Harman Patil (Editor)

Tsurugisaki Lighthouse

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Year first lit
  
1925 (current)

Foundation
  
concrete

Height
  
17 m

Construction
  
Concrete

Year first constructed
  
1871 (first)

Automated
  
yes

Focal height
  
41.1 metres (135 ft)

Opened
  
4 July 1925

Phone
  
+81 46-888-0588

Tsurugisaki Lighthouse

Location
  
Miura, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan

Tower shape
  
octagonal prism tower with balcony and lantern

Address
  
Minamishitauramachi Matsuwa, Miura, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan

Similar
  
Jōgashima Lighthouse, Mikomotoshima Lighthouse, Sunosaki Lighthouse, Kannonzaki Lighthouse, Satamisaki Lighthouse

Lighthouse of japan tsurugi saki


Tsurugisaki Lighthouse (剱埼灯台, Tsurugisaki tōdai) is a lighthouse located on Cape Tsurugi on the southeastern extremity of the city of Miura, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan on the southernmost and eastern tip of Miura Peninsula. (On the southernmost western tip of Miura Peninsula stands the Jōgashima Lighthouse.)

The Tsurugisaki Lighthouse was one of eight lighthouses to be built in Meiji period Japan under the provisions of the Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Amity and Commerce of 1858, signed by the Bakumatsu period Tokugawa Shogunate. The lighthouse was designed and constructed by British engineer Richard Henry Brunton. Brunton constructed another 25 lighthouses from far northern Hokkaidō to southern Kyūshū during his career in Japan.

The Tsurugisaki Lighthouse was completed on March 1, 1871 and was designed to protect shipping entering Tokyo Bay via the Uraga Channel, with its light visible as far as the Bōsō Peninsula on the eastern shore of the bay. The original structure was destroyed during the Great Kantō earthquake on September 1, 1923 and was replaced with the current reinforced-concrete structure on July 4, 1925. The lighthouse has been unmanned since 1991.

It is currently maintained by the Japan Coast Guard.

References

Tsurugisaki Lighthouse Wikipedia