Fowey Rocks Light
Location | seven miles southeast of Cape Florida on Key Biscayne |
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Coordinates | 25°35′26.2″N 80°05′48″W / 25.590611°N 80.09667°WCoordinates: 25°35′26.2″N 80°05′48″W / 25.590611°N 80.09667°W |
Year first lit | 1878 |
Automated | May 7, 1975 |
Foundation | screw-pile |
Construction | cast-iron |
Tower shape | skeletal octagonal pyramid |
Markings / pattern | brown and white |
Focal height | 110 feet (34 m) |
Original lens | 1878: 1st order drum Fresnel lens 1982: Flash tube array 1983: 300mm |
Current lens | VRB-25 system |
Range | White 15 nautical miles (28 km; 17 mi), red 10 nautical miles (19 km; 12 mi) |
Characteristic | Flashing white 10s with two red sectors |
Racon | "O" (Oscar) |
Admiralty number | J2960 |
ARLHS number | USA-307 |
USCG number | 3-920[1][2][3] |
Fowey Rocks Light
| |
Governing body | National Park Service |
NRHP Reference # | 10001181[4] |
Added to NRHP | January 26, 2011 |
Fowey Rocks are named for the Royal Navy frigate HMS Fowey which was wrecked on a different reef to the south in 1748.[5] During construction of the lighthouse the workers lived on a platform built over the water to minimize the danger of transporting them and their supplies each day from the mainland. While construction was under way, on 17 February 1878 the Arratoon Apcar ran aground on the reef. The 1500 ton steamship came to rest just 200 yards (180 m) from the workmen's platform.[6] Efforts to save the boat failed, and she was pounded apart on the rocks and sank. Today the wreck is an excellent scuba diving site.[7]
The Labor Day Hurricane of 1935 washed away the first deck of the lighthouse, 15 feet above the water, but the tower survived. The lighthouse is inside the boundaries of Biscayne National Park.
In June 2011, the General Services Administration made the Fowey Rocks Light (along with 11 others) available at no cost to public organizations willing to preserve them.[8][9] On October 2, 2012; the National Park Service accepted ownership of the light.[10]
As this light is out in the bay, didn't get to visit it, but did get a stamp- which was located at the Dante Fascell Visitor Center for Key Biscayne National Park, which governs the light now.
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