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Abagadasset Point Range Light (ME)
Absecon Light (NJ)
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Black Rock Harbor Lighthouse (CT)
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Buffalo Breakwater Lighthouse (NY)
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Burnt Coat Harbor Light (ME)
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Canton Island Boat Channel Light (Kiribati)
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Cardona Island (PR)
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Carquinez Strait (CA)
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Cedar Keys (FL)
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Channel Island Light (?)
Chapel Hill Front Light (NJ)
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Chapin Island Range (AK)
Charity Island (MI)
Charleston (SC)
Charlevoix (MI)
Charlevoix South Pier Light (MI)
Charlotte Amalie (VI)
Charlotte Harbor (FL)
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Charlotte-Genesse (NY)
Charlotte-Genesee West Pier (NY)
Chatham Light (MA)
Cheboygan Main Light (MI)
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Chefuncte River (see Tchefuncte)
Chequamegon Point Light (WI)
Cherry Island (DE)
Cherrystone Bar Light (VA)
Chesapeake (VA)
Chesapeake & Delaware Canal (MD/DE)
Chester Range Front Light (PA)
Chester Range Light (PA)
Chetco River Light (OR)
Chicago Harbor (IL)
Chicago Harbor Lighthouse (IL)
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Choctaw Point (AL)
Choptank River (MD)
Christiana North Jetty (DE)
Clark’s Point Light (MA)
Clay Island Lighthouse (MD)
Cleveland East Pier Lighthouse (OH)
Cleveland East Pierhead Lighthouse (OH)
Cleveland Harbor East Breakwater Lighthouse (OH)
Cleveland Harbor West Pierhead Lighthouse (OH)
Cleveland Ledge (OH)
Clinton River (MI)
Clopper’s Bar (TX)
Cobb Point Bar (MD)
Cockspur Light (GA)
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Cohansey (NJ)
Colchester Reef (VT)
Cold Spring Harbor (NY)
Columbia River Lights (OR)
Colvos Passage (WA)
Coney Island (NY)
Conanicut Island (RI)
Concord Point (MD)
Conimicut (RI)
Conneaut West Breakwater Light (OH)
Conover Beacon (NJ)
Coos Bay (OR)
Copper Harbor (MI)
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Cosgrove Shoal Light (FL)
Cottonwood Island (OR)
Courthouse Point (MD)
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Coxsackie (NY)
Crabtree Ledge (ME)
Craighill Channel Lower Front Light (MD)
Craighill Channel Lower Rear Light (MD)
Cranberry Island (NS)
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Croatan Shoal (NC)
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Crossover Island Lighthouse (NY)
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Cross Ledge Light (NJ)
Cubits Gap (LA)
Cuckolds Light (ME)
Culebrita Island (PR)
Cumberland Head (NY)
Currituck Beach (NC)
Curtis Island (ME)
Cut-Off Channel Range Front Light Station (MD)
Cut-Off Channel Range Rear Light Station (MD)
Cuttyhunk (MA)
Dames Point (FL)
Danskammar (NY)
Daufuskie Island Front Range Light (SC)
Daufuskie Island Rear Range Light (SC)
Deepwater Point Range Front Lighthouse (NJ)
Deepwater Point Range Rear Lighthouse (NJ)
Deepwater Shoals (VA)
Deer Island (MA)
Deer Island Thorofare (ME)
Delaware Breakwater (DE)
Delaware Breakwater Front Range (DE)
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Derby Wharf (MA)
Desdemona Sands (OR)
Destruction Island (WA)
DeTour Reef (MI)
Detroit River (MI)
Devil’s Island (WI)
Dewey Rocks Light (AK)
Diamond Head (HI)
Diamond Island Ledge Light (ME)
Diamond Shoal (NC)
Dice Head (ME)
Dofflemeyer Point (WA)
Dog Island (FL)
Doubling Point (ME)
Drum Point (MD)
Drummond Island (MI)
Dry Spruce Island Rock (AK)
Dry Tortugas (FL)
Duck Island Range (MI)
Duck Point Light (?)
Duluth Harbor South Breakwater Inner Light (MN)
Duluth Northern Pier Light (MN)
Duluth Range Front Light (MN)
Duluth Range Rear Light (MN)
Dumpling Rock (MA)
Dunkirk (NY)
Dunkirk Pierhead Lighthouse (NY)
Dunlap Reef N.W. End Light (WI)
Dutch Gap Canal Lighthouse (VA)
Dutch Island (RI)
Duxbury Pier (MA)
Eagle Bluff (WI)
Eagle Harbor (MI)
Eagle Harbor Front Range Light (MI)
Eagle Harbor Rear Range Light (MI)
Eagle Island (ME)
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East Brother Island (CA)
East Charity Shoal (NY)
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East Chugach (AK)
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Egmont Key (FL)
Elbow of Cross Ledge (NJ)
Eldred Rock (AK)
Elizabeth Island (Bahamas)
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Ellis Island (NY)
Elm Tree Range (NY)
Emms Rock (ME)
Enderbury Island (South Pacific)
Erie Point (PA)
Escanaba (MI)
Esopus Meadow (MA)
Eureka Pass Daybeacon (AK)
Execution Rocks (NY)
Fair Haven Range Lights (NY)
Fairhaven Bridge (MA)
Fairport Harbor Lighthouse (OH)
Fairport Harbor West Breakwater Lighthouse (OH)
Fairway Island (AK)
Falmouth Inner Harbor (MA)
False Point Daybeacon (?)
Farallon Island (CA)
Farmers Ridges Range (MI)
Faro de Arecibo Light (PR)
Faro de Los Morrillos Light (PR)
Faro de Puerto Ferro Light (PR)
Father Point (CA)
Faulkner Island (CT)
Fenwick Island (DE)
Finns Point Range Front Light (PA)
Finns Point Range Rear Light (PA)
Fire Island (NY)
Fisherman’s Point (Cuba)
Fisher’s Island (CT)
Fishing Battery (MD)
Five Fingers (AK)
Five Mile Island Light (CT)
Flag Island (MN)
Fleets Bay Light (VA)
Fletcher’s Neck (ME)
Fog Point Lighthouse (MD)
Foot Bank (?)
Foreign Light Stations
Foremost Rock Daybeacon (?)
Fort Adams (RI)
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Fort Foote Wharf (MD)
Fort Gratiot (WI)
Fort Jackson Range (GA)
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Fort McCree Rear Range Beacon (FL)
Fort Mifflin (PA)
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Fort Ripley Shoal (SC)
Fort Scammel Point (ME)
Fort Sumter (SC)
Fort Tompkins (NY)
Fort Wadsworth (NY)
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Fort Wood (CT)
Found Island Rock Daybeacon (?)
Four Mile Crib (IL)
Fourteen Foot Bank (DE)
Fourteen Foot Shoal (MI)
Fourteen Mile Point (MI)
Forty Mile Point (MI)
Fox Island (CAN)
Fox River (WI)
Fowey Rocks (FL)
Frankfort Pierhead (MI)
Franklin Island (ME)
Franks Island (LA)
Fransen Island Range (MN)
Frechette Point (MI)
Frederiksted (VI)
Frost’s Point (NH)
Frying Pan Island (MI)
Frying Pan Shoals (NC)
Galloo Island (NY)
Gallups Island (MA)
Galveston (TX)
Gambier Bay Entrance Light (AK)
Garden Key (FL)
Gary (IN)
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Gaspee Point (RI)
Gastineau Channel Light (AK)
Gay Head (MA)
General History Genesee (NY)
George Island (?)
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Gloucester Breakwater (MA)
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Goat Island (ME)
Golovin Bay Light (AK)
Goose Rocks (ME)
Gould Island (RI)
Governors Island (NY)
Grand Haven Front Light (MI)
Grand Haven Rear Light (MI)
Grand Island Light Station (LA)
Grand Island East Channel (MI)
Grand Island Harbor Rear Range Light (MI)
Grand Island North Light (MI)
Grand Marais Harbor Range Lights (MN)
Grand Marais (MN)
Grand Traverse (MI)
Granite Island (MI)
Grant’s Pass (AL)
Grassy Hammock (CT)
Grassy Island North Channel Front Range (MI)
Grassy Island North Channel Rear Light (MI)
Grassy Island Range Lights (WI)
Grassy Island South Channel Front Light (MI)
Grassy Island South Channel Rear Light (MI)
Gravelly Shoal (MI)
Graves Ledge (ME)
Graves Light (MA)
Gray’s Harbor (WA)
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Greenbury Point Lighthouse Shoal (MD)
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Grosse Ile North Channel Range (MI)
Grosse Ile South Channel Front Range (MI)
Grosse Ile South Channel Rear Range (MI)
Grosse Point (IL)
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Gustavus Light (AK)
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Halfmoon Shoal (TX)
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Hamilton Island (CAN)
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Harbor Beach (MI)
Harbor Island (NC)
Harbor of Refuge (DE)
Hart’s Landing (MI)
Havre de Grace Light (MD)
Hawk Inlet East Shoal (AK)
Hawkins Point (MD)
Hawea Point (HI)
Head of the Passes (LA)
Heceta Head (OR)
Helm Bay (AK)
Hendricks Head (ME)
Hen and Chickens Shoal Light (FL)
Hereford Inlet (NJ)
Heron Neck (ME)
Hermanos Island Rear Daybeacon (AK)
High Island Light (TX)
Highland Light (MA)
Highwater Rock Daybeacon (AK)
Hillsboro Inlet (FL)
Hilton Head Range Light (SC)
Hive Island (AK)
Hog Island (MA)
Hog Island Shoal Light (RI)
Hog Rock Light (AK)
Holland Harbor (MI)
Holland Island Bar (MD)
Holmes Hale (MA)
Honolulu Harbor (HI)
Honolulu Harbor Range Front Light (HI)
Honolulu Harbor Range Rear Light (HI)
Hooper Island (MD)
Hooper Strait (MD)
Horn Island (MS)
Horseshoe Range East Group Lighthouse (PA)
Horseshoe Range West Group Lighthouse (PA)
Horseshoe Reef (NY)
Horton Point (NY)
Hospital Point Range Front Light (MA)
Hospital Point Range Rear Light (MA)
Hot Island Light (?)
Housatonic River (CT)
Houston Ship Channel (TX)
Howland Island (Pacific)
Hudson City (NY)
Humboldt Bar (CA)
Hunter Bay Daybeacon (WA)
Hunting Island (SC)
Huron Harbor (OH)
Huron Island (MI)
Hyannis Front Range (MA)
Hyannis Rear Range (MA)
Icy Passage Light (AK)
Ida Lewis Rock (RI)
Ilkognak Rock Light (AK)
Indian Island (ME)
Indian Point Range (MI)
Indiana Harbor East Breakwater (IN)
Indiana Waterway Light No. 49 (NC)
Inner Point Light (AK)
Ipswich Range (MA)
Isla Cabras Light (PR)
Isla Caja de Muertos (PR)
Isla Cardona (PR)
Isle au Haute (ME)
Isle aux Galets (MI)
Isle LaMotte (VT)
Isle of Shoals (NH)
Isle Royale (MI)
James Island (MD)
Jeffrey’s Hook (NY)
Jobos Harbor (PR)
Johnson Point (WA)
Jones Inlet (ME)
Jones Point (VA)
Jordan’s Point (VA)
Juniper Island Light (VT)
Jupiter Inlet (FL)
Kahoolawe Point (HI)
Kaena Point (HI)
Kahului Entrance Range (HI)
Kailua (HI)
Kalae (HI)
Kalamazoo (MI)
Kalaupapa (HI)
Kalgin Island (AK)
Karheen Passage Daybreak (AK)
Kasnyku Harbor Daybeacon (AK)
Kauhola Point (HI)
Kauiki (HI)
Kaula Rock (HI)
Kaumalapau (HI)
Kawaihae (HI)
Kauna Point (HI)
Keahole (HI)
Keku Strait Daybeacon (AK)
Kenosha (WI)
Kennebec River (ME)
Ketchikan-Thomas Basin (AK)
Ketchikan Light (AK)
Kewalo Basin (HI)
Kewaunee Pierhead (WI)
Keweenah Waterway (MI)
Keweenaw Lower Entrance (MI)
Keweenaw Upper Entrance (MI)
Key Reef Light (AK)
Key West (FL)
Khantaak Island (AK)
Kilauea (HI)
Killock Shoal (VA)
Kingston Flats (NY)
Kinkora (NJ)
Klawak Island Light (AK)
Klokachee Lamp (?)
Kokole Point (HI)
Kuhio Bay (HI)
Kukuihaele (HI)
La Pointe (WI)
Lae o Ha Laau Point (HI)
Lahaina (HI)
Lake Borgne (MS)
Lake Pontchartrain (LA)
Lake St. Clair (MI)
Lake St. George (FL)
Lake Worth Inlet (FL)
Lambert Point (VA)
Lansing Shoal (MI)
Larzatita Island Reef Light (AK)
Latimer Reef (NY)
Laupahoehoe Point (HI)
Laurel Point (NC)
Lauu Point (HI)
Lazaretto Point (MD)
Leading Point (MD)
Lehigh (NJ)
Lehua Island (HI)
Lewis Reef (AK)
Libby Island (ME)
Lime Kiln (WA)
Lime Point (CA)
Lincoln Rock (AK)
Liston Range Front Lighthouse (DE)
Liston Range Rear Lighthouse (DE)
Little Creek (?)
Little Cumberland Island (GA)
Little Gull Island (NY)
Little Mark Island (ME)
Little Rapids Cut (MI)
Little River (ME)
Little Sable Point (MI)
Little Traverse (MI)
Lloyd Harbor (NY)
Long Beach (CA)
Long Beach Bar (NY)
Long Island Head (MA)
Long Point (MA)
Long Point (NC)
Long Shoal (NC)
Long Tail Point (WI)
Looe Key (FL)
Lorain West (OH)
Los Angeles (CA)
Love Point (MD)
Lovells Island (MA)
Low Point (CAN)
Lower Cedar Point (MD)
Lower Little Island (NY)
Lower Range (MA)
Lower Thoroughfare Range (MD)
Lubec Channel (ME)
Ludington (MI)
Ludlam Beach (NJ)
Lynde Point (CT)
Lynn Harbor (MA)
Machias Seal (CAN)
Mackinac Point (MI)
Magothy River (MD)
Mahon River (DE)
Mahukona (HI)
Makapu'u Point (HI)
Manana Island (ME)
Manistee (MI)
Manistee North Pierhead (MI)
Manistique (MI)
Manitou Island (MI)
Manitowoc (WI)
Manitowoc North Breakwater (WI)
Manitowoc North Pierhead (WI)
Mantua Creek (NJ)
Maplin Sand Light (England)
Marblehead (OH)
Marblehead (MA)
Marcus Hook (DE)
Mare Island (CA)
Marine City Range Light (MI)
Marquette Light (MI)
Marquette Breakwater (MI)
Mark Abbott Memorial Lighthouse (CA)
Marrowstone Point (CT)
Marshall Point Light (ME)
Martin Reef (MI)
Mary Island (AK)
Maryland Point (MD)
Matagorda Bay Light (TX)
Mathias Point Shoal Light (MD)
Matinicus Rock Light (ME)
Mattituck (NY)
Maumee Bay (OH)
Maurice River (NJ)
Maxfield Point (VT)
Maxwell Point Light (SC)
Mayo Beach (MA)
McClellan Rock Light (AK)
McGregor Point Daybeacon (HI)
McGulpin Point (MI)
Meares Island (CAN)
Mendenhall Bar (AK)
Mendota Light (MI)
Menominee Pierhead Light (WI)
Meriches Light (NY)
Merrill Shell Bank (MS)
Merrimac (WI)
Metomkin Point (VA)
Miah Maull Shoal Light (NJ)
Michigan City Light (IN)
Michigan Island (WI)
Middle Bay (AL)
Middle Island (MI)
Middle Neebish (MI)
Midway Rock Light (CA)
Mile Rocks Light (CA)
Milolii (HI)
Milwaukee Breakwater (WI)
Milwaukee Pierhead (WI)
Minneapolis Shoals (MI)
Minnesota Point (MN)
Minor Island (WA)
Minor Island/Tansy Point (WA)
Minot’s Ledge (MA)
Mispillion River (DE)
Mission Point (MI)
Mississippi River Gulf Outlet (MS)
Mite Head (?)
Mitrofania Island (AK)
Mobile Bay (AL)
Mobile Point (AL)
Mobile Point Range Rear Light (AL)
Molasses Reef (FL)
Molokai (HI)
Molokini Light (HI)
Mona Island (PR)
Monhegan Island (ME)
Montreal River Light (MI)
Monroe (MI)
Monroe Pier (MI)
Monomoy Point Light (MA)
Montauk Point (NY)
Moos Head (OR)
Moose Peak (ME)
Morgan Point (CT)
Morris Island (SC)
Morro Bay (CA)
Mosquito Bank Light (FL)
Moss Landing (CA)
Mount Desert Island Light (ME)
Mud Island Rear Light (PA)
Muertos Island (PR)
Mukilteo Light (WA)
Mule Rock (AK)
Mulholland Point (CAN)
Munising Range (MI)
Murderkill River Range Front (DE)
Murphy’s Dock Light (?)
Muscle Bed Shoal (RI)
Muskegon South Pierhead (MI)
Myhlen Feldt Point (VI)
Matomkin Light (VA)
Nakalele Point (HI)
Nansemond River (VA)
Nanticoke River (MD)
Nantucket Cliff Range Lights (MA)
Nantucket Range Lights (MA)
Napoopoo (HI)
Narranguagus Bay (ME)
Narrow Point (AK)
Narrows Light (MA)
Nash Island (ME)
Natchez (MS)
Nauset (MA)
Navassa Island (West Indies)
Navesink (NJ)
Nawilliwilli Harbor Light (HI)
Nayatt Point Light (RI)
Neches River (TX)
Ned Point (MA)
Neuse River Light (NC)
New Canal (LA)
New Castle Range Front Lighthouse (DE)
New Castle Range Rear Lighthouse (DE)
New Dorp (NY)
New Dungeness (WA)
New Haven (Outer Breakwater) (CT)
New Haven Harbor (CT)
New London Harbor (CT)
New London Ledge (CT)
New Point Comfort (VA)
New Presque Isle (MI)
Newark Bay (NJ)
Newbern Harbor (NC)
Newburyport Harbor (MA)
Newburyport Harbor Range Light (MA)
Newcastle Range (DE)
Newport Beach (CA)
Newport Harbor (RI)
Newport News (VA)
Newport Wharf Light (VT)
Niagara-on-the Lake (NY)
Niblack Daybeach (AK)
Nobska Point (MA)
North Brother Island (NY)
North Dumpling Light (NY)
Northeast Corner (?)
North Head (WA)
North Hook Fog Signal (NJ)
North Inian Pass (AK)
North Landing River Beacon (VA)
North Manitou Island (MI)
North Manitou Shoal (MI)
North Pier (PA)
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Oak Island (NC)
Oak Orchard (NY)
Oakland Harbor (CA)
Ocean Cape (AK)
Ocracoke (NC)
Ogdensburg Harbor (NY)
Old Field Point (NY)
Old Mission Point (MI)
Old Orchard Shoal (NY)
Old Plantation Flats (VA)
Old Point Comfort (VA)
Old Reedy Island (DE)
Old Sodus Point (MI)
Ontonagon (MI)
Oregon Inlet (NC)
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1. Historic lighthouse drawing, 2. Boston Light [170602-G-0Y189-474], 3. Sand Key [170602-G-0Y189-329], 4. Brazo Santiago [170602-G-0Y189-489], 5. Punta de Los Reyes [170602-G-0Y189-282]
Additional Resources: Please visit the National Park Service Maritime Heritage Program's website for a searchable inventory of Historic Lighthouses and Light Stations: https://www.nps.gov/maritime/inventories/lights.htm
Lighthouse materials available here are an expanded version of the National Park Service's Inventory of Historic Light Stations. This site incorporates the National Park Service's Inventory as well as light station files that are maintained by the Coast Guard Historian's Office. A special thanks is owed to Ms. Candace Clifford of the National Maritime Initiative and author of the Inventory of Historic Light Stations for her permission to utilize the Inventory.
The majority of the photos were taken from the files of the U.S. Coast Guard Historians' Office. They were compiled and scanned by Mr. Joseph Kiebish, and we wish to acknowledge his generous assistance and thank him for his service as a volunteer.
Additional information as well as the history for each lighthouse is provided courtesy of volunteers from the Chesapeake Chapter of the U.S. Lighthouse Society, including Anne Puppa, William Simms, Melissa Buckler, Marie Vincent, Catherine Price, Diane Hackney and Matthew B. Jenkins. We gratefully acknowledge their efforts as well
Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Light Station Craighill Lower Rear
Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Light Station Craighill RL_1
THE FOUR CRAIGHILL CHANNEL RANGE LIGHTS
Range lights are used in pairs to mark a channel. Each one of the pair supports a light of different heights. When the two lights are aligned one is in the channel. Named after an engineer and longtime member of the lighthouse board, Craighill Channel cuts roughly five miles off the southern approach to Baltimore, entering Brewerton Channel (the main Patapsco River / Baltimore channel). As a major segment of the approach to the commercial ports of Baltimore this was a very important channel and the need to use it at night was acutely felt. The four Craighill Channel range lighthouses are really two separate ranges built a bit over ten years apart. The older and larger pair is the Lower Range and its construction coincided with a major dredging and enlarging of the Channel in 1870.
The following four lights were listed on the National Register of Historic Places on 2 December 2002.
Location: Entrance to the Patapsco River, MD, Chesapeake Bay Date Built: Commissioned 1873 (using temporary lights), Fully completed in 1875 Type of Structure: Rear light – Pyramidal iron frame surrounding a plate-encased stairway leading to double-decked lantern. Front light – caisson with circular dwelling / tower. Height: Rear light - 105 feet, Front light – 39 feet (main light), 22 feet – range. Characteristics: Fixed white for both range lights, The front light also has a flashing white main light with one red sector. Range: 16 miles Status: Standing and Active
Location: Entrance to the Patapsco River, MD, Chesapeake Bay Date Built: Commissioned 1886 Type of Structure: Rear – pyramidal iron skeleton supporting a square shaft leading to the lantern. Front – brick octagonal tower. Height: Rear – 64 feet above mean high water, Front – 15 feet. Characteristics: Fixed red for both range lights Foghorn: No Appropriation: $25,000 Status: Standing and Active
Historical Information:
Craighill Channel Lower Range Front Light, Chesapeake Bay, Maryland
Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Light Station's National Register of Historic Places Nomination
===========================================
1. Name of Property
historic name: Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Light Station
other names/site number: BA-1550
2. Location
street & number: N/A not for publication: N/A
city or town: near Edgemere vicinity X
state: Maryland code: MD county:Baltimore code: 005 zip code: N/A
3. State/Federal Agency Certification
As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1986, as amended, I hereby certify that this nomination meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property meets the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant statewide. (___See continuation sheet for additional comments.)
Captain, U. S. Coast Guard,
Chief, Office of Civil Engineering 2/22/02
Signature of certifying official Date
Department of Transportation, U.S. Coast Guard
State or Federal agency and bureau
In my opinion, the property ____ meets ____ does not meet the National Register criteria. (___ See continuation sheet for additional comments.)
______________________________________ ____________________
Signature of commenting or other official Date
_________________________________________________________________
4. National Park Service Certification
I, hereby certify that this property is:
____ entered in the National Register ______________________
___ See continuation sheet.
____ determined eligible for the ______________________
National Register
____ determined not eligible for the ______________________
____ removed from the National Register ______________________
____ other (explain): _________________
__________________________________ ______________________ _________
Signature of Keeper Date of Action
5. Classification
Ownership of Property (Check as many boxes as apply)
___ private
___ public-local
___ public-State
X public-Federal
Category of Property (Check only one box)
___ building(s)
___ district
___ site
X structure
___ object
Number of Resources within Property
Contributing Noncontributing
_____ _____ buildings
_____ _____ sites
1 _____ structures
_____ _____ objects
1 0 Total
Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register 0
Name of related multiple property listing: Light Stations of the United States
6. Function or Use
Historic Functions (Enter categories from instructions)
Cat: transportation Sub: water-related
Current Functions (Enter categories from instructions)
7. Description
Architectural Classification (Enter categories from instructions): No Style
Materials (Enter categories from instructions):
foundation: stone
roof: sheet metal
walls: wood covered with sheet metal
other: exoskeleton: cast iron
lantern: cast iron
Narrative Description (Describe the historic and current condition of the property.)1
Description Summary
The Craighill Channel Lower Rear Range Light Station consists of a square pyramidal exoskeleton cast-iron tower with a square wooden enclosed stairwell to the lantern room. The 1 1/2-story keeper's quarters, now destroyed, was a square dwelling built on the lighthouse's nine granite foundation piers. The Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Lighthouse is located in 2 to 3 feet of water, marking the south entrance to Craighill Channel, near the southerly end of Hart Island, northern Chesapeake Bay, western shore, near Edgemere, Baltimore County, Maryland. The lower range front light, which works in association with the rear light, is located 2.4 miles south. Owned and managed by the U.S. Coast Guard in District 5, access to the station is via boat.
Existing Structures
Tower, Foundation
The foundation consists of three rows of three piers, a total of nine piers, all made of Port Deposit granite. These piers have been covered with prefab Plexiglas protective covers. A landing platform and ladder is located on the west side. A modern pipe railing surrounds the landing.
Tower, Exterior
The wooden tower is covered with corrugated metal sheets. The keeper's house, which was located around the tower at the bottom two levels, was removed shortly after automation in 1937. The metal sheet siding is continuous to the base of the tower indicating it was applied at the same time, or shortly after, the dwelling was torn down. A lantern room surmounts the top of the tower. From each of the four corner piers, an iron exoskeleton pyramidal column provides support to the inner wooden tower. The lower approximate 1/3 of the tower, where the keeper's quarters were located, was painted white, and the remaining upper portion of the tower was painted brown.
Tower, Interior
The entrance door to the tower is located on the east side. A counter clockwise series of stairs and landing ascends to the lantern. There are five sets of four steps, each with a corner landing, then a full landing on the east side followed by five more sets of four steps and corner landings. At this point, a vertical beaded wooden door with a metal slide bolt closure opens to a small wood exterior deck facing south. This door is now permanently sealed. Three more sets of four steps follow to where a single pane Plexiglas window, vented on the north side, is located. Four more sets of four steps and corner landings end with a full landing on the north side from which a boarded door once opened on to another small wooden exterior deck. Three more sets of four steps and corner landings follow to where a single pane Plexiglas window, vented on the south side, is located. Finally, four more sets of four steps and corner landings end at the service room, which has narrow single pane Plexiglas windows with vents on each side. From here two sets of four steps end at the watch room. All of the steps appear to be original except for the lower two sets where some plywood treads have been installed. The first step-riser on the second set of stairs is original and has a turned down half moon cut into the middle and a round hole to either side. These may have been for ventilation purposes when the dwelling was intact and the space under the stairwell was used as a storage area.
Service Room
The service room has three narrow windows on the south, east, and west side; all three windows are single pane Plexiglas with vents. The floors are painted gray. A double trap door is located in the floor with a large iron hook fastened to one of the timbers over the hatch for purposes of hauling supplies. The tower's heavy wooden framing is exposed and consists of horizontal, vertical, and cross framing. The exterior vertical siding is visible behind the framing. The framing and siding are all painted white. There are 12 steps up to the watch room.
Watch Room
Access to the lantern room is via 16 wooden steps within a spiral stairwell. The under side of the stairwell is covered with sheet metal. A banister once ran along the south side of the service room where the stairwell descends to the Service Room; the banister was replaced in 2000. The watch room is covered with vertical beaded paneling on the walls and ceilings, both painted white. The baseboard is painted gray. There are double window openings on the south, east, and west side, now boarded over. On the north side is a storage area under the spiral staircase and the fitting for a heating stove in the wall. Sheet metal covers the walls and part of the floor where the stove was located. A door between the stairwell and stove opened to a full gallery below the lantern room gallery, but the door is now sealed shut. The gallery balustrade is made of wood posts with three rails and a wooden deck, all painted brown.
Lantern Room
The lantern room is square, covered with variable width vertical beaded paneling on the interior, and painted white. The baseboard is gray. The lantern room has a wooden floor. The roof is covered with sheet metal, and the smoke hood is intact. A storm pane is located in the south side for the range light, and a smaller window on the north side. Ventilators with regulators are located on the parapet walls on both the east and west sides, and two open vents are located on the south parapet wall. A wooden rail once ran across the lantern room to guard the stairwell, but only the newel post and top and bottom rail survive; all seven pickets are missing.
Access to the upper or lantern gallery deck is via a plywood half-door. Originally, there was a double half-door as indicated by hinges on both sides of the doorway frame. The deck is covered with flat seam sheet metal. The gallery balustrade is made of wooden posts, rails, and pickets. The balustrade posts are fitted with a cap rail, and an intermediate and lower rail, which carry decorative wooden splat balusters between them, are spaced nearly together with two sets of "V"s cut into their edges so that a diamond pattern is formed when they are placed together. Very few of these pickets are intact. Along the south gallery rail, is a wooden box with canvas cover that probably housed a spare range light. A Max Lumin 14-inch range light RL 355, serial number 0235, was stored inside the lantern room and probably was used in this box; it was removed in 2000.
The range light is a classic Fresnel lens in poor condition. The bull's-eye center has been replaced with a PYREX 7 marked "MADE IN (next area chipped out) 10" D. X 6 F.S.O." The brass frame of the lens is marked "HENRY - LEPAUTE a PARIS." The west half of the sixth and seventh annular ring is missing. The west side section of the lens is missing the second and seventh element. The east side had a door in which the prism elements were mounted, but it is missing along with all the elements. The lens pedestal is a hollow sheet iron cylinder into which is cut a door fitted with a brass handle; inside is a shelf. It was once painted green and later red.
Previously Existing Structures:
The keeper's dwelling was a 12-story, mansard roofed, square, wooden structure located at the base of the tower and built over the stone piers. It had four pediment windows on each side including the south side that also had a pediment door. On the mansard roof, were two pediment dormer windows on each side. The dwelling had horizontal wooden siding and was surrounded by a wooden gallery balustrade.
Conclusion
Craighill Lower Channel Rear Range is an early combination wooden tower with metal exoskeleton support. The tower contains a large percentage of original material. Most of the wood and all the metal framing material appears to date from its original construction and 1884, 1888, and 1897 alterations. The integral keeper's dwelling was destroyed, significantly affecting the integrity of this structure. The large percentage of original wooden fabric in the tower is unusual.
8. Statement of Significance
Applicable National Register Criteria (Mark "x" in one or more boxes for the criteria qualifying the property for National Register listing)
X A Property is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history.
____ B Property is associated with the lives of persons significant in our past.
X C Property embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction or represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components lack individual distinction.
____ D Property has yielded, or is likely to yield information important in prehistory or history.
Criteria Considerations (Mark "X" in all the boxes that apply.)
____ A owned by a religious institution or used for religious purposes
____ B removed from its original location
____ C a birthplace or a grave
____ D a cemetery
____ E a reconstructed building, object, or structure
____ F a commemorative property
____ G less than 50 years of age or achieved significance within the past 50 years
Areas of Significance (Enter categories from instructions):
Maritime History
Transportation
Architecture
Period of Significance: 1873-19372
Significant Dates: 1873, 1937
Significant Person (Complete if Criterion B is marked above): N/A
Cultural Affiliation: N/A
Known Design Source: none
Architect/Builder: unknown
Narrative Statement of Significance (Explain the significance of the property.)
The Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Light Station is significant for its association with federal governmental efforts to provide an integrated system of navigational aids and to provide for safe maritime transportation in the Chesapeake Bay, a major transportation corridor for commercial traffic from the early nineteenth through twentieth centuries. Built using an exoskeletal tower design, the tower embodies a distinctive method of construction unusual for the upper Chesapeake Bay. This type of offshore exoskeletal lighthouse tower was usually built in coastal regions where soft sand or coral required this technology. The only other skeletal lighthouses in the region using this technique are on shore; these include Cape Charles Lighthouse, Virginia, and a few range lights along the Delaware River in Delaware and New Jersey.
The Craighill Channel Lower Range Rear Lighthouse is an early combination wooden tower with metal exoskeleton support. The tower contains a large percentage of original material. Most of the wood and all the metal framing material appears to date from its original construction and 1884, 1888, and 1897 alterations.
History
The Craighill Channel starts at the mouth of the Magothy River and extends to the southern end of Belvidere Shoal, a distance of approximately five miles. This channel forms the first leg of the maintained channel to the Patapsco River and Baltimore Harbor. The channel was named after William Price Craighill, a major in the Army Corps of Engineers and a member of the Lighthouse Board, who supervised the surveys for the widening and deepening of the channel. The channel was dredged 169 feet wide and, generally, 21 feet deep, but the growing importance of Baltimore as a port persuaded Congress to appropriate $50,000 in 1870 to widen the channel to 500 feet and deepen it to 22 feet. Unlike the Brewerton Channel, which then intersected the Craighill Channel about a mile northeast of Seven Foot Knoll Lighthouse, Craighill had no lights to aid night navigation. The Lighthouse Board stated in 1871 that
this channel has the advantage of saving about five miles in distance to large vessels bound to Baltimore from the lower bay; avoids much, if not all, of the dangers usually experienced from the accumulation of ice in the lower part of the Brewerton Channel during the winter; is much easier navigated, or would be if range beacons were established.3
Because of the location of the Craighill Channel and its connection with the Chesapeake Bay, shore range lighthouses would have required very powerful lights and an extremely high rear range light. Thus, the range lighthouses were built in the water. Both range lighthouses were originally designed to be screwpile foundation types, but the severe ice conditions during the winter of 1872-1873 convinced the Lighthouse Board to build a small caisson structure for the front range and a granite pier foundation for the rear range. Upon completion of this new pair of range lights, it was thought that "the two expensive lights built on jetties at North Point" would become "unnecessary" and "might be dispensed with." Congress appropriated $45,000, on June 10, 1872, "for two range lights for Craighill Channel into Patapsco River from Chesapeake Bay, to take the place of the two lighthouses now at North Point."
Because of bottom conditions at the chosen site for the rear range lighthouse, "a pile and grillage foundation became necessary to support the piers on which the columns of the frame-work rest." A cofferdam of sheet piling, 60 by 60 feet, around the entire site for the nine piers was constructed in April 1873 in two feet of water. The dam was damaged twice by "heavy gales." Piles were driven and cut off evenly, then a grillage of timbers placed on top, and finally the nine piers of Port Deposit granite were constructed on top. The cofferdam was then dismantled. The lighthouse was an open framework in the "form of a frustum of a pyramid of four sides, the corner columns being of cast iron resting on cast iron disks, which are anchored to the masonry of the piers." The keeper's house was built within the frame at the base of the pyramid "through which an enclosed stairway will pass, leading to the lantern." The cost of the rear range foundation was more than anticipated because of difficulty in securing a stable foundation in the soft bottom. The appropriated funds were, therefore, not sufficient to cover the total cost of completing both range lighthouses. Thus, a temporary light was established on the unfinished structure on November 20, 1873. Temporary accommodations for the keepers were prepared on shore by making use of the quarters used by the construction crew. A request for additional funding was made in 1874, and $45,000 was approved on June 23, 1874. Work resumed and was completed in March 1875.4
The structure received "extensive repairs" in June 1884 when all the wooden braces, most of which were "much decayed," were removed and replaced by iron swivel and Phoenix beam braces; iron straps were placed on all the tower beams resting on iron; the upper and lower decking was repaired; a new rack for lantern panes was made; new boat davits were erected; gutters and down spouts were replaced; the roof was repaired; and the entire exterior was painted.5
On August 21, 1888, a "cyclone" carried away the roof of the dwelling, the copper smokestack, and portions of the galvanized iron sheets covering the tower. Damage was also done to the doors, windows, and gallery. All repairs were completed in the same year.
Also in 1888, the owner of the land near the lighthouse on Miller's Island brought a suit against the United States for damages for what he called "unauthorized occupation of the site" under the laws of riparian rights. The courts ruled against him.6
In 1897, the timbers at the base of the tower, where they rested on the stone piers, had decayed and were replaced and strengthened by iron rods and beams. The "old storage platform" was replaced and a new ladder provided. The structure was also painted. In 1899, new model fourth-order lamps were installed and minor repairs made.7
A Coast Guard engineering survey conducted on the lighthouse in April 20, 1994, stated the wooden tower "will rapidly become a serious safety hazard to servicing personnel" and the Coast Guard "shouldn't spend any more money trying to maintain it." The Fifth District "should initiate a project to demolish the tower (not framework) and replace it with a light lowering device." The engineer correctly states of the structure, "Although it is eligible [for listing on the National Register], the tower is not listed as a historic structure." However, the engineer did not understand that being determined eligible means the structure must be treated the same as one, which is listed.8
In 2000, the USCG made repairs to the structure including installing single pane Plexiglas with vents in the window openings and replacing the banister in the watch room.
9. Major Bibliographical References
"Biennial Lighthouse Inspection Report, Fifth District, Craighill Channel Range Rear Light, LLNR 8050," inspection performed by LCDR Boy and LT Walz of CEU Cleveland, April 20, 1994. Copy of report in Craighill Channel Light file, National Maritime Initiative office, National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Clifford, Candace. 1994 Inventory of Historic Light Stations. Department of Interior, National Park Service, History Division, Washington, D.C., 1994.
de Gast, Robert. The Lighthouses of the Chesapeake. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London, 1973.
Holland, F. Ross, Jr. Maryland Lighthouses of the Chesapeake Bay: An Illustrated History. Maryland Historical Trust, Crownsville, Maryland, in press.
U.S. Lighthouse Board. Annual Reports, 1870-1899. Department of Commerce and Labor, 1870-1899.
Previous documentation on file (NPS)
___ preliminary determination of individual listing (36 CFR 67) has been requested.
___ previously listed in the National Register
X previously determined eligible by the National Register
___ designated a National Historic Landmark
___ recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey # __________
___ recorded by Historic American Engineering Record #
Primary Location of Additional Data
X State Historic Preservation Office
___ Other State agency
X Federal agency
___ Local government
___ University
___ Other
Name of repository: National Archives; Library of Congress; National Maritime Initiative, National Park Service; U.S. Coast Guard Headquarter, Historian's Office, Washington, D.C.
10. Geographical Data
Acreage: Less than one acre
USGS quadrangle: Sparrows Point, MD
UTM References: Zone Easting Northing
18 379635 4342895
Boundary Description:
The boundary is conterminous with the foundation of the light station.
Boundary Justification:
The boundary completely encompasses the light station.
11. Form Prepared By
name/title: Ralph E. Eshelman, Maritime Historian
(Originally prepared for the Maryland Historical Trust as part of a multiple property nomination for Maryland Lighthouses; reformatted in May 1998 by Candace Clifford, NCSHPO consultant to the National Maritime Initiative, as part of a multiple property documentation form for U.S. Coast Guard-owned light stations; edited and revised in August 2002 by Jennifer Perunko, NCSHPO Consultant, National Maritime Initiative, National Park Service)
organization: Eshelman & Associates
date: January 27, 1996
street & number: 12178 Preston Dr.
city or town: Lusby state: MD zip code: 20657
telephone: 410-326-4877
Property Owner
name: U.S. Coast Guard, Fifth Coast Guard District
street & number: 431 Crawford Street
telephone: (757) 398-6351
city or town: Portsmouth state: VA zip code: 23705
Notes:
1 The following description and associated photographs were reviewed in August and September 2002 by a US Coast Guard Aid to Navigation team responsible for the property. A document verifying that the description and associated photographs reflect the current condition of the property is on file with the Office of Civil Engineering, US Coast Guard Headquarters, Washington, D.C.
2 The period of significance is based on the period during which the light station was "manned;" i.e., from completion of construction until automation, 1873-1937.
3 Lighthouse Board, Annual Report, 1870; and 1871, pp. 30-31; de Gast, p. 105; and Holland, Maryland Lighthouses of the Chesapeake Bay: An Illustrated History, in press, Chapter 4, page 2.
4 Lighthouse Board, Annual Report, 1870; 1871; 1873; 1874; and 1875.
5 Lighthouse Board, Annual Report, 1884.
6 Lighthouse Board, Annual Report, 1889.
7 Lighthouse Board, Annual Report, 1887; and 1899.
8 "Biennial Lighthouse Inspection Report, Fifth District, Craighill Channel Range Rear Light, LLNR 8050," inspection performed by LCDR Boy and LT Walz of CEU Cleveland, April 20, 1994. Copy of report in Craighill Channel Light file, National Maritime Initiative office, National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
NPS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-0018
CRAIGHILL CHANNEL RANGE REAR LIGHT STATION Page 1
United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form