[site/top_page_harbour_lights.htm]

H

arbour Lights Lighthouses

HarbourLights.com

 >Catalog Index >2002 >Highland Massachusetts OE


2002 by State:

California
  Battery Point 278
Florida
  Old St. Augustine 275
  St. Augustine ORN 715
Georgia
  Tybee ORN 715
Hawaii
  Kilauea OE 437
Indiana
  Old Mich. City ORN 715
Maine
  Boon Island 273
  Cape Elizabeth ORN 715
  Hendricks Head 274
Maryland
  Drum Point OE 440
  Turkey Point 279
Massachusetts
  Clark's Point 284
  Highland OE 439
  Minot's Ledge SE 646
  Monomoy Point 269
Michigan
  Rock of Ages 271
Missouri
  Mark Twain 654
New Jersey
  Absecon 277
  Tuckers Island 276
New York
  Coney Island ORN 540
  Crossover Island 714
  Ft Tompkins Spring 652
  Ft Tompkins Summer 655
  Ft Tompkins Fall 656
  Ft Tompkins Winter 657
  Race Rock 272
  Statue Liberty OE 438
North Carolina
  Bald Head OE 442
  Cape Hatteras OE 401R
  Cape Lookout OE 441
  Hatteras Beacon 537
  Roanoke River 538
Rhode Island
  Bullock Point 280
South Carolina
  Cape Romain 283
Virginia
  Wolf Trap 282

Fresnel Lenses
  Three & One Half 650
  Third Order Beehive 651
  Fourth Order 658

USCG Ships
  Utility Boat 112
  Life Boat 44'  113 Rev
  Rigid Hull  114

 

Highland Massachusetts
Harbour Lights #439

A bright beacon pierces through the misty fog, searing a path through the thick vapor. A disoriented captain spots the fleeting, yet intense signal. He is still thirty miles from the eastern coast of Cape Cod, but with his position affirmed, he sighs with relief. Although his maritime maps might tell him that he just spotted the Cape Cod Light, he affectionately calls her "Highland." 

As only the seventh light constructed by the U.S. Government, Highland is rich in historic significance and nautical heritage. With the authority of George Washington , the Government approached citizen Isaac Small about purchasing a plot of land from him, ten acres to be exact. After selecting a strategic spot atop the 120-foot tall cliff, workers built a wooden sentinel, placing it 500 feet back from the edge. The Lightkeeper then set the lanterns ablaze and illuminated the skies in the late 1790’s .

But the wood in first lighthouse did not fare well in the erosive, salty air. The structure was deemed unsafe and replaced by a second tower in 1831 . That brick structure, not constructed properly, was dismantled twenty-five years later. The ensuing sentinel was built right. It was built to last. It would endure.

Highland Lighthouse, as we know it now, was first lit in 1857 , and is still operational to this day. Although the pounding oceans carved away 400 feet of the cliffs over the last century, Highland never faltered. Her only darkened time came when preservationists moved the lighthouse further inland in a pre-emptive strike against tragic loss.

Now, future generations will be able to appreciate her Queen Ann-style house, her charming tower, and her attached walkway. The first-order Fresnel lens, largely destroyed during removal, is displayed in the museum. The present optic, a VRB-25, shines from a focal plane of 183 feet above sea level. When it's not visible because of weather or fog, a signal can be heard by ships as it sends out a radio beacon every six minutes.

Highland Lighthouse preserves both history and lives. Just as it’s done for the last 200 or more years... just as it will for years to come. Pay her a visit. She is waiting to share her stories with you. 

Highland Lighthouse is an active aid to navigation, its Keepers Quarters are used as a museum and is owned by National Park Service. 
 

HL# Name MSRP Introduced Retired Edition

439

Highland MA $50 Jan 02   Open

 

| Top | Home | Archives | Copyright | Contacts |