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 >Catalog Index >2003 >Roanoke River North Carolina Ornament


Buy a full-size Harbour Lights and send in your voucher by December 1, 2005 for a chance to win one of 10 gold-plated pewter replicas. DETAILS

2003
By State:
Alabama
  Sand Island 297
California
  East Brother 542
  Fort Point 541
  Point Reyes 299
Connecticut
  Stratford Point 717
Florida
  Anclote Key 290
  Dry Tortugas 287
  Hillsboro Inlet OE 444
  Mayport 281
  Sand Key 288
  St. Joseph Point 289
Hawaii
  Diamond Head OE 446
Maryland
  Cove Point 292
Massachusetts
  Boston Harbor Lens 665
  Nauset Beach OE 448
Michigan
  St. Clair Channel 660
Minnesota
  Two Harbors 293
New Jersey
  Brandywine Shoal 295
New York
  Fire Island OE 448
North Carolina
  Bodie Island OE 447
  Chicamacomico LSS 286
  Roanoke River 548
Oregon
  Yaquina Head OE 443
Rhode Island
  SE Block Move 662
South Carolina
  Georgetown 291
Texas
  Half Moon Reef 296
Washington
  Alki Point 294
Wisconsin
  Kenosha 298

Canada
  West Point 285
Egypt
  Pharos  659
Greece
  Colossus 661

USCG Ships
  LS Nantucket 115

Roanoke River North Carolina
Harbour Lights #548
2003-2004 Collectors Society Exclusive Ornament
RETIRED

One of the great shipping centers of the 19th century was Plymouth, North Carolina and officials knew that a lighted beacon was needed at the entrance to the Roanoke River. So in 1835, the Lightship “MM” was placed in the Albemarle Sound to shine its oil-illuminated light from a mast 42 feet above water level. The warning beacon could be spotted eleven to fifteen miles away and its fog bell, (and later its foghorn) could be heard during periods of low visibility.

But the Civil War intervened. With the threat of Union takeover, the Confederate troops moved the Lightship upstream to thwart navigational efforts. When threat of the “USS Ram Albemarle” loomed, the soldiers sank the lightship and several other crafts in the river to serve as a blockade against the deep-water vessel.

After the Civil War ended, plans began for a more permanent river marker. The Lighthouse Board commissioned the building of a screwpile lighthouse, which was completed in 1866. But the lighthouse did not survive long before it succumbed to fire. Its replacement was dumped into the ocean when heavy ice flows severed two of the iron pilings.

By 1887, workers had re-built the lighthouse, placing it again on pilings that were screwed into the muddy ocean floor. The fixed white fourth order Fresnel lens remained in service until it was decommissioned in the 1940s. For more than a decade after that, the lighthouse was dark, hosting only Sea Scout troop meetings and clandestine card games. 

Then in 1955 a maritime salvager, Emmett Wiggins, loaded the lighthouse onto a barge and moved it inland near Edenton, where it remains to this day. Wiggins lived in the sentinel and occasionally lighted the lens, but now the beacon is privately owned and no longer in operation.

At one time, the Washington County Historical Society hoped to acquire the structure and move it to Plymouth to serve as a Maritime Museum, but that plan was scrapped when the owner died, just before signing over the deed. As an alternative, the group initiated a plan for a replica of the light station to be re-built downtown. The reconstruction of the Roanoke River Light will be greatly enhanced by the recent discovery of the original architectural plans recovered from archives by the Outer Banks Lighthouse Society.

Miraculously, salvagers discovered the long-scuttled Lightship “MM” in 47 feet of water. Plans are being made to raise the lightship and put it on exhibit near the lighthouse replica. With over $500,000 in federal funding promised to this project, residents of Plymouth hope to soon see their nautical heritage resurrected and open to the public.

 

HL# Name MSRP Introduced Retired Edition

HL548

Roanoke River NC $15 Apr 03 May 04 TBD

 

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