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 >Catalog Index >2004 >Ocracoke North Carolina OE


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2004 By State
California
  East Brother 542
  Golden Gate 663G
  Golden Gate 663
  LS RELIEF 672
Delaware
  Indian River LSS 300
  Mispillion 302
Florida
  Northwest Passage 308
  Old St. Augustine 671
Maine
  Little River 305
Maryland
  Craighill Rear Range 309
  Hooper Strait OE 461
Massachusetts
  Race Point 306
Michigan
  Alpena 316
  Grand Haven OE 450
  Grand Traverse OE 451
  Ludington Pier 304
  Presque Isle 313
New Jersey
  Hereford Inlet Fall 313
  Sea Girt OE 459
New York
  Rondout II 301
North Carolina
  Oak Island OE 445
  Ocracoke OE 456

Oregon
  Heceta Head OE 455
Rhode Island
  Castle Hill OE 453
Texas
  Port Isabel OE 457
Virginia
  Cape Henry OE 454
Washington
  Cape Flattery 303
Wisconsin
  Bailey's Harbor Range 674
  Cana Island OE 460
  Raspberry Island 307

Bermuda
  St. David's 311
China
  Mahota Pagoda 310

Fresnel Lens
  Fourth Order 673
  Hereford ORN
  Point Vicente ORN
  Yorktown ORN
  Boston Harbor ORN

USCG Ships
  Tender George Cobb 116
  Barque Eagle 117

Ocracoke North Carolina
Harbour Lights #456
Lighted

The Ocracoke Lighthouse is the oldest active lighthouse in North Carolina and the second oldest operating lighthouse in the nation. The original light, built in 1803 on Shell Castle Island, was struck by lightening five years later, and burned to the ground. A new site was chosen, the fishing village of Ocracoke in the Pamlico Sound. During the early 1700’s Ocracoke Island was the home of the notorious Blackbeard the Pirate, where he was eventually beheaded. Legend says that his ghost still haunts the area!

In 1823, at a cost of $11,360 the tower, including a one story, one bedroom light keeper’s house was constructed. A second story was added onto the house in 1897 and another section was added in 1929. The double keepers’ quarters still stand on the site today, along with a generator house, originally used for storing the whale oil.

Architecturally, the lantern room is slightly off-center and one side of the 75-foot tower is steeper than the other. The lanterns were first fueled by whale oil, then kerosene and finally, electricity. In 1854 the original reflector system was replaced with a Fourth Order Fresnel Lens. The present light is equal to 8,000 candlepower and casts a stationary beam that can be seen 14 miles at sea. Early in the Civil War, the Ocracoke Lighthouse was controlled first by the Confederate troops, who removed the lens from the lamp, and then by the Union troops, who replaced it.

In 1868, the brick tower was cemented and covered with a coat of whitewash. The whitewash was made of one-half bushel of unslaked lime with boiling water, a peck of salt, one-half pound of powdered Spanish whiting (fish), three pounds of ground rice put in boiling water and a pound of glue. Keepers had to apply the thick mixture from boiling vats as quickly as possible.

For more information about visiting this magnificent beacon contact the National Park Service Visitor Center on Ocracoke Island at (252) 928-4531. Ocracoke Light remains among the oldest lighthouses still active on the southern coast. Plan a trip to this unique sentinel today!
 

HL# Name MSRP Introduced Retired Edition

456

Ocracoke NC $55 6/04   Open

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