Caldey Island Lighthouse: Difference between revisions
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'''Caldey Lighthouse''' is located on the south end of [[Caldey Island]], three miles off the south [[Pembrokeshire]] coastline, a small island inhabited by a Cistercian monastery. | '''Caldey Lighthouse''' is located on the south end of [[Caldey Island]], three miles off the south [[Pembrokeshire]] coastline, a small island inhabited by a Cistercian monastery. |
Latest revision as of 18:00, 28 July 2023
Caldey Island Lighthouse | |||
Caldey Island | |||
Caldey Island Lighthouse in 2007 | |||
Location | |||
Grid reference: | SS14329594 | ||
Location: | 51°37’54"N, 4°41’3"W | ||
Characteristics | |||
Height: | 52 feet | ||
Tower shape: | massive cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern | ||
Tower marking: | white tower and lantern | ||
Light: | Fl (3) WR 20s. | ||
Intensity: | 5,010 candela | ||
Focal height: | 213 feet | ||
Range: | 13 nautical miles | ||
History | |||
Built 1829 | |||
Information | |||
Owned by: | Trinity House |
Caldey Lighthouse is located on the south end of Caldey Island, three miles off the south Pembrokeshire coastline, a small island inhabited by a Cistercian monastery.
The ighthouse is owned and operated by Trinity House.[1][2]
Construction and dimensions
An application to build the lighthouse was made in March 1827 on behalf of traders in Carmarthen Bay. It was commissioned by Trinity House and built by Joseph Nelson at a cost of £4,460. The light was first lit in 1829.
The Lighthouse is a squat, round, brick-lined limestone tower of 56 feet, with walls three feet thick at the base and two feet six inches at the top. The light stands 210 feet above high-water mark. It acts in conjunction with the Lundy North lighthouse to the south, and has a range of 13 nautical miles. The former oil store for the lighthouse is a listed structure.[3]
Lantern and lamp
The present lantern was fitted around the middle of the nineteenth century and consisted of 20 Argand lamps and reflectors, subsequently replaced by a helical lantern later in the nineteenth century.
The Lighthouse was converted to automatic operations in 1929. It was the last Trinity House lighthouse to be powered by gas, eventually being converted to electricity in 1997.
The light was intended to help coastal traffic trading limestone and coal to local ports but the light also helped long-distance and North American traffic identify the Bristol Channel and avoid confusion with the English Channel.
Keeper's cottages
The lighthouse keepers' cottages, that flank the Lighthouse, are two-storey, with hipped roofs, octagonal chimneys, and a one-storey linking corridor. This forms a ‘U’-shape, with the Lighthouse at the centre of the south side, and enclosed gardens to the north. The cottages were built around 1868-70 by T. C. Harvey, C.E.
In art
Cardiff Central Library holds a wash drawing by Charles Norris showing the Lighthouse under construction.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Caldey Island Lighthouse) |
References
- ↑ Caldey Island Lighthouse: Trinity House
- ↑ Rowlett, Russ: Lighthouses of Wales – The Lighthouse Directory (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
- ↑ Site details: Former oil store at Caldey Lighthouse (RCAHMW)
- Hague, D. B., Lighthouses of Wales Their Architecture and Archaeology (Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales, 1994), ISBN 1-871184-08-8
- Lloyd, T., Orbach, J., Scourfield, R., The Buildings of Wales: Pembrokeshire (Yale University Press, 2004), ISBN 0-300-10178-3.
Lighthouses of Trinity House |
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Great Britain: |
Channel Islands and Gibraltar: Casquets • Europa Point • Les Hanois • Sark |