Bardsey Lighthouse

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Bardsey Lighthouse
Goleudy Enlli

Caernarfonshire

Bardsey Island

Bardsey Lighthouse in 2008
Location
Grid reference: SH111205
Location: 52°44’60"N, 4°47’59"W
Characteristics
Height: 100 feet
Tower shape: square frustum tower
with balcony and lantern
Tower marking: Tower: white and red
horizontal bands,
white lantern
Light: Fl R 10s.
Intensity: 52,277 candela
Focal height: 128 feet
Range: 18 nautical miles
Light source: solar power
Admiralty No.: A5234
History
Built 1821
Information
Owned by: Bardsey Island Trust

Bardsey Lighthouse stands on the southerly headland of Bardsey Island, off the Lleyn Peninsula in Caernarfonshire, and guides vessels passing through the Irish Sea.

History

Application for a light here was first made in 1816 by Lt. Thomas Evans R.N., but several other applications made in 1820 finally resulted in the building of the tower by Trinity House in 1821 at a cost of £5,470 12s 6d plus a further £2,950 16s 7d for the lantern[1]

Joseph Nelson was the engineer and builder, but the heavy weathered string-course near the base and the blocked and hooded directional-light window show the influence of Daniel Alexander, who succeeded Samuel Wyatt as consulting engineer[2] to Trinity House, and under whom Nelson served.[1] Joseph Nelson is associated with the design of at least fifteen lighthouses, mostly in the Bristol Channel.[1]

In 1987 the lighthouse was converted to automatic operation and up until 1995 was monitored from the Trinity House area control station at Holyhead. It is now monitored from the Trinity House depot at Harwich,[3] with a local part-time attendant carrying out routine maintenance.[1]

Architecture

The lighthouse is built of ashlar limestone and is unplastered inside and out, but painted in red and white bands on the outside.[1] The lighthouse tower is 30 m (98 ft) high and is unusual amongst Trinity House towers of this period in being square in plan (Coquet Lighthouse, off Northumberland, is also square). Unlike many other lighthouses, Bardsey retains its original gallery railings, which are of iron and bellied (which is to say curved out in width at their crowns) towards the top.[1] Other examples include Salt Island Lighthouse, at Holyhead, designed by John Rennie in the same year. Fortunately, the present lantern, fitted in 1856, did not require the removal of the original railings.[1]

The plinth of the tower is 13 feet high and elaborately enriched, and at ground level it forms a square of 25 feet reducing to 20 feet at the top of the plinth and 15 feet at the top of the tower below the crowning cornice, which juts out in a square of 18 feet.[1] The walls are 4 feet thick at the base reducing to under 3 feet at the top.[1]

Originally, the light comprised reflectors but changed to a dioptric (refracting) mechanism in 1838; the appearance of the original lantern is not known. The present lantern of 1856 is a 14-foot wide chamfered octagon and the light remained fixed, instead of revolving. The present revolving apparatus was installed in 1873 and gives a group of five flashes, originally driven by a vapourizing oil-lamp, but replaced by electric in 1973.[1]

The lighthouse is unusual in lacking any sort of harbour or quay facilities.[1] As it is on an established migratory route, the tower has many bird casualties and The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and Trinity House have tried to help the problem by providing perches on the lantern top and flood-lighting the tower, but this does not seem to have helped.[1]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Bardsey Lighthouse)

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 Douglas Bland Hague, Lighthouses of Wales Their Architecture and Archaeology, 1994, Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales, Aberystwyth, 102 pages, ISBN 1-871184-08-8
  2. Ken Trethewey. "Daniel Alexander - Pharology". pharology.eu. Archived from the original on 22 March 2016. http://web.archive.org/web/20160322043954/http://pharology.eu/DanielAlexander.html. 
  3. Trinity House : Bardsey Lighthouse Retrieved 16 August 2009
Lighthouses of Trinity House

Great Britain:
Anvil PointBamburghBardseyBeachy HeadBerry HeadBishop RockBull PointCaldey IslandCoquetCromerCrow PointDungenessEddystoneFarneFlamboroughFlatholmGodrevyHartland PointHilbre IslandHolyheadHurst PointGuile Point EastHeugh HillLizardLongshipsLongstoneLowestoftLundy NorthLundy SouthLynmouth ForelandMonkstoneMumblesNab TowerNash PointNeedlesNorth ForelandPendeenPeninnisPoint LynasPortland BillRound IslandRoyal SovereignSkerriesSkokholmSmallsSouth BishopSouth StackSouthwoldSt Anthony'sSt BeesSt Tudwal'sSt Anns HeadSt CatherinesStart PointStrumble HeadTater DuTrevose HeadTrwyn DuWhitbyWolf Rock

Channel Islands and Gibraltar:

CasquetsEuropa PointLes HanoisSark