Ballycotton Lighthouse
Ballycotton Lighthouse | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | X01146367 |
Location: | 51°49’32"N, 7°59’3"W |
Characteristics | |
Height: | 50 feet |
Tower shape: | cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern |
Tower marking: | black tower |
Light: | Fl WR 10s. |
Focal height: | 196 feet |
Range: | white: 21 nautical miles red: 17 nautical miles |
History | |
Built 1851 | |
Information | |
Owned by: | Commissioners of Irish Lights |
Ballycotton Lighthouse stands on Ballycotton Island, a small island girt with cliffs about a mile from the village.
The lighthouse was commissioned in 1851, and when it was first built the keeper and his family lived on the island: their children rowed to school, weather permitting. By 1899 the four keepers were housed in the town with keepers rotating duty at the lighthouse.[1]
In 1975 the light was converted to electricity and it was automated on 28 March 1992 when the lighthouse keepers were withdrawn.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Ballycotton Lighthouse) |
References
- ↑ "Lighthouses - Ballycotton Lighthouse". Commissioners of Irish Lights. http://www.irishlights.ie/tourism/our-lighthouses/ballycotton.aspx.
- Rowlett, Russ: Lighthouses of Southwestern Ireland (Munster) – The Lighthouse Directory (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)