Lizard Lighthouse

The Lizard Lighthouse is a lighthouse at Lizard Point, Cornwall, England, built to guide vessels passing through the English Channel. It was often the welcoming beacon to persons returning to England, where on a clear night, the reflected light could be seen 100 mi (160 km) away.[2][3]

Lizard Lighthouse
Lizard Lighthouse
Cornwall
LocationLizard Point, Cornwall, England
Coordinates49°57′37″N 5°12′8″W
Year first constructed1619 (first)
Year first lit1751 (current)
Automated1998
Deactivated1903 (West tower)
Constructionstone tower
Tower shapetwin octagonal towers with balcony and lantern connected by keeper's quarter
Markings / patternwhite tower and lantern
Tower height19 m (62 ft)
Focal height70 m (230 ft)
Current lens2nd order Catadioptric four-panel rotating lens
Intensity800,000 candela
Range26 nmi (48 km)
CharacteristicFl W 3s.
Admiralty numberA0060
NGA number0064
ARLHS numberENG 068
Managing agentTrinity House[1]
HeritageGrade II listed building 

History

A light was first exhibited here in 1619,[4] built thanks to the efforts of Sir Christopher Dimaline but it was extinguished and the tower demolished in 1630 because of difficulties in raising funds for its operation and maintenance.

The current lighthouse, consisting of two towers with cottages between them, was built in 1751 by the landowner Thomas Fonnereau; each tower was topped by a coal-fired brazier.[5] Trinity House took responsibility for the installation in 1771. In 1812 the coal burners on each tower were replaced with Argand lamps and reflectors.[6] In each tower a fixed arrangement of nineteen lamps and reflectors was installed. In 1873 the original lamps and reflectors were still in use.[7] That year, because of the number of wrecks still occurring around the Point, the decision was taken to upgrade the lights and provide a fog signal.[8]

Therefore, in 1874, the site was significantly changed by the building of an engine room to provide electric power, not only for the lights but also for a fog siren. The engine room was equipped with three 10 hp caloric engines by A & F Brown of New York,[9] driving six Siemens dynamo-electric machines, which in turn powered an arc lamp in each tower;[5] (caloric engines were used because there was no nearby source of fresh water for steam power).[8] At the same time a pair of medium-sized (third-order) fixed catadioptric optics were installed, one on each tower, designed by John Hopkinson of Chance Brothers.[10] The siren was in use from January 1878; it sounded (one blast every five minutes)[11] through a 15-foot (4.6 m) horizontal horn which was installed on the roof of the engine house and could be moved depending on the prevailing wind direction.[9] The new electric lights were first lit on 29 March that same year. In 1885 the Siemens dynamos were replaced by a pair of more powerful de Méritens magneto-electric generators.

In 1903 there were further changes when a large four-panel rotating optic, manufactured by Chance Brothers, was installed in the eastern tower and both the lantern and light on the western tower were removed (it was announced that this 'new revolving light of very great power' would be 'visible at a distance of between 40 and 50 miles').[12] In 1908 a new pair of sirens were installed (sounding out to sea through twin 'trumpets' on the roof of the engine house) and a trio of Hornsby oil engines replaced the caloric engines .[9] Soon afterwards an underwater bell was set up two miles south of the Lizard, operated by an electric striker controlled from the lighthouse via a submarine cable.

A carbon arc lamp continued to provide the light source until it was superseded in 1926 by an electric filament lamp,[13] which enabled a reduction in the number of personnel at the lighthouse from five to three.[14] The new lighting system, designed and installed by the General Electric Company, functioned automatically: a lamp changer was provided which would switch to a reserve electric or emergency acetylene lamp in the event of a bulb or power failure; and an automatic winding device was fitted to the clockwork mechanism that rotated the lenses.[15] Transformers were introduced in the engine room to allow the 40-year-old magnetos to remain in use, along with the Hornsby engines.

The engines and magneto generators continued in daily use until 1950, when the lighthouse was connected to mains electricity. In that year four Gardner diesel engines were installed, three to run compressors for the fog signal, the other linked to a pair of generators for use in the event of a mains power failure.[9] In March 1954 the lighthouse keeper and assistants were able to put out a fire that was started in the exhaust pits of the engines providing the electric power.[16]

In 1998, Lizard Lighthouse was automated and demanned.[5] The fog horn was decommissioned in 1998 and replaced with an automatic electronic fog signal; at the time it was the last compressed-air fog signal still in use in the United Kingdom. The machinery is still in place and it is still occasionally sounded to mark special occasions.[17] The rotating optic continues in use to this day.[9]

Lighthouse Heritage Centre

Opened in 2009 with a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund,[18] the Lizard Lighthouse Heritage Centre is located in the lighthouse engine room, which still features some of the original engines. Interactive exhibits and displays focus on the history of the lighthouse, the life of a lighthouse keeper, and the role of lighthouses in sea safety. Currently, the buildings around the site are being used as holiday cottages.[19]

Generator

One of the lighthouse's former generators is now in the collection of Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum;[20] it carries a plate marked:[20]

L'Electricite magneto - Electrique No.21b. A de meritens, 44 Rue Bournalt Paris. Dte S.G.D.G. on France at L'Etranger

The other is still in situ in the engine house.[9]

See also

References

  1. Lizard Lighthouse The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved 22 April 2016
  2. "The New Lizard Light". The Picton Post (348). New South Wales, Australia. 18 January 1911. p. 7. Retrieved 6 July 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  3. "LIGHTS THAT SAVE LIVES". Blyth Agriculturist. XV (859). South Australia. 31 July 1925. p. 5. Retrieved 6 July 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  4. Pearce, Cathryn (2010). Cornish Wrecking, 1700-1860: Reality and Popular Myth. Boydell & Brewer. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-84383-555-4.
  5. "Lizard Lighthouse". Trinity House. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  6. Historic England. "The Lighthouse, The Lizard (1328497)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  7. Elliot, George H. (1875). European Light-House Systems. London: Lockwood & co. pp. 139–140. Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  8. Douglass, James Nicholas (13 June 1879). "Report from the Select Committee on Lighting by Electricity". Reports from Committees (House of Commons). 11: 54–61.
  9. Renton, Alan (2001). Lost Sounds: The Story of Coast Fog Signals. Caithness, Scotland: Whittles.
  10. Chance, James Frederick (1902). The Lighthouse Work of Sir James Chance, Baronet (PDF). London: Smith, Elder & co. p. 152. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
  11. "Fog Signals". Parliamentary Papers, volume LXIV. 23 (337): 2–4. 1 August 1879.
  12. Engineering journal, quoted by Renton (2001).
  13. Plaque on magneto machine
  14. 'Lighthouses' in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 edition, volume 14.
  15. "Electricity". Electricity: A Practical Trade Journal. 41: 977. 23 December 1927.
  16. "Keepers Save Fire-Menaced Lizard Light". The West Australian. 70 (21, 112). Western Australia. 22 March 1954. p. 8. Retrieved 6 July 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  17. "Lizard Lighthouse". Worldwide Lighthouses. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  18. "Lighthouses". Trinityhouse.co.uk. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  19. "Bishop Rock".
  20. Birmingham Museums Trust accession record 1954S00295
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