- Ship John Shoal Light
Infobox_Lighthouse
caption = Ship John Shoal Light (USCG)
location = upperDelaware Bay near the Bombay Hook NWR
coordinates = coord|39.3053|N|75.3767|W|region:US_type:landmark
yearbuilt = 1877
automated = 1973
yeardeactivated =
foundation = Caisson
construction = Cast iron
shape = octagonal house with lantern on mansard roof
focalplane = 50 ft
elevation =
lens = Fourth orderFresnel lens
currentlens = Solar powered VRB-25 beacon
intensity =
range = 12 nm
characteristic = Flashing 6 sec. with red sectorThe Ship John Shoal Light marks the north side of the ship channel inDelaware Bay on the east coast of theUnited States , near theBombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge . Its cast iron superstructure was exhibited at the 1876Centennial Exposition inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania .History
The Ship John Shoal took its name from an incident in 1797 in which the "John", captained by a Robert Folger, ran aground while on the way from
Hamburg, Germany to Philadelphia. Passengers and cargo were unloaded safely, but the vessel was lost. (The figurehead is on exhibit in the Gibbon House Museum inGreenwich, New Jersey , the town to which the rescued passengers were taken.)cite web
title = Ship John Shoal Lighthouse
url = http://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=383
publisher = lighthousefriends.com
accessdate=2008-07-03]Completion of the original
Brandywine Shoal Light in 1850 led the Lighthouse Board to draw up plans to erect similar lights at Ship John Shoal and Cross Ledge. Both of these were intended to be of the then-new screw-pile design. During construction of theCross Ledge Light in the winter of 1856, however, ice carried away the entire structure, prompting reconsideration of the suitability of this type of foundation.cite web
title = Historic Light Station Information and Photography: Delaware
url = http://www.uscg.mil/history/weblighthouses/LHDE.asp
publisher =United States Coast Guard
accessdate=2008-07-03] In the 1870s caisson foundations became available, and in 1873 Congress appropriated funds toward the construction of a caisson light on the shoal. Wooden piles were driven and the caisson placed in 1874; however, insufficient time remained in the working season to complete the light, and a temporary structure was placed to allow display of a light from November of that year.The incomplete structure managed to withstand the winter ice, but in January the keepers abandoned their temporary refuge out of fear that it would be overturned. They were able to return in March, but by then, the permanent superstructure had been diverted to the
Southwest Ledge Light inConnecticut . An identical cast iron house was fabricated, but it was diverted to Philadephia for display at theCentennial Exhibition , where it was even occupied by a keeper tending a working light in its lantern. The house did not reach the caisson until the summer of 1877; in the meantime, a lightship was stationed alongside the unfinished structure. The base had also been surrounded with 2,000 tons ofriprap to ward off ice damage.In 1970 additional riprap was dumped around the light, and about the same time a concrete platform was built on one of the two piles of rock in order to hold tanks for which there was no room in the light itself. In 1973 the light was automated, and four years later the original
Fresnel lens was removed and replaced by a solar powered beacon, whosesolar panel s stand on the platform where the tanks once rested. The light remains an activeaid to navigation .cite web
url = http://www.nps.gov/history/maritime/light/shipjohn.htm
title = Inventory of Historic Light Stations: New Jersey Lighthouses: Ship John Shoal Light
accessdate=2008-07-03]References
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