- Parris Island Range Lights
Infobox_Lighthouse
caption =
location = Parris Island,Beaufort County, South Carolina
coordinates = coord|32|18|46|N|80|40|39|W|type:landmarkcite web|url=http://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=868|title=Parris Island, SC|access date=2008-07-18|work= The Lighthouses|publisher=Lighthousefriends.com]
yearbuilt = 1881
yearlit = 1881
automated =
yeardeactivated = 1912
foundation =
construction = Wooden - Front
Metalskeletal tower - Rear
shape =
marking =
height = convert|45|ft|m|0 - Front
convert|132|ft|m|0 - Rear
elevation =convert|120|ft|m|0 - Rear
lens = Steamer lens (Rear)
currentlens =
intensity =
range =
characteristic =
admiralty =
NGA =
ARLHS =The Parris Island Range Lights were
range light s on the southern end of Parris Island in Beaufort County,South Carolina . The Parris Range Lights were first lit in 1881. They were deactivated in 1912. Only the lens house for the Rear Light remains, which is the oldest building at Parris Island.Clary, Margie Willis, "The Beacons of South Carolina", Sandlapper Publishing Co., Inc., Orangeburg, SC, 2005, pp. 105-106, ISBN 0-87844-176-X.]Parris Island is on
Port Royal Sound south ofPort Royal, South Carolina . It is best known as the home of theMarine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island . The range lights on the Recruit Depot south of the airfield.Range Lights
In 1878, the U.S. Congress authorized range lights on Parris Island. These were to be used with the Hilton Head Range Lights to guide ships coming into Port Royal Sound.
The Front Range Light was a convert|45|ft|m|0 tall, wooden tower with square cross section and four legs. The watch room beneath the lantern was enclosed. To compensate for any shifts in the channel, the front light could be moved.
The front light suffered from erosion and storm damage. Its foundation was replaced in 1892. In 1900 and 1902 the U.S. Lighthouse Board's Annual Report indicated that it would have to be moved back. It is possible that the front light was moved back prior to deactivation.
The Rear Light was a convert|132|ft|m|0 tall triangular, iron
skeletal tower , manufactured by the Cooper Manufacturing ofMount Vernon, Ohio . John Michael Doyle, who was an employee of the manufacturer, supervised the erection of the tower on a concrete foundation. Doyle later supervised the erection of the shorter Bloody Point Rear Range Light. He also became the first light keeper at Bloody Point. A brick lamp house, which was also called a lens house, was built at the base of the tower to house the lamp during the day. At night, the locomotive or steamer lamp with parabolic reflector was raised on rails to a height of convert|120|ft|m|0. The Parris Island Range Lights were lit on 1881. Burn, Billie, "An Island Named Daufuskie", The Reprint Company, Inc., Spartanburg, SC, 1991, pp. 187-203, ISBN 0-87152-454-6.]A wooden walkway was built to connect the lights. The keeper's house was built about midway between the front and rear light.
References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.