Sunday, June 28, 2009

The 28Th day of the sixth month of the year of the OP



CONCORD POINT LIGHTHOUSE
Chesapeake Bay
Havre de Grace, Maryland

The lighthouse guarding the entrance to the Susquehanna River has for years been known as the Concord Point light, located on a point of land known since the seventeenth century as “Conquered Point”. The lighthouse is restored in a small park bordering the Bay, and offers passers by a place to rest and perhaps dream of a life long gone.

The government decided to build a light at this location and a small plot was purchased. The 39-foot tower was built for $3,500 by John Donohoo in 1827. Since its inception, this lighthouse has had five different lights installed. The first lamps were a series of nine with 16-inch reflectors. A steamer’s lens was next and sometime in the 1870’s s sixth-order Fresnel was installed. In 1892 a fifth-order lens was placed in the tower and finally a fixed green light has been shown.

A hero of the War of 1812, John O’Neill, who defended Havre de Grace against the British fleet in 1813 was named the lighthouse keeper. His direct descendants held this position until 1920 when the light was automated.

http://www.hdgtourism.com/do_museums.html

Exit left from Md. Route 40 in Havre de Grace onto Superior St. Take a right on North Union Street and follow it until it becomes South Union and then look for a left turn on Commerce St. Commerce Street leads the traveler to the town park where the lighthouse overlooks the confluence of the Susquehanna River and Chesapeake Bay.

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