"And the evening and the morning were the third day!"
"And God said, Let there be light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness."
Darkness to light at the Old Cape Henry lighthouse in Virginia.
Capes Henry and Charles
in Virginia at the
mouth of the Chesapeake Bay were
named after the two sons of King James of England . The first lighthouse on the Chesapeake
Bay was erected on Cape Henry in
1792 at a cost of $15,200, most likely an outrageous sum for that time. The sandstone tower is 90 feet tall and a
local man, Laban Gossigan, became the first keeper.
The Virginia Governor
offered President Washington assistance in erecting a tower at the current
site. It seems that a certain amount of
materials were placed at that location by the state and they would be available
for the construction by the Federal government.
Blowing and shifting sands had buried the building materials and they
had to be replaced. The contract to
build the tower was signed by Alexander Hamilton and awarded to an New
York brick layer, John McComb, Jr.During the Civil War the
Confederates destroyed the lantern, only to be replaced in 1863. A military guard was placed at the light
until the end of the war.
By 1872 cracks appeared in the walls and the
Lighthouse Board recommended it be replaced. By 1879 construction on the new
tower had begun.The Lighthouse Board
ordered the replacement of the tower and the new one was completed in 1881 at a
cost of $125,000. Like the Cape Charles
light, this southern beacon was fitted with a huge first order Fresnel lens. Not just a bay light, but an offshore
sentinel for all shipping entering the bay and as such required the largest of
lights. In 1929, this beacon became the
first radio-distance-finding station.
The light flashes the dot-dot-dash pattern of the letter “U” at 80,000
candlepower.
This was an early morning after a much earlier ride from Chestertown, Maryland south to the entrance of the Chesapeake Bay at Virginia Beach, Virginia. The three hour ride was totally worth it, for the ensuing sunrise was spectacular. Such trips are planned, but when one arrives at the shot site....the result is in God's hands and one takes what one is given. In this case I got lucky!
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