Portland Head Lighthouse

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Buffalo Main Light

Public Affairs Photo of Buffalo Main Light - Flickr (Some rights reserved)

(USCG)
Station Established: 1818; rebuilt 1833
Year Current Tower(s) First Lit: 1833
Operational: NO
Automated: NO
Deactivated: 1914
Foundation Materials: STONE MOLEHEAD
Construction Materials: LIMESTONE/CAST IRON
Tower Shape: OCTAGONAL
Height: 60-feet
Markings/Pattern: NATURAL
Characteristics:
Relationship to Other Structure: SEPARATE
Original Lens: THIRD ORDER, FRESNEL 1857
Foghorn: None

Historical Information:

(Wikipedia)
The lighthouse was established and lit in 1833 and was deactivated in 1914. The foundation material was stone molehead and the lighthouse was constructed out of limestone and cast iron. The shape of the tower was octagonal and was 60 feet (18 m) high. The lens installed in 1857 was a third order Fresnel lens. The lens was later removed to the Buffalo History Museum.

This 60-foot-tall, octagonal limestone structure is the oldest still standing in its original location in the city of Buffalo. It replaced the original 1818 light on this site along the Lake Erie shore at the mouth of the Buffalo River. Presently, it is part of an outdoor museum located on the grounds of the United States Coast Guard Station.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.

In 2010, the Coast Guard announced it would relinquish 4.6 acres (1.9 ha) of its 31 acres (13 ha) on the point and Congressman Brian Higgins obtained over $6 million to reconfigure the Coast Guard station to allow public access to the lighthouse. In April 2011, Erie Canal Harbor Development Corporation approved a grant of $170,700 to repair and restore the lighthouse in anticipation of public tours. The work was completed in August 2011.

Photos taken by Adam Moss - Flickr (Some rights reserved)

Content Courtesy of the US Coast Guard Historian's Office And Wikipedia