Cape Le Ronde (Cap Ronde) Lighthouse

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Chance Brothers Lighthouse Chance Brothers Lighthouse
  • Date of lens manufacture

    1902

  • Date of lighthouse construction

    1874

  • Country

    Canada

  • Commissioning body
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  • Order of lens

    5th order

  • Fixed or revolving lens

    Revolving

  • Active/Inactive

    Inactive

  • Describe the character of light

    1874 -1902 Fixed white light, On December 1, 1902, the fixed white light, which had been the station’s characteristic since it was established, was changed to flashing white through the installation of a fifth-order lens from Chance Brothers of England. The revolving lens produced a white flash every seven-and-a-half seconds.

  • Describe the lighthouses daymarks

    The tower is a square wooden building, painted white, 28 feet high, surmounted by an iron lantern 7 ½ feet in diameter, with ten sides, and glazed with plate glass 36 x 28 inches; one pane is dark.

  • Which aspects of the lighthouse (other than the lens) were manufactured by Chance brothers
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  • Describe the history of the lighthouse

    This light-house has been erected during the present year on Cape La Ronde, on the west side of the entrance to St. Peter’s Bay, Richmond County, Cape Breton, for the purpose of guiding vessels into the Bay. It is a fixed white light elevated 92 feet above high water, and in clear weather can probably be seen a distance of 14 miles. The tower is a square wooden building, painted white, 28 feet high, surmounted by an iron lantern 7 ½ feet in diameter, with ten sides, and glazed with plate glass 36 x 28 inches; one pane is dark.

    The light is exhibited by means of two-circular burner lamps with 20-inch reflectors; one mammoth flat-wick with 16-inch reflector, and three with 18-inch reflectors. There are two spare lamps on hand, and three galvanized iron tanks have been provided. 276 gallons of oil were delivered at this station.

    The dwelling is attached to the light-house, besides which there is an oil store 12 x 16 feet. The contract was awarded to Mr. F. S. Cunningham for the sum of $1,345.

    Mr. Charles Lattimore was placed in temporary charge of the light, which was shewn on the 1st December, 1874.

    The total cost of the lighthouse, including the lighting apparatus, contract for building the lighthouse, and superintendence of construction, came to $2,822.64. The appointment of Charles Lattimore (Latimer) at an annual salary of $300 was made official in March 1875, and he would go on to serve until 1898. Each of the light’s first three keepers had lengthy careers at the station. John Mauger followed Charles Latimer in 1898, and served until 1928, when Edward Poirier was appointed keeper.

    In 1878, a twelve-foot-deep well was dug at the station and walled with stone. In 1881, wire stays were attached to the tower as it was found to vibrate considerably in strong winds due to its exposed position on the cape.

    On December 1, 1902, the fixed white light, which had been the station’s characteristic since it was established, was changed to flashing white through the installation of a fifth-order lens from Chance Brothers of England. The revolving lens produced a white flash every seven-and-a-half seconds.

    In 1909, roughly 400 feet of retaining cribwork was constructed around the cape at a cost of $1,195 to protect it from the sea. The protection work received more attention in 1911, 1912, and again in 1917.

    The original lighthouse remained standing until around 1950, when a tower on a shed was placed on the cape. The lighthouse was unstaffed in 1966. In 2020, a lighted buoy was being used to mark Cape La Ronde.

  • Current management body/ ports authority
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  • Historical preservation societies/manager/operator
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  • Is the site vulnerable to coastal erosion?
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  • Have you experienced any affects of climate change on the lighthouse?
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  • Observations on the condition of the lighthouse?
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  • Is the site open/closed to the public

    Open

  • Is the tower open/closed to the public

    Closed

  • Latitude and Longitude

    Latitude: 45.577543, Longitude: -60.890019 No light exists at this location today.

  • On-site bookable accommodation available
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  • Associated web addresses
  • Other details

    Cap Rond (Cape la Ronde) : (1874-?), Île Madame, Richmond. Formerly located on Cape La Ronde, the eastern most point on Isle Madame. The lighthouse was replaced with a light on a mast; later that light was replaced by a buoy offshore. ARLHS CAN-1367.

  • Which resources did you use to research this lighthouses?
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Former Chance Lens Since Replaced/Removed Former Chance Lens Since Replaced/Removed
  • Date of decommissioning or removal of Chance lens

    1966-2020?

  • Which lens(es) replaced the Chance lens ?

    a lighted buoy was being used to mark Cape La Ronde.


In the 1800s, Chance Brothers & Co glassworks in Smethwick began making the hi-tech lenses that lighthouses use to warn ships of dangerous locations. By 1951, over 2,500 lighthouses around the world were fitted with a Chance lens.

Unde?


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