Deal Island Lighthouse

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Chance Brothers Lighthouse Chance Brothers Lighthouse
  • Date of lens manufacture
    ---
  • Date of lighthouse construction

    1848

  • Country

    Australia

  • Commissioning body

    New South Wales, Victorian and Tasmanian Governments

  • Order of lens

    1st order

  • Fixed or revolving lens

    Fixed

  • Active/Inactive

    Inactive

  • Describe the character of light

    Fl (3) W 20s.[1]

  • Describe the lighthouses daymarks

    White stone tower and lantern

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

    The Deal Island Lighthouse was Australia’s highest lighthouse at elevation of 305 metres, unfortunately is starting to deteriorate as no maintenance has been carried out since it was deactivated in 1992.

    The Deal Island Lighthouse in Bass Strait was first turned on in 1848. It was built jointly by the New South Wales, Victorian and Tasmanian Governments. It is not only the highest light in Australia, but also in the Southern Hemisphere. Some people consider this to be a Victorian Lighthouse rather than Tasmanian as adjustments in the border has placed the island in either state.

    The tower is constructed of rubble using local granite. Most other materials had to be brought to the island and hauled up lighthouse site 3 kilometres from the landing site and 280 metres above sea level.

    The list of materials included 5,000 bricks, 12,000 shingles, eighty rafters, 2,500 bushels of limestone, 200 joists of various lengths and great quantities of battens, boards, planks and other goods.

    Because of the location of the tower the project was quite labour intensive. The construction crew was made up of Charles Watson (officer in charge), an overseer, a medical dispenser, two carpenters, four masons, two quarrymen, one blacksmith, and nineteen labourers. Ten bullocks were also used on this project.

    The high elevation of the light caused visibility problems with low cloud 40% of the time, however the keepers of the day at the Wilsons Promontory Lighthouse (75 kilometres to the north) reported seeing the Deal island light on an average of 6 nights in 10.

    The original revolving catoptric light apparatus was replaced by a fixed catadioptric lens having an acetylene operated flashing light source in 1921.

    This was further upgraded in 1937 with the installation of a first order revolving lens using a 1,000 watt electric lamp as the light source, taking power from an engine driven generating plant installed near the tower.

    The original cottages were arranged with the headkeeper’s cottage being about 3 kilometres from the lighthouse and the assistant keepers’ cottages being adjacent to the tower.

    Later the assistant keeper was relocated to a cottages built halfway between the tower and the headkeeper’s cottage. This cottage has since been demolished and the original cottages are now ruins.

    Eventually new cottages were located within the old headkeeper’s compound, one being built in 1936 and two in the in 1960s. One of the sixties houses was demolished by AMSA in the 1980s.

    Originally stores and personnel had to be landed at the land-locked East Cove facing Murray Pass, the comparatively narrow passage between Deal and the other islands in the Kent Group.

    A series of horse driven whims and a bullock dray were used to haul the stores from the jetty up to the high ground above the cove and then the rest of the distance to the lighthouse.

    Later a four wheel drive vehicle was used to bring up the stores, then helicopters from the 1980s until the lights closure. Until 1926, when a wireless telephone was installed, the only way of communicating with the outside world was by flagging down a passing ship.

    The keepers had to be self-sufficient growing their own vegetables and keeping their own animals to provide fresh food to supplement their stores. Apart from normal duties, the lightkeepers had other situations to contend with. There have been major bush fires on Deal in 1919, 1950, 1986 and the last being in 1995. The assistant keepers cottage was burnt out in the 1919 fire and another abandoned cottage was destroyed in the 1950 fire. There was also an RAAF air crash on the Island during World War II when four lives were lost.

    A few years earlier (prior to deactivation) some “tupperware” lights were put on nearby North East and South West islands to supplement the Deal Light AMSA stated at the time, not to replace it.

    However, the light on Deal Island was turned off for the last time on 2 March 1992.

    The lighthouse was deactivated & station was then destaffed in July 1992 using helicopters and the ship “Flinders Trader”. An entry in the log book at the Museum on the island shows Max and Linda Lucus leaving the island on the Flinders Trader in July 1992. It is likely however some casual AMSA employees remained on the island for a few months July.

    In 1992, AMSA appointed a volunteer caretaker. He remained on the island until 1998 when the state of Tasmania demanded vacant possession of the island on transfer of ownership from AMSA.

    In 1998, the Tasmanian Government contracted the Australian Bush Heritage Fund to provide a caretaker for Deal Island.

  • Current management body/ ports authority

    AMSA

  • Historical preservation societies/manager/operator

    Tasmanian Parks & Wildlife Service

  • Is the site vulnerable to coastal erosion?
    no
  • Have you experienced any affects of climate change on the lighthouse?
    ---
  • Observations on the condition of the lighthouse?

    Reasonable

  • Is the site open/closed to the public

    Open

  • Is the tower open/closed to the public

    Closed

  • Latitude and Longitude

    39°29′39.5″S 147°19′21.1″E

  • On-site bookable accommodation available
    no
  • Associated web addresses
  • Other details

    The lighthouse on Deal Island was prone to being obscured by cloud due to its elevation of 304.9 metres, As a result the light was discontinued in 1992 & replaced with lights on nearby North East & South West Islands. Volunteer group Wildcare Friends of Deal Island work in partnership with the Tasmanian Parks & Wildlife Service and are continuing to restore the built & natural heritage on the island & have developed a museum in one of the lightstation buildings. https://wildcaretas.org.au/branches/friends-of-deal-island/

    ARLHS AUS-064.

  • Which resources did you use to research this lighthouses?

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.

Where?


[16, 6, 1, 6]
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