Point Cabrillo

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Chance Brothers Lighthouse Chance Brothers Lighthouse
  • Date of lens manufacture

    1909

  • Date of lighthouse construction

    1909

  • Country

    United States

  • Commissioning body

    US Lighthouse Service

  • Order of lens

    3rd order

  • Fixed or revolving lens

    Revolving

  • Active/Inactive

    Active

  • Describe the character of light

    1 10s

  • Describe the lighthouses daymarks

    Literally a light-house, with the lantern house atop housing the lens. White painted building with red painted sloping roof.

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

    Although Point Cabrillo was surveyed by the U. S. Lighthouse Service in 1873, construction of the Light Station didn’t begin until 1908. The demand for lumber meant that maritime commerce on the north coast was at an all time high and a lighthouse was critical to the safety of the ships and their valuable cargo. The lens was illuminated for the first time on June 10,1909, under head keeper Wilhelm Baumgartner.

    Baumgartner invited the neighbors and residents of Pine Grove to attend the midnight ceremony.

    Built and managed by the US. Lighthouse Service under the Department of Commerce the original Point Cabrillo Light Station consisted of most of the buildings still standing today: the three keepers’ residences, the storage buildings (two of which are rental cottages, the third houses bathrooms), the Blacksmith & Carpentry Shop (now home to the Marine Science Exhibit), and the Oil House. Two buildings that were moved or added after original construction include one water tower and companion pump house which are located behind the First Assistant Lightkeeper’s Home Museum. Three original structures have not yet been re-constructed: one water tower, the barn and one utility building. The barn, which was located to the south of the residences at the end of a side road, was used as a US Air Force radio monitor’s training facility after WW II. It was burned by the Volunteer Fire Dept. as an exercise in the late 1980s.

    Fog Signal compressors The Lighthouse and Fog Signal Building share a common wall and appear to be one structure. The Fog Signal Building housed a pair of engines and compressors that created a siren using compressed air.

    Two 18-horsepower gas/kerosene engines and compressors powered the fog signal. These occupied the entire ground floor of the building. The fog horn signature was 2 seconds on, 2 seconds off, 2 seconds on, and 24 seconds off.

    The Lens One enters the Lighthouse at the base of the Light Tower. The Lantern Room at the top of the Tower houses a 3rd order British-built Fresnel lens by Chance Bros. with a range of 13-15 miles. The lens was originally powered by a kerosene oil lamp. There are only two other British-built lighthouse lenses in operation in the U.S. today: a 1st order lens at Heceta Head Lighthouse in Oregon and a 2nd order rear range light at Ambrose Channel, Staten Island, New York.

    Originally the lens rotated by means of a clockworks mechanism with a descending weight. A chain with a 65-80 pound weight on the end of it passed through the floor of each level of the Light Tower. The lightkeeper would crank up the chain onto a drum every 2 hours. At some point, a portion of the floor and concrete foundation on the ground floor was removed to add an additional 4-5 feet to the chain, gaining (perhaps) an additional ten minutes between windings. The kerosene fueled wicks were replaced with a bulb hung into the lens when electricity was introduced to the Light Station in 1935. In 1937 the clockworks was replaced with an electric motor.

    The four-sided bullseye lens rotates at a fixed speed to produce a flash at ten second intervals. The rotation pattern of a lighthouse is printed on the nautical chart; it is the lighthouse signature and must not vary.

  • Current management body/ ports authority

    US Coast Guard

  • Historical preservation societies/manager/operator

    Point Cabrillo Lightkeepers Association - California State Historic Park

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

    No

  • Observations on the condition of the lighthouse?

    Excellent

  • Is the site open/closed to the public

    Open

  • Is the tower open/closed to the public

    Open

  • Latitude and Longitude

    39.348648° -123.826117°

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

    The lighthouse is one of only three functioning Chance Brothers lenses in the USA, the others being at Heceta Head in Oregon, the other at Ambrose Channel on Staten Island, New York.

    ARLHS USA-619; Admiralty G4362; USCG 6-0450.

  • 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?


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