Waukegan Harbor Lighthouse | Seeing The Light |
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Historical
Information It would appear that Snowhook's recommendation was well received, since in 1860 Congress only approved $1,000 for the Lighthouse Board to keep the Little Fort Light shining, but appropriated $10,500 for the Army Corps of Engineers to construct an iron pierhead beacon on the end of the breakwater on its completion.
Subsequent changes and additions in the harbor plan continued to delay the construction of the breakwaters, and with the Little Fort keeper's dwelling continuing to serve as the only light for the harbor, 1867 saw the construction of new outbuildings at the station, and replacement of the roof in 1870. Unbelievably, the arrival of 1880 saw the Army Corps of Engineers still busy in the harbor, and without an apparent end in the work, it appeared that the "temporary" installation of the light atop the keeper's dwelling was fast becoming a permanent arrangement. Since the town of Waukegan was now encroaching on the station reservation on the bluff, a picket fence was constructed around the entire reservation to provide security. Finally, in 1898, work on the breakwaters was drawing to a close, and a temporary iron post supporting a white lens lantern was erected at the outer end of the north breakwater. With the construction of a small lamp cleaning building on the pier to provide keepers with a protected area in which to perform the constant maintenance required of the illuminating apparatus, this new light was exhibited for the first time on the night of August 10, 1898. The characteristic of this post light was subsequently changed to red in October, and finally on December 31, 1889 the "temporary" Fifth Order light installed on the Little Fort Keepers dwelling twenty years previous was permanently discontinued.
A base of bags filled with concrete was constructed at the end of the pier and a concrete foundation sixteen by fifteen feet in plan, and six and a half feet high was cast upon the bag foundation to receive the tower. The following year, the circular cast iron tower was finally erected on the concrete foundation constructed the year before at the end of the south pier. Painted white, and crowned with a circular lantern with diagonal astragals, the lantern was outfitted with Fourth Order Fresnel lens with a characteristic of fixed white for twenty seconds followed by four red flashes, each at five second intervals. Standing 35 feet from the base to the top of the ventilator ball, the "sweet spot" of the lens sat at a focal plane of 36 feet above high water, and was visible for a distance of 13 miles. Appearing in official Light Lists as the "Waukegan Harbor Light," the light was exhibited for the first time on the evening of August 31, 1899.
At the turn of the twentieth century, the Corps of Engineers was laying plans for additional dredging of the harbor in order to make it accessible to the larger vessels now plying the lakes, and extending the piers almost 1,500 feet further to provide enhanced harbor protection. With this decision to extend the piers, it became immediately evident to the Lighthouse Engineers that the iron tower would need to be relocated to the new pierhead, since it's present location would leave it sitting almost 1,400 feet from the end of the pier, and thus would no longer serve as an effective aid to navigation. At this time, the District Engineer had been considering the construction of a fog signal on the pier, to serve as a warning to mariners during the thick fogs which frequently blanketed the area. Realizing that the construction of such a signal plant coincident with the tower relocation would be advantageous, the Lighthouse Board requested an appropriation of $10,000 for the project in its 1902 annual report.
In order to have the minimum effect on navigation, the work of lifting the cast iron tower from the pier, and relocating it approximately 1,400 feet to the outer end newly completed pier extension was undertaken during the late winter of 1905, with the light reestablished and exhibited from its new location on the night of February 7. Also on this night, a red lens lantern was displayed from a skeleton steel tower at the end of the north breakwater to delineate the opening into the harbor.
Other than general maintenance and upgrading of illuminating and fog signal apparatus, the station stood on the pier in relatively unchanged condition for the following sixty years.
Photographs taken soon after the fire show the tower as being painted completely white, however today it sports a bright green painted belly band, likely to increase its effectiveness as a day mark against the backdrop of the city of Waukegan. While many visitors walk the pier to look at the stubby tower today, it is unlikely that many have any concept of the impressive and vital structure of which this tower was an integral part at the turn of the twentieth century. Keepers of
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This page last modified 12/01/2007