Point Sur Light

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Point Sur Light in 2001 - 37th trip
Point Sur Light in 2001 - 37th trip

Big Sur, California

Built: 1889

Automated: 1972

This 40 foot granite tower, with adjoining rooms originally used for fuel storage and steam whistle boilers, stands on magnificient Point Sur, located about half way up the California coast, south of San Francisco and Monterey Bay. Originally equipped with a first-order Fresnel lens, it now houses two rotating aero beacons. Point Sur is the location of the crash of the Navy dirigible Macon when it was struck by a squall in 1935. Keeper Thomas Henderson was watching the ship through binoculars when it crashed. Today, the Point Sur station remains much like it was when first built, with most of the outbuildings still intact, which are owned by the California State Parks.


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Lighthouses: A Photographic Journey

Conceived and Developed by David S. Carter
Photographs by Donald W. Carter
Text by Diana K. Carter, Donald W. Carter & David S. Carter

Copyright © 1995-2011 David S. Carter, Donald W. Carter, & Diana K. Carter. All rights reserved. Reproduction by any means, physical or electronic, in part or in full, without the express permission of the authors, is strictly prohibited.

This article was last modified on 6/4/2009.

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