Sapelo Island Light

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Sapelo Island Light in 1996 & 1999 - 27th & 35th trips
Sapelo Island Light in 1996 & 1999 - 27th & 35th trips

Sapelo Island, Georgia

Built: 1820

Decommissioned: 1898

This 90-foot tall brick tower was built by Winslow Lewis on land provided the Federal government by Thomas Spalding. It was originally built as a harbor light, guiding vessels into Doboy Sound north of St. Simons Island on their way to the increasingly busy port of Darien. It received a fourth-order Fresnel lens in 1854. Confederates damaged the tower during the Civil War, but it was repaired by the Lighthouse Board in 1868. It was undermined by the hurricane tidal wave of 1898 and was abandoned by the Lighthouse Service soon after. The Service erected a 100-foot steel pyramidal tower in 1905 that operated until 1933 when lighthouse operations were suspended for good. The skeletal tower no longer exists at the site and the brick tower had fallen into disrepair until it was renovated in 1998. The photo shown on the left is how it appeared in 1996 (27th trip) and the photo on the right is how it appears in 1999 (35th trip) after the renovation. It is part of the Sapelo Island National Estuarian Sanctuary.


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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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