Pennsylvania Lighthouses on Lake Erie
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About this ebook
Eugene H. Ware
Eugene H. Ware, a financial consultant with a love of Presque Isle, is the president of the Friends of the Tom Ridge Environmental Center and past president of the Presque Isle Partnership, both organizations that support Presque Isle and its missions. He has previously written four books about the park, which is just five minutes from his home. He also writes a blog about Presque Isle State Park for the local newspaper called “A Place for All Seasons”.
Read more from Eugene H. Ware
Presque Isle State Park Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A History of Presque Isle: As Told Through Conversation with the Park’S Legendary Hermit, Joe Root Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsThe Moods of Presque Isle Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Pennsylvania Lighthouses on Lake Erie - Eugene H. Ware
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PREFACE
The first known light beacon in the world, the Pharos of Alexandria, was located on an island at the head of the harbor to the port of Alexandria, Egypt. Pharos was originally lit sometime in 250 BC, after more than twenty years of construction. Greek architect Sostratus of Gnidus was in charge of designing and building this massive structure, the base and first two floors of which measured 98 feet square. A central light tower rose an additional 367 feet. Alexander the Great built the structure in the city he named for himself, and it was said to have cost over 267 tons of silver.
The Pharos was in full-time use until AD 641, when Islamic warriors conquered Alexandria and caused serious damage to the light and building during their long siege. That means the building, at that point, had been in service for an unimaginable ten centuries. While it was not in use the entire time, it actually survived for an additional five hundred years until it was finally destroyed by a series of earthquakes in the fourteenth century. Today, Pharos is recognized as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
Before Pharos, the first lighting systems were designed to help mariners by providing early warning of submerged rocks, reefs, cliffs and sandbars where ships could run aground. They were also used to help alert ships of other coastal hazards. Most were very primitive methods, such as fires on the cliffs or beaches. Two huge problems with these fires were the vast supply of wood that was always necessary and the fact that the fires had to be constantly watched and supervised. It was not long before the builders of these fire-based lights realized that by elevating these fires, they could be seen farther out at sea. Thus began the world’s recognition of the lighthouse.
A close-up view of Presque Isle Light Station in 2004. Author’s collection.
From the beginning, sailors have had a particular need for light. They recognized that the hazards of navigation were challenging enough in calm and daylight situations, but when night and severe weather worked together to create low visibility, navigation at sea could become all but impossible. As the world’s nations began to use the seas to trade, the need for navigation aids such as lighthouses increased tremendously.
Once Spain, England, France and Holland all began to establish colonies and settlements in North and South America, shipping and trading grew at rapid rates. The need for more lighthouses, especially on the North American shores, quickly became evident. However, it was in the Caribbean, where the Spanish had an enormous influence, that the first lighthouse in the New World was built. It was constructed and opened in 1563 on the island of Cuba on the shores at Havana. It was named the Morro Light of Havana.
The first lighthouse in North America was authorized by an act of the English assembly and built by the Massachusetts Bay Colony at the entrance to the harbor of Boston in 1716. This lighthouse sits on Little Brewster Island, about eight miles from Boston, and has been designated a National Historic Landmark. During the Revolutionary War, the British destroyed part of it, but it was rebuilt with a new eighty-nine-foot tower in 1873. Records indicate that there were only seventy lighthouses in the world during those early years. A dozen or so of them were on the Atlantic coast of North America. Today, this lighthouse, known as the Boston Light, is the only light still manned by resident keepers. The light is serviced today by three active-duty U.S. Coast Guardsmen, and all hold the designation of lighthouse keeper. As a gesture of respect for a very old and venerable occupation, the Boston Light continues this worthy tradition of service.
For the next one hundred years, many new lighthouses dotted the coastlines of Canada, the English colonies and, finally, the new United States of America. Wherever ships ventured, the need for a lighthouse soon followed. The English colonists and colonies led the way in lighthouse construction along the eastern coast of North America. Soon after the American Revolution, individual states assumed responsibility for the lighthouses in their areas.
However, in August 1789, one of the first acts of the newly formed United States Congress was to assume the responsibility for all navigation aids within the new nation. It has been said that this act was passed due almost entirely to pressure from President George Washington. Washington, once a surveyor by trade, wanted to have the ability to appoint lighthouse keepers, negotiate with contractors and supervise the building of any new lighthouses. Both John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, the next two presidents, also carried on this tradition. The first two lighthouses built under this legislation were Maine’s Portland Head Light and the Old Cape Henry Light in Chesapeake Bay. These lighthouses were built under President Washington’s direct supervision. He also appointed the keepers of both lights and continued these practices for seven additional lights in the following years.
During the early years, all lighthouses were officially placed under the Department of the Treasury. Much like what sometimes happens today, a department that is assigned a particular duty by an act of Congress may be unprepared and unwilling to take responsibility for the management of its new duties. When this delegation of lighthouses responsibility came about, it was a total surprise to the Department of the Treasury. Within the department, the responsibilities and management of this new area became like a ping-pong ball and bounced all over its various internal offices.
Finally in 1820, the responsibility for all the lighthouses was given to Stephen Pleasonton, a fifth auditor within the Department of the Treasury. Even back in the early days of the republic, the audit area of this department was widely known for passing paper from desk to desk and getting little accomplished. Pleasonton, who was a passionate bean counter, was given the title of general superintendent of lights. He was a bookkeeper and had no experience in any of the fields related to his new duties.
All knew him as the perfect practicing bureaucrat. Right from the start, Pleasonton failed to realize his real duty involved the lives and safety of the ships, crews and passengers. His actual responsibility was to provide all of them with the best navigation aids possible, and cost should have been a secondary issue. Unfortunately, during the time he held this position, his only focus was on economy and never on quality or safety.
A strange but true fact about Pleasonton is that some held him in hero status for something he had done many years before. In his early years, he was recognized as a very somber and serious young man who happened to be born the same year as his beloved nation. By a simple act, he would become a dashing war hero in the War of 1812. It was because of his quick actions that he single-handedly saved the original Declaration of Independence. As the British were advancing on Washington, D.C., in 1814, the secretary of state asked him to move many of the State Department records to a safer location. Pleasonton quickly made arrangements to purchase large bolts of linen and had the cloth made into crude bags. Throwing as many documents as he could into the bags, he loaded them all into a cart and drove them to Leesburg, Virginia, about thirty miles from Washington. Included in these bags were the Declaration of Independence, the official journals of Congress and Washington’s notes and correspondences. It was not until the next morning—after what he called a wonderful sleep following too much work—that he realized the British had indeed burned the White House, the Capitol, the treasury and nearly every other important building in the Washington area. By 10:00 a.m., the State Department building was nothing more than smoking rubble. The only records that survived were what Pleasonton was able to remove.
In spite of this, when he took over as the superintendent of lights, he became even better known for his penny-pinching policies and a huge number of glaring irregularities, shady transactions and self-dealings that took place during his management. Historians consider his service as superintendent to be the low point in American lighthouse history. During this service, there were times when Congress and the presidents either told him to stop doing something or informed him that he needed to accomplish a particular task, and Pleasonton simply took it upon himself to ignore them. Ultimately, he was removed from office, but only after thirty-two years in the position.
In 1873, George H. Elliot, major of engineers and the engineering secretary of the United States Lighthouse Board, said:
It is not alone in view of its economic effects that the lighthouse system is to be regarded. It is a life-preserving establishment, founded on the principals [sic] of Christian benevolence…A failure of such a light to send forth its expected ray is, as it were, a breach of solemn promise, which may allure the confiding mariner to an untimely death or disastrous shipwreck.
This and the fact that the U.S. Lighthouse Service was in the process of publishing what was to become, and still is, the bible for light keepers, called Instructions to the Employees of the United States Lighthouse Service, showed exactly how serious the federal government had become about the proper administration of the nation’s lighthouses.
Sometime around 1781, the lighting of the inland sea, more commonly known as the Great Lakes, was begun in North America. The first attempt at establishing a lighthouse on the Great Lakes was the building of a signal fire in a lantern room of the British Fort Niagara. The fire was on the roof of the fort that was located at the mouth of the Niagara River on Lake Ontario. This makeshift light—erected soon after the HMS Ontario sank in October 1780 after it left the fort at Oswego, New York, in a violent gale—provided some help for ships in the area. British records show that over eighty people who were aboard the Ontario perished that evening when it sank.
This mishap demonstrated to both the Americans and