Hog Island Light

Hog Island Light

Undated photograph of Hog Island Light (1896 tower) (USCG)
Location Hog Island SE of Exmore, Virginia
Coordinates 37°23′38″N 75°42′04″W / 37.394°N 75.701°W / 37.394; -75.701Coordinates: 37°23′38″N 75°42′04″W / 37.394°N 75.701°W / 37.394; -75.701(approx.)
Year first lit 1853 (first)
1896 (second)
Deactivated 1896 (first) 1948 (second)
Construction brick (first)
steel (second)
Tower shape conical (first)
octaconal skeletal (second)
Height 72 feet (first)
194 feet (second)
Original lens (first) fourth-order Fresnel Lens
first-order Fresnel Lens (second)
Range 19 miles (17 nmi; 31 km) (second)
Characteristic fixed white light (first)
flashing white light (second)

The Hog Island Light was a lighthouse roughly marking its eponymous island, and thus the north side of the Great Machipongo Inlet on the Virginia coast. Originally, no light existed between Cape Henlopen, Delaware and Cape Charles, Virginia. In 1830 the United States Congress appropriated money for a coastal beacon in the general vicinity of Chincoteague Island. The following year, the Collector of Customs in Norfolk selected Assateague Island. In 1853 another lighthouse was erected twenty miles north of Cape Charles at Hog Island to light the remaining dark section of coastline between the Assateague Light and the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay.

History

The 1853 tower (USCG)

There have been two lights at Hog Island, one of the Virginia Barrier Islands. The first light was erected in 1853 and consisted of a whitewashed brick tower with a keeper's dwelling adjacent to it. It was ostensibly equipped with a first-order fresnel lens, though a report in 1870 stated that it had been assigned a fourth order lens instead.

Erosion of the island eventually endangered the first lighthouse, and in 1896 an octagonal steel skeletal tower similar to the 1895 Cape Charles Light was erected to replace it. The new Hog Island tower was painted black to distinguish it from the nearly identical Cape Charles light that is painted white. In 1900 early in the evening on Washington’s Birthday a huge flock of birds, mostly geese and ducks, smashed into the lantern of the Hog Island Lighthouse. The two keepers fired their shotguns at the birds to drive them away before the lens was damaged. Two days later another flock of birds flew in. Out of ammunition, the keepers had to drive them away with sticks. This time much of the lantern glass was broken out and the light was extinguished until repairs were made.[1]

The 1933 Chesapeake-Potomac Hurricane damaged the light station and caused severe shoreline erosion on Hog Island. Also in 1933 both the Hog Island Light and the Cape Charles light were electrified eliminating the need for the keepers to hoist buckets of oil to the lantern room. The 1938 New England hurricane that passed just offshore of the Delmarva before making landfall on Long Island as a category 3 storm caused further damage and finally toppled the long abandoned 1853 tower that was by then 50 feet offshore and surrounded by breakers. The barrier island continued to shift and in 1948 this second lighthouse was de-activated and demolished, as the waves threatened to bring it down. By the late 1940s The role of the lighthouse in guiding ships was becoming less important since the establishment of LORAN stations along the coast during World War II, and the Hog Island lighthouse was not replaced.

The site where the Hog Island Light station once stood near the village of Broadwater long ago vanished beneath the waves and is now nearly a mile out to sea, but the 10-foot high lens, a first order produced by the Henry-LePaute Company in France, was removed from the lighthouse and preserved when the light station was de-activated. The lens from the Hog Island Light was first displayed at the Mariners' Museum in Newport News; in 2004 it was moved to an enclosed pavilion on the Portsmouth, Virginia waterfront where it is currently displayed.

Demolition charges explode at the base of the 1896 Hog Island Lighthouse. Photo taken 1948 U.S. Coast Guard Archive.

Keepers

Notes

References

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