Latitude 50 Deg 35.5 Min N
Longitude 1 Deg 17.8 Min W
Station established c.1323
Height of tower 26 meters
Elevation 41 m
Character Fl W 5s
Range 26 M
This is the lighthouse in 2000 from the seaward side and from the land side
The current lighthouse was designed by James Walker. The
lighthouse was built of ashlar stone with dressed quoins and was carried up from
a base plinth as a 3 tier octagon, diminishing by stages
It was first lit in March 1840.
The elevation of the light proved to be too high, as the
lantern frequently became shrouded in fog. 1875 it was decided to lower the
light 13 metres by taking about 6 metres out of the uppermost section of the
tower and about 7 metres out of the middle tier, which destroyed its beauty and
made it appear squat and mis-proportioned.
A fog signal was installed in a separate building in a separate building on
the cliff edge in 1868. It was driven by a coke-fired caloric hot-air engine and
an additional keeper was needed to run the fog signal.
In 1888 the station was converted to electric and the fog signal replaced
by a siren.
By 1932 the fog signal building was so threatened by erosion that is had to be removed. A smaller copy of the main lighthouse was built in front to house the new fog signal. The locals promptly christened this new pair of towers "Cow and Calf". The lighthouse was automated in 1997
Today the lighthouse is open to the public and you can stay in the keeper's
cottages for your holidays!
The lens is a 2nd Order 4 Panel Catadioptric and VERY impressive! It is lit by 2
X 400 W Mbi Lamp
To the west and 7 metres below the main light a fixed red light warns mariners about the Atherfield Ledge.
They even have a spare lens for this red light.
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