Bodie
Island Lighthouse
Bodie Island, North Carolina
#NC-09110-LH - Notecards
Also available in Assortment #AST-901
& #AST-902
Bodies washed
ashore from shipwrecks led to the naming of Bodie Island, according
to local folklore. The lighthouse here helps ships follow the
southbound inshore current while avoiding the powerful northbound
Gulf Stream.
The 163-foot
conical brick tower, built in 1872, is the third lighthouse at
this site. The first, a 54-foot brick tower built in 1847, was
doomed by a faulty plan and the appointment of a project supervisor
who was an ex-customs inspector with little knowledge of lighthouses
or, for that matter, construction. By 1859, this lighthouse had
deteriorated beyond repair, and the Lighthouse Board replaced
it with a sturdy 80-foot tower. Less than two years later, Confederate
soldiers blew the replacement to smithereens.
Bad luck continued
at the site, when a flock of birds crashed into the first-order
Fresnel lens within a month after the initial lighting of the
third tower. A jerry-rigged net of heavy wire was quickly put
into place to protect the lantern from further damage. Now automated,
this lantern remains in use.
The boldly-striped
Bodie Island Lighthouse can be found a few miles south of the
Cape Hatteras National Seashore entrance. A paved road leads to
the tower, located about a mile off Route 12. Still a working
lighthouse, the tower is closed to the public, but the National
Park Service operates a visitors center in the old keeper's house.
Text
© 1999 Terry White, Drawing © 1999 Bill Harrah