Patos Island Light

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Patos Island Light
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Patos Island Light is located in Washington (state)
Patos Island Light
Location San Juan Islands, Washington
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[1]
Year first lit 1908
Automated 1974
Foundation Surface
Construction Wood
Tower shape Square
Height 38 feet (12 m)
Original lens Fourth order Fresnel lens
Characteristic White light every 6 s; two red sectors marking dangerous shoals
Patos Island Light Station
Nearest city Eastsound, Washington
Area 1 acre
Built 1893 (1893)
Architectural style Greek Revival-Victorian
NRHP Reference # 77001355[2]
Added to NRHP October 21, 1977

Patos Island Lighthouse is an active aid to navigation overlooking the Strait of Georgia at Alden Point on the western tip of Patos Island in the San Juan Islands, San Juan County, Washington, in the United States.[3] The station is the northernmost in the San Juan Islands and marks the division point between the eastern and western passages into the Strait of Juan de Fuca.[4] It is part of Patos Island State Park.[5]

History

The original light station was a post light and third-class Daboll trumpet fog signal. Beginning operation on November 30, 1893, the light was used as a navigational aid to steamships traveling to ports around Georgia Strait such as Vancouver, and up the Inside Passage to Alaska.

The lighthouse was improved in 1908 with a new fog signal and a 38-foot (12 m) tower, which housed a fourth-order Fresnel lens.[6] The light was automated in 1974.[7] Today, it has a modern lens which flashes a white light once every six seconds and has two red sectors marking dangerous shoals off the island. The original fourth-order Fresnel lens is now in private ownership in Oregon.[8]

The early years of the light were recorded in The Light on the Island, the childhood recollections of Helene Glidden, daughter of Edward Durgan who was lighthouse keeper from 1905-1913.[9]

Through the efforts of the non-profit Keepers of the Patos Light, the lighthouse was renovated in 2008 with a new roof, doors, windows, gutters and downspouts, and new paint inside and out.[10] The lighthouse is the last remaining structure at the site: the original keepers house was demolished in 1958 when modern quarters were built.[6] Those and other modern buildings were subsequently razed and burned by the Bureau of Land Management and the Coast Guard.[5]

References

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External links