Cape Sarichef Light

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Cape Sarichef Light
Map
LocationUnimak pass through Aleutian Islands, Alaska
Coordinates54°35′54″N 164°55′39″W / 54.59833°N 164.92750°W / 54.59833; -164.92750
Tower
Constructed1904
ConstructionReinforced Concrete
Automated1979
Height170 feet above sea level
ShapeHexagonal tower in 1950. Currently a skeleton tower.
Light
First lit1950 (Hexagonal tower)
Deactivated1950 Edit this on Wikidata
Focal height52 m (171 ft) Edit this on Wikidata
LensThird order Fresnel lens, 1904
Range8 nm
CharacteristicFlashing white 2.5s, Obscured from 223.5° to 018.5°.

Cape Sarichef Light is a lighthouse located on the northwest tip of Unimak Island, approximately 630 miles southwest of Anchorage, Alaska. The most westerly and most isolated lighthouse in North America, Cape Sarichef Light marks the northwest end of Unimak Pass, the main passage through the Aleutian Islands between the Bering Sea and the Pacific Ocean. When it was first lit on July 1, 1904, it was Alaska's second coastal lighthouse (after Scotch Cap Light), and the only U.S. manned lighthouse on the Bering Sea. Today, the lighthouse is automated, and the beacon is mounted on a skeleton tower.

Cape Sarichef was named in 1816 by Russian explorer Otto von Kotzebue after Admiral Gavril Sarychev of the Imperial Russian Navy.

History

The original lighthouse was a wood tower on an octagonal wood building, 45 feet in height. The light was 126 feet above the sea[1].

The lighthouse was known for its extreme isolation, which precluded regular resupply. From August 1912 to June 1913, the lighthouse received no supplies at all; the nearest neighbor was a trapper some 10 miles away. [2] Although living quarters were originally provided for keepers' families, the Lighthouse Board prohibited civilian keepers from bringing their families because of the site's isolation[1]. The keeper's nearest neighbor was a trapper some 10 miles away. Mail and supplies were not received for months at a time. The station shut down from December 1st through March 1st because the Bering Sea was frozen. Due to the privations they endured, civilian keepers got one full year off every 4 years of service. Circa 1933, one of the assistant keepers suffered a breakdown after two years at the lonely station.

Following the disastrous tsunami in 1946 that destroyed Scotch Cap Light and killed its 5-man crew, the Coast Guard razed and rebuilt Cape Sarichef Light in 1950[3]. The upgrade included a LORAN radiobeacon to help ships and aircraft obtain an accurate position. A crew of 21 men each served a one year tour of duty at the station. Approximately 2 miles from the station was an Air Force DEW (Distant Early Warning) Line radar station crewed by 25 men. Relations between the two services were reportedly very good, with a lot of swapping of everything from food to vehicle parts.[citation needed]

The station was automated in 1979. The new light was erected on a steel skeleton next to the old tower. The old light, fog horn and radiobeacon were turned off. The Coast Guard turned the property over to the Fish and Wildlife Service. The old tower and buildings were demolished in 1999.[1]

Original 1904 Lighthouse – USCG archive photo

References

  1. ^ a b c "Alaska Light Stations". Historic Light Station Information & Photography. Retrieved 2007-07-05.
  2. ^ Noble, Dennis (1999). "Alaska and Hawaii: A Brief History of U.S. Coast Guard Operations". Retrieved 2007-07-05.
  3. ^ De Wire, Elinore (1992). "The Eskimo Lights: Lighthouses in Alaska". Elinore De Wire's Lighthouse Bookshelf. Retrieved 2007-07-05.

External links