Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Lighthouse of the Week, November 15-21, 2015: St. Catherines, UK


A classic, historical, famously-situated lighthouse in the United Kingdom is St. Catherine's on the Isle of Wight.

This Web page is all about it:  St. Catherine's

An excerpt about it:
"A small light was first set up at St. Catherine's in about 1323 by Walter de Godyton. He erected a chapel and added an endowment for a priest to say Masses for his family and to exhibit lights at night to warn ships from approaching too near this dangerous coast, both purposes being fulfilled until about 1530 when the Reformation swept away the endowment. Neither the present lighthouse tower lighted in March 1840, nor the chapel of which the ruins remain, held these ancient lights. The present tower was constructed in 1838 following the loss of the sailing ship CLARENDON on rocks near the site of the present lighthouse. 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."
And some pictures of it:






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