The tower at sunrise from Sandy Bay.
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Northern Ireland
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Location |
Larne County Antrim Northern Ireland |
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Coordinates | 54°51′16″N 5°47′53″W / 54.854538°N 5.797976°WCoordinates: 54°51′16″N 5°47′53″W / 54.854538°N 5.797976°W |
Year first constructed | 1888 |
Year first lit | 1899 |
Construction | Annalong granite tower |
Tower shape | slim cylindrical tower with conical roof and light shown trought a window |
Markings / pattern | unpainted tower |
Height | 23 metres (75 ft) |
Focal height | 23 metres (75 ft) |
Light source | mains power |
Characteristic | Iso WR 5s. |
Admiralty number | A6031 |
NGA number | 6984 |
ARLHS number | NTI-004 |
Managing agent | Commissioners of Irish Lights |
The Chaine Memorial Tower in Larne, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, is a memorial to James Chaine, a former Member of Parliament for Antrim, who died in 1885. It is a cylindrical stone tower lighthouse with a conical roof, situated on the west side of entrance to Larne Lough.
Chaine developed Larne's short sea route to Scotland as well as establishing the town as a transatlantic port. The memorial, built in 1888, by public subscription, is a replica of an Irish round tower. The memorial is situated at the mouth of Larne harbour, and is reached via Chaine Memorial Road. There is access from Curran Road via Bay Road.
The plaque which adorns the memorial is now difficult to read. It reads that the monument was erected by the...
In 1885, the Memorial Committee for Chaine sought the assistance of the Commissioners of Irish Lights to help to build and maintain a tower, but they initially refused. Eventually it was agreed the Memorial Committee would build the replica round tower, without a light, at Sandy Point Bay, and the Larne Harbour authority would maintain it. The approved tower was completed in January 1888.
In 1896 it was suggested that a light be added to the tower. As a result, the Commissioners of Irish Lights took over the tower and on 1 July 1899, an oil powered navigational light was installed 22 metres up the tower (the tower being 28 metres in height). The light was installed to aid the navigation of the Hunter Rock, a submerged rock approximately 5 miles off shore. The light was de-manned and converted to coal gas from the Larne mains gas supply in 1905, before finally being converted to electric in September 1935. During April 1948 the supply was changed from DC to AC.
Responsibility for maintaining the light now falls under the remit of the attending keeper at Ferris Point Lighthouse on the other side of the Harbour.