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Five Mile Point

Five Mile Point Light
Old New Haven
Five Mile Point Light - New Haven CT.jpg
Five Mile Point Light in 2008
Five Mile Point Light is located in Connecticut
Five Mile Point Light
Location in Connecticut
Location Long Island Sound
New Haven
Connecticut
United States
Coordinates 41°14′56″N 72°54′14″W / 41.24898°N 72.90379°W / 41.24898; -72.90379Coordinates: 41°14′56″N 72°54′14″W / 41.24898°N 72.90379°W / 41.24898; -72.90379
Year first constructed 1805 (first)
Year first lit 1847 (current)
Deactivated 1877
Foundation brownstone basement
Construction brownstone tower
Tower shape octagonal frustum tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / pattern white tower, black lantern
Height 80 ft (24 m)
Original lens 12 lamps, 21 inch reflectors (1845)
Current lens Fourth order Fresnel lens
Range 10 nautical miles (20 km)
Characteristic decorative light
ARLHS number USA-539
Managing agent

Lighthouse Point Park

Five Mile Point Lighthouse
Location Lighthouse Point Park, New Haven, Connecticut
Area less than one acre
Built 1845
Architect Marcus Bassett
Architectural style Lighthouse
NRHP Reference # 90001108
Added to NRHP August 1, 1990

Lighthouse Point Park

Five Mile Point Light, also known as Five Mile Point Lighthouse or Old New Haven Harbor Lighthouse, is a U.S. lighthouse in Long Island Sound on the coast of New Haven, Connecticut. Located at the entrance to New Haven Harbor, the beacon's name derives from its proximity to Downtown New Haven, about five miles (8 km) away. The original lighthouse consisted of a 30-foot (9.1 m) octagonal wooden tower built in 1805 by Abisha Woodward. In 1847, a new 80-foot (24 m) octagonal tower was constructed by Marcus Bassett with East Haven brownstone. This new beacon was illuminated by 12 lamps with reflectors which were positioned 97 feet (30 m) above sea level. Also constructed at this time was a two-and-one-half story brick house which supplanted the previous, deteriorating keeper's dwelling. A fourth-order Fresnel lens replaced the lamps in 1855 and a fog bell was added in the 1860s. The Five Mile Point Light was deactivated in 1877 when the nearby Southwest Ledge Light was completed. Currently, the lighthouse is contained within Lighthouse Point Park and, along with the keeper's house, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.

During the American Revolutionary War in July 1779, a battle took place on the site of the future lighthouse when British troops anchored offshore and staged an invasion of New Haven. Patriot forces launched a defense of the beachfront as the attackers landed their boats. Ensign and Adjutant Watkins of the King's American regiment was the first of the British soldiers killed in the skirmish, shot while attempting to disembark on the shoreline. He was buried close to where the lighthouse at Five Mile Point would eventually be erected a few decades later. Although the British went on to burn the nearby house of Amos Morris and several other residences in the area, they suffered heavy losses and ultimately abandoned their advance on New Haven.

In 1804, the United States Congress passed a statute requiring the secretary of the treasury to build a lighthouse at Five Mile Point if land could be obtained for a reasonable price. That same year, Amos Morris, Jr., son of the man whose home was the first to be razed during the 1779 British invasion, sold a suitable one-acre plot of his father's coastal estate to the federal government for $100. On March 16, 1805, an appropriation for $2500 was issued for the construction of the lighthouse. Late that year, a 30-foot (9.1 m) octagonal wooden tower was built by Abisha Woodward on the southwest edge of the harbor and to mark the path around the Southwest Ledge. The fixed white light was made by eight oil lamps with 13 inches (33 cm) parabolic reflectors, but it was criticized for being too dim. The lighthouse also had a keeper's quarters constructed in 1805. The first keeper of the light was Amos Morris Jr., for a period of just three weeks. An 1832 report noted that the light was 50 feet (15 m) above the water and that its visibility had been improved with the removal of some trees. In 1838, Lieutenant George M. Bache reported that the wooden tower and keeper's house was in a poor state. Congress would appropriate $10,000 to construct a new stone lighthouse on March 3, 1847.


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