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Gibbs Hill Lighthouse

Gibbs Hill Lighthouse
Gibbs Hill Lighthouse.jpg
Gibbs Hill Lighthouse is located in Bermuda
Gibbs Hill Lighthouse
Bermuda
Location Gibbs Hill
Bermuda
Coordinates 32°15′10″N 64°50′05″W / 32.25282°N 64.83475°W / 32.25282; -64.83475Coordinates: 32°15′10″N 64°50′05″W / 32.25282°N 64.83475°W / 32.25282; -64.83475
Year first constructed 1846
Automated 1964
Construction cast iron tower
Tower shape tapered cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / pattern white tower and lantern
Height 117 feet (36 m)
Focal height 354 feet (108 m)
Intensity 500,000 candela
Range 26 nmi (48 km)
Characteristic Fl W 10s. red aviation warning flash atop tower
Admiralty number J4550
NGA number 11668
ARLHS number BER-010
Managing agent Gibbs Hill Lighthouse

Built in 1844 by the Royal Engineers, the Gibbs Hill Lighthouse is the taller of two lighthouses on Bermuda, and one of the first lighthouses in the world to be made of cast-iron. This is because at that time, steel still was not able to be bent. The optic consists of a Fresnel lens from 1904 revolving on steel bearings. However for most of its history, the lens revolved on a bed of 1,200 pounds of mercury. While it is certainly not extremely tall in lighthouse standards, the hill that it stands on is one of the highest on the island. The light's focal plane on Gibbs Hill Lighthouse, therefore, is at 354 feet (108 m) above sea level. Airplanes can see its flashes from over 100 miles (160 km) away.

The lighthouse has 185 steps to the top in eight flights. Until 1964, most of the light was run by hand, but in June of that year, the whole system was automated and runs on electricity. Sixty-thousand people ascended the lighthouse in 1985, and it continues to be a popular tourist attraction.

A radar antenna for marine shipping was installed atop the lighthouse in 1987 supported on a steel space frame fixed at the original bolt locations. The radar and supporting frame were undamaged in September 2003 despite the oscillation of the tower during Hurricane Fabian. This movement caused two gallons of mercury to slop out of the lens support trough and put the light out of operation. The 1904 lens was repaired in 2004 with steel bearings to replace the mercury.

At the base of the tower is the Lighthouse Tea Room, a restaurant converted from the lighthouse keeper's former living quarters, where breakfast, lunch, and dinner are served daily.




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