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Point Adams Light

Point Adams Light
Point Adams Light is located in Oregon
Point Adams Light
Location south of Columbia Bar
Coordinates 46°11′18″N 123°58′40″W / 46.188333°N 123.977778°W / 46.188333; -123.977778
Year first lit 1875
Deactivated 1899
Foundation probably brick
Construction redwood frame
Height 49 feet (15 m)
Focal height 50 feet (15 m)
Original lens fourth order French lens
Range 16 nautical miles (30 km; 18 mi)
Characteristic 1875–1881: flashing red and white, 10 s, fog signal
1881-1899: fixed red

Point Adams Light was a lighthouse near the mouth of the Columbia River on the Oregon Coast of the United States. The lighthouse was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who also designed Point Adams's sister stations, Point Fermin Light in San Pedro CA, East Brother Island Light in Richmond, California, Mare Island Light, in Carquinez Strait, California (demolished in the 1930s), Point Hueneme Light in California (replaced in 1940), and Hereford Inlet Light in North Wildwood, New Jersey, all in essentially the same style. It operated from February 15, 1875 until 1899, when it became obsolete by the extension of the south jetty and the establishment of the Lightship Columbia in 1892. The lighthouse was considered a fire hazard and demolished in 1912.

It was located about a mile south of Point Adams—named by Captain Robert Gray in 1792 [1]—near what is now Battery Russell in Fort Stevens State Park. The combination of the Point Adams Light with the Cape Disappointment Lighthouse on the north side of the river effectively framed the entrance to the Columbia.

The keeper's quarters and light were a combined structure, similar to the Yaquina Bay Light, in Newport, and used the same structure, materials, and optics as Point Fermin Light south of Los Angeles, California.


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