*** Welcome to piglix ***

Stoer Head Lighthouse

Stoer Head Lighthouse
Rubha Stòr
Stoer Head Lighthouse.jpg
Stoer Head Lighthouse 2016
Stoer Head is located in Scotland
Stoer Head
Scotland
Location Lochinver
Sutherland
Scotland
Coordinates 58°14′24.1″N 5°24′9.7″W / 58.240028°N 5.402694°W / 58.240028; -5.402694Coordinates: 58°14′24.1″N 5°24′9.7″W / 58.240028°N 5.402694°W / 58.240028; -5.402694
Year first constructed 1870
Construction stone tower
Tower shape cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern
Markings / pattern white tower, black lantern, ocrhe trim
Height 14 metres (46 ft)
Focal height 59 metres (194 ft)
Light source mains power
Range 24 nautical miles (44 km; 28 mi)
Characteristic Fl W 15s.
Admiralty number A3882
NGA number 3600
ARLHS number SCO-226
Managing agent

National Trust for Scotland


National Trust for Scotland

Stoer Head (Rubha Stoer in Scots Gaelic) is a point of land north of Lochinver in Sutherland, NW Scotland. A lighthouse on the point marks the northern entrance to The Minch.

The peninsula is about 6 km long and 3 km wide, and has a number of scattered small settlements including Culkein, Balchladich and Achnacarnin. The lighthouse is at grid reference NC003330 at the end of a 5 km long track which branches off the B869 Lochinver to Unapool road. Further North up the coast are the Old Man of Stoer and the Point of Stoer, which can easily be reached from the lighthouse on foot.

Around 10,000 visitors visit the lighthouse each year, necessitating the construction of a public toilet in 2013. The two keepers cottages have are now holiday homes.

Stoer Head Lighthouse was built on Stoer Head by brothers David and Thomas Stevenson in 1870 after being identified as one of forty-five sites in Scotland where a lighthouse was necessary to protect shipping. The lighthouse is 45 feet (14 m) high, making it squat in appearance, but the height of the cliffs on which it sits means it can be seen at a distance of 24 miles (39 km) out at sea. The beacon flashes four white every fifteen seconds.

Sea transport in the 1870s being the only feasible option for this remote site, the stone and other materials for the lighthouse were landed on a jetty built for the purpose about a mile to the south east of the lighthouse. No doubt, supplies for the lighthouse were similarly transported until roads became passable in the 20th century. The jetty (Ordnance Survey grid reference NC013320) is now in disrepair.

Close to the jetty is the Stoer Lighthouse Stores bothy which was used by the men building the lighthouse. In the bothy there is a mural depicting the east elevation of the Stoer lighthouse: the mural probably dates from the 1800s, certainly predating the sale of the bothy in the 1960s. The neighbouring (inland) bothy is known as the Salmon Bothy and was used to store salmon.

The lighthouse was manned by a Principal lighthouse keeper and assistant until 1978, when it was automated. The remoteness of the assignment necessitated a degree of self-sufficiency, and there is ample evidence of their occupation, with the remains of the former byre, stable, cow shed, pig house and cart shed still visible nearby. The children were educated at the local school at Stoer for their primary education, but had to move to a boarding school for their senior studies as there was no senior school in the county of Sutherland.


...
Wikipedia

...