Cape Florida Light
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Cape Florida Quick Facts
Year Station Established: 1825
Is the Light operational? Yes
Year Light First Lit: 1846
Year Automated: 1978
Shape: Conical
Tower Height: 95 ft.
Original Optic: 17 Argand Lamps
Present Optic: 300mm
Existing Keepers Quarters? Yes
Year Constructed: Replica/1970
Number of Stories: 2
Architectural Style: Cape Cod
Construction Materials: Brick
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Cape Florida Light
Key Biscayne, Florida
Click here for more Photos
(7 photos, 232KB total download)
| Last Visited: February, 2003 History/Info:
The Cape Florida lighthouse is one of the most celebrated landmarks owned
by the State of Florida. The historic compound in Bill Baggs State Park
and Recreation Area includes the newly restored, 95-foot white-brick tower
and a replica of the lighthouse keeper's 1825 cottage, delighting visitors
as well as residents of this subtropical island of Key Biscayne. Graceful
coconut palms line the walkway toward the ocean and grand historic
monument.
A climb to the lantern room affords a vast panorama of the lush island
with its long stretch of sandy beaches and the ever-changing tropical
seas. Against a background of aquamarine waters, leaping dolphins and
giant rays, schools of colorful fishes, occasional sharks, diving
pelicans, and other tropical birds may be seen. You will view ships from
international ports plying the deep blue of the powerful Gulf Stream,
enormous cruise ships on the horizon, and luxury yachts, deep-sea fishing
boats, and bobbing sailboats riding the waves.
The tranquility surrounding the entire state park - and especially the
historic compound - belies the dramatic and sometimes violent past when
hurricanes, fire, and the Seminole Wars swept through the region.
The original lighthouse and cottage, built in 1825, were attacked and
burned in 1836 by Seminole warriors protesting U.S. presence in the South
Florida wilderness and resisting deportation from Florida to the West.
When the lighthouse was rebuilt in 1855-1856, it was extended from 65 feet
to its present height, and wooden stairs were replaced with 119 spiraling
iron steps to the top.
Today rangers and guides on scheduled tours take visitors through the
furnished air-conditioned cottage and the cookhouse (now an
air-conditioned video mini-theater) as an introduction to Cape Florida
lighthouse history and Key Biscayne.
The lighthouse rises on the southernmost tip of Key Biscayne overlooking
the rest of the more than 500-acre Bill Baggs State Park. Visitors may
want to picnic, sunbathe, swim, fish, or follow paths through the
ecologically restored interior, traveling on foot or bicycle from
beachside to bayside on the Key Biscayne Heritage Trail.
Source:
key-biscayne.com
Latitude/Longitude: 25°40'N 80°9.3'W
Directions:
click here for
overview map
click here for
detail map
- From Miami, take I-95 south to exit 1,
following signs for Key Biscayne and Bill Baggs State Park.
- At the end of the ramp, go straight
through the first set of lights, then take a left at the next set of lights.
- This road is SW 26th Rd which becomes SR
913, the Rickenbacker Causeway. There is a toll to get onto Key Biscayne via
the Causeway, but no toll on the way back.
- Stay on the Rickenbacker Causeway for
about 5.5 miles when the road becomes Crandon Blvd in the town of Key
Biscayne.
- Follow Crandon for another 2.5 miles
until you come to the Bill Baggs State Park. Pay the entrance fee to enter the
park and follow the signs to the lighthouse.
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