Hillsboro Inlet
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Hillsboro Quick Facts
Year Station Established: 1907
Is the Light operational? Yes
Year Light First Lit: 1907
Year Automated: 1974
Shape: Ocatgonal Skeletal
Tower Height: 137 ft.
Original Optic: 2nd Order, Fresnel
Present Optic: 2nd Order, Fresnel
Existing Keepers Quarters? Yes
Year Constructed: 1907
Number of Stories: 1.5
Architectural Style: Duplex
Construction Materials: Wood
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Hillsboro Inlet Light
Pompano Beach, Florida
Click here for more Photos
(4 photos, 152KB total download)
| Last Visited: March, 1999 History/Info:
First proposed as early as 1851, Hillsoboro Inlet lighthouse wasn't funded
until 1902. Additional funds were appropriated in 1903 and 1905. The
lantern room and cupola of the lighthouse was displayed at the 1904
Great St. Louis Exposition, while the remainder of the tower was built
later in Detroit, Michigan.
The lighthouse was first lit in 1907. The 145 foot tall lighthouse was
accompanied by three identical wooden dwellings for the keeper and his
two assistants. The lighthouse housed a second order bivalve classical
lens made in Paris in 1905. The lens floated on a pool of mercury which
allowed it to rotate with very little friction. The rotation of the lens
was powered by a clockworks with a 100-pound weight that ran for only
two hours before it needed to be rewound.
Efforts to protect the station failed in 1947 when another hurricane
destroyed the head Keepers dwelling. The other two dwellings remain to
this day.
This lighthouse was electrified in the early 1930's. It was automated
and unmanned in 1972. Although unmanned as a light station, the
dwellings were converted into recreational cottages for senior military
personel. In 1978, the lighthouse and dwellings were placed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Hillsboro Inlet Lighthouse is used today as a military recreation area
for senior officers. This function helps maintain the historic grounds
and buildings while economically maintaining the aid to navigation. Its
grounds are not open to the public, but you can get a great view of the
lighthouse from beaches on the south side of Hillsboro Inlet.
Source:
Florida Lighthouse Page
Personal Notes:
Walk further into
the park than just the parts surrounding the parking lot. We didn't
journey that far. All our pictures of the lighthouse were from near the
parking lot. We could have gotten much better pictures if we went further
in.
Latitude/Longitude: 26°16'N 80°05'W
Directions:
click here for map
- From the south (Miami, Ft. Lauderdale, etc.) take A1A north into Pompano Beach.
- Appx. 3/4 of a mile north of the intersection of Route 844 you will come to a
drawbridge. Take a right into the parking lot for the park. From there you can wander the
park to get your best vantage points of the lighthouse.
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