| Last Visited: September, 2007 History/Info:
As the port of Hyannis grew in importance it became obvious that a
navigational aid was needed to help mariners negotiate the area.
Construction was swiftly completed and the light went into service
on November 21, 1816, with seven lamps and reflectors exhibiting a
fixed white light. The conical tower was built of stone, with a
diameter at the base of 16 feet. The walls were 20 feet high, and
the tower was topped by an octagonal iron lantern. The
one-and-one-half-story dwelling was 16 by 30 feet, with a
10-by-12-foot porch.
In 1882, Great Island was sold to Charles B. Cory, a wealthy
ornithologist from Boston. Cory established the island as a game
preserve, with elk, deer, antelopes, pheasants, and other animals.
Non-game birds were protected; the island thus became one of the
nation's earliest bird sanctuaries.
The lighthouse's iron lantern was removed at some point after the
light was discontinued. Cory added a taller structure to the top,
designed to facilitate the use of the tower as a viewing platform.
The old stone dwelling was utilized used as a museum for the
butterfly collection amassed by Cory and his wife, Harriet.
Malcolm G. Chace, a banker from Rhode Island who had visited Great
Island as a boy, purchased the property in 1914. In the 1930s, the
dwelling was dismantled and the stones were used to build a new
house on the island. The lighthouse's observatory/lantern installed
by Cory has been rebuilt in relatively recent years.
Most of Great Island has remained in the ownership of the Chace
family, but they have surrendered development rights for 266 acres
through an agreement with the Trustees of Reservations, which
ensures it will remain in its natural state.
Great Island, including the lighthouse, is off-limits to the
public. The lighthouse can be viewed distantly from the
Hyannis-Nantucket ferry, or from excursion boats and fishing
charters leaving Hyannis.
Source:
New England Lighthouses Personal
Note:
Since the best way to see this lighthouse is from boat, the view
from land is very distant. In the directions below you can click on
a link to the Hyannis Lighthouse page to get to a view from land.
From there Point Gammon is about 2 1/4 miles away. If you don't have
a very long lens (I used a 400mm lens with doubler) the lighthouse
will just appear to be a small speck at the point of land.
Latitude/Longitude: 41°36.576'N 70°15.968'W
Directions:
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