| Last Visited: October, 2003 History/Info:
The Gay Head Lighthouse has always been perilously close to the
ever-eroding cliffs. The red brick light was built in 1844 to
replace a wooden tower authorized by President John Quincy Adams. In
1856, the marvelous Fresnel lens with its 1,009 prisms was
installed, after having been proudly exhibited at the World's Fair
in Paris. It is now preserved at the Martha's Vineyard Historical
Society in Edgartown, and is lighted every evening after dark
throughout the year.
The Gay Head, East Chop, and Edgartown
Lighthouses are maintained by the Martha's Vineyard Historical
Society under a 30-year lease with the United States Coast Guard.
Each light has a large, fenced-in park area that makes a perfect
place to relax and enjoy the island's view.
Source:
Martha's Vineyard Online
The Gay Head Light was the first Vineyard lighthouse, authorized
by Congress in 1798 and built the next year. An 1852 report on the
nation's lighthouses ranked Gay Head ninth for important seacoast
lights, the highest rank of any light north of New York. At this
time the lighthouses, which had been lit with crude oil lamps, were
being refitted with the superior Fresnel lenses.
Gay Head was recommended for a first-order French Fresnel light, the
high-tech wonder of the nineteenth century which won the gold medal
at the Paris Exhibition of Industry. The lens was a scientific
system of 1,003 prisms, put together like clapboard at the top and
bottom, with huge bulls-eye magnifying lenses in the center. The
prisms accumulated and reflected light towards the bulls-eye,
crating a single powerful beam that could be seen from a distance of
twenty miles at sea.
A year after the lens was installed, General David Hunter wrote in
Harper's Magazine: "Of all the heavenly phenomena that I have had
the good fortune to witness-borealis lights, mock suns or meteoric
showers-I have never seen anything that, in mystic splendor,
equalled this trick of the magic lantern of Gay Head."
Source:
Vineyard Gazette Online
Hours:
The Gay Head and East Chop Lighthouses are open for sunset tours
from late June through mid-September, from 1.5 hours before sunset
to 0.5 hour after. The Gay Head Lighthouse is open Friday to Sunday;
the East Chop Lighthouse just Sundays. Musicians and vocalists often
perform impromptu. A $3 admission fee is requested for adults;
children under 12 are admitted free.
Latitude/Longitude: 41°21'N 70°50'W
Directions:
click here for map
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From the ferry terminal in Vineyard Haven, take a
right onto Beach Rd.
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Beach Rd. turns into Main St., which turns into State
Hwy.
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At an intersection turn right onto RR1 (essentially
it's still State Hwy)
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RR1/State Hwy becomes Vineyard Haven Rd.
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Stay on Vineyard Haven Rd. for 1.4 miles then bear
right onto North Rd.
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Continue on North Rd. for 4 miles. At that point North
Rd. once again becomes RR1.
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Stay straight on RR1 for another 5.5 miles.
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At the 4-way intersection take a right onto South Rd.
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Take South Rd. 6.4 miles to the end at the lighthouse.
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