Ned Point Light
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Ned Point Quick Facts
Year Station Established: 1837
Is the Light operational? Yes
Year Light First Lit: 1838
Year Automated: 1923
Shape: Conical
Tower Height: 5th Order, Fresnel ft.
Original Optic:
Present Optic: NO
Existing Keepers Quarters?
Year Constructed:
Number of Stories:
Architectural Style:
Construction Materials:
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Ned Point Light
Mattapoisett, Ma.
Click here for more Photos
(8 photos, 217KB total download)
| Last Visited: November, 2001 History/Info:
The historic beacon sits on the rocky shore of Ned's Point in
Mattapoisett, warding mariners off of dangerous shoals and into safe
harbors. With the same dependability it has maintained for the last
160 years, the humble Ned's Point Lighthouse stands oblivious to
admirers planning to honor it with a birthday celebration next
weekend.
The Ned's Point Lighthouse is one of the smallest remaining working
lighthouses on Buzzards Bay.
Over the years, many events changed its surroundings, yet the
lighthouse continued to maintain its recognizable white cone tower
and black-topped lantern room.
Visitors from all over the world who appreciate the historical
significance of this lighthouse make pilgrimages to Mattapoisett's
Veterans Memorial Park at the end of Ned's Point Road.
The light was built in 1837 by Leonard Hammond, who used rubble from
the beach to construct the 35-foot stone tower topped by a cast-iron
lantern room. The 32 triangular, spiral granite stairs, each stone
sitting one on top of another and smaller than the one before it,
were hand cut in Mattapoisett. The cost of construction: $450.
No longer is there a stove in the small workspace on the ground
level of the lighthouse. It was used during the winter to heat the
whale oil illuminating the lamp. But the small shack used as an oil
house still stands several yards away.
Clayton Hagy, the keeper of the lighthouse for the past five years,
has a wealth of information on its history. Early lighthouse keepers
used to haul buckets of whale oil from the storage house to the
lighthouse. During the winter months, the cold, congealed oil was
heated to a liquid on the stove and was carried up the spiraling
granite steps to the lantern room.
In 1888, the original beehive lantern room was replaced by the
octagonal-shaped one there today. The lighthouse keeper's house,
destroyed by a hurricane at that time, was rebuilt alongside the
lighthouse. A few of the stones from the foundation are still
visible in the grass near the rear base of the tower.
In 1923, Ned's Point Lighthouse became fully automated and the
unneeded keeper's house was moved by barge to Wing's Neck in Bourne,
where it remains today as a private home.
Source:
South Coast Today
Hours:
The tower is open during July and August, Thursdays, 10 a.m. to
noon. The park surrounding the lighthouse are open daily to the
public.
Latitude/Longitude: 41°39'N 70°47.7'W
Directions:
click here for map
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From New Bedford take Interstate 195 north to exit 19.
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At the end of the ramp go right onto North St.
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Take North St. 1.3 miles to the end and take a left
onto Water St.
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In 0.2 miles Water St. becomes Beacon St. Stay
straight on Beacon St.
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In 0.3 miles bear right onto Ned Point Road.
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Take Ned Point Road 0.7 miles to the end at Ned Point
and the lighthouse.
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