Hog Island Light
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Hog Island Quick Facts
Year Station Established: 1886
Is the Light operational? Yes
Year Light First Lit: 1901
Year Automated: 1964
Shape: Conical
Tower Height: 60 ft.
Original Optic: 5th Order, Fresnel
Present Optic: 250mm
Existing Keepers Quarters? Yes
Year Constructed: 1901
Number of Stories:
Architectural Style: Integral
Construction Materials: Cast Iron
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Hog Island Shoal Light
Near Bristol, RI.
Click here for more Photos
(3 photos, 61KB total download)
| Last Visited: February, 2004 History/Info:
Hog Island is a 212-acre island at the entrance to the harbor of
Bristol, Rhode Island.
By 1891 a lightship, which had been built in 1846 marking the Hog
Island shoal, was in poor condition, and it was decided that a
lighthouse would be built to replace it. Congress appropriated
$35,000 in 1896, and the lighthouse was built in 1901. The lightship
remained nearby until the lighthouse was finished. Just a couple of
months before the tower was lighted, the keeper of the Hog Island
Shoal Lightship was dismissed for drunkenness.
The old lightship was removed and sold at auction for $360.
A fifth order Fresnel lens was installed in the new lighthouse,
exhibiting a white flash. In 1903 the lens was replaced by a fourth
order one. The structure has five decks; the second and third decks
were the living quarters for the keepers.
In 1995 the Coast Guard performed major repairs on the lighthouse.
Damaged railings and other parts were replaced and the exterior was
sandblasted and repainted.
Hog Island Shoal Light is now automated and has a modern plastic
lens.
Source:
New England Lighthouses - A Virtual Guide
Latitude/Longitude: 41°38'N 71°16'W
Directions:
click here for
overview map
click here for
detail map
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From the south take Route 24 to Route 114 and head north
over the Mt. Hope bridge.
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From the north take Route 114 south through Bristol.
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Just north of the Mt. Hope bridge turn east onto Old
Ferry Rd.
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There are "no parking" signs at the end of Old Ferry Rd
at the bridge. There is a Roger Williams University parking lot near the
end of the road. It requires a parking permit sticker, however on the
weekends the lot is relatively empty so parking there is possible.
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When you get to Bristol Ferry light you'll be able to
see Hog Island light off in the distance.
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