Since the days of exploration and colonization, Sandy Hook and the nearby Navesink Highlands have been prominent landmarks for ships approaching Lower New York Harbor. Englishman Thomas Pownall sailed into the harbor in 1755 and noted that: "The first land you discover in coming from the Sea is the high land of the Nave-sinks . . . under the Navesinks stretching from their foot for about 4 miles to the right or northward of this high land (is) a neck of low sandy hills covered with cedars & holly, ending in a low sandy point . . . This was the first land of America that I saw . . . The Cedar point , .. was..called by the Dutch Sandy Hoek. After having come from the sea (and) within the Hook & under the pleasant feel of still Water, the Eye is delighted with the view of a most noble bay.
To enter the
harbor, sailing ships navigated a narrow, curving channel around the tip of Sandy Hook. Pownalls passage took place during good
weather, but six years later a number of shipwrecks occurred on the treacherous, unseen
sandbars and shoals surrounding Sandy Hook. Severe
financial losses from these shipwrecks made forty-three New York merchants petition the
Colonial Assembly of New York in 1761. The
merchants requested that a lighthouse be erected on Sandy Hook to guide ships safely into
the harbor. The New York Assembly supported
this proposal and passed An Act for raising a Sum not exceeding Three Thousand
Pounds by way of Lottery for building a Light House on Sandy Hook.
A committee
of prominent New York citizens was authorized to establish the lottery and purchase a
small quantity of land at the tip of Sandy Hook to build a lighthouse. Negotiations with Robert Hartshorne, the owner of
Sandy Hook, resulted in the purchase, on May 16, 1762, of four acres of barren,
sandy soil
for the moderate price of 750 pounds.
The June 18,
1764 edition of the New York Mercury Newspaper reported that: On Monday
Evening last (June 11, 1764), the NEW YORK LIGHT HOUSE erected at Sandy Hook was lighted
for the first time. The House is of an
Octagonal Figure, having eight equal sides; the diameter at the base, 29 feet; and at the
Top of the Wall, 15 feet. The Lanthorn
(lantern house) is 7 feet high; the circumference 33 feet.
The whole Construction of the Lanthorn is Iron; the Top covered with Copper. There are 48 Oil Blazes. The building from the surface is nine stories; the
whole from bottom to top, 103 feet.
To pay for
the operation and maintenance of the new lighthouse, the Colony of New York authorized a
tonnage tax of three pence per ton on ships sailing into the harbor. This enabled the Port
of New York to maintain the tower, pay a keepers salary, and make a small profit
from any surplus tax money.
Early in the
American Revolution, the expected arrival of the British Fleet made the lighthouse a
military target. A patriot raiding party
removed 8 copper lamps and 4 casks of whale oil from the lighthouse in March, 1776. In June, a daring attack to destroy the tower was
attempted by Lieutenant-Colonel Benjamin Tupper and his soldiers. Tupper ordered the artillery to play,
which continued for an hour, but found the walls so firm I could make no impression. In the face of stiff resistance from a British
armed guard defending the lighthouse, and supported by a British Frigate in Sandy Hook
Bay, Tupper called off the attack and withdrew his command.
In response to the raid, the British high command took steps to protect this
key navigational aid by sending loyalists to fortify the lighthouse and guard it from
attack. Supported by the British Army and
Navy, the loyalists kept the Lighthouse Fort or Refugees Tower
under British control for most of the revolution.
As
commercial ship traffic in and out of the harbor increased tremendously after 1800, so did
the need to better mark the sea approaches leading to the Port of New York. To improve navigation, the newly created federal
Lighthouse Establishment decided to take full advantage of the Navesink
Highlands by building two identical octagonal stone towers there in 182708. High above the sea, these twin lights
were visible before the Sandy Hook Lighthouse, located at sea level. Two lighthouses were built, so approaching ships
would not confuse them with the Sandy Hook Lighthouse located over five miles to the
north. The Twin Lights were further
identified by fixed (non-blinking) and rotating (blinking) white lights, while Sandy Hook
light was a fixed white light. In 1861-62,
the twin lights were replaced with new brownstone towers connected to a brownstone keepers
dwelling. Today, the lights are preserved as
Twin Lights State Historic Site, Highlands, NJ 07732.
For many
years, early American lighthouses burned whale oil as an illuminant in metal lamps and
later, lamps with mirror-like reflectors. In 1822, Augustin Fresnel of France introduced a
glass lens that revolutionized the lighting of Lighthouses.
The Fresnel Lens resembled a giant, old-fashioned beehive, inside of which
was a single lamp. The lens thick glass
prisms bent the lamps light to the center of the lens, which greatly magnified the
light into a powerful beam that could be seen for many miles at night. Fresnel made his lenses in six different sizes, or
orders. The 1st, 2nd
, and 3rd order lenses were usually installed in seacoast lighthouses to warn
ships that they were approaching land. The 4th,
5th, and 6th order lenses were used in harbor and sound lighthouses. A Fresnel lens was shipped to America in
1840, destined for the Sandy Hook Lighthouse, but it was slightly too large to fit inside
the lens house. It and a second lens were
transferred over to the Twin Lights thus making them the first American lighthouses to use
Fresnel Lenses. The Sandy Hook Lighthouse was
refitted with its present 3rd order Fresnel lens in 1857 when the iron lens
house (lanthorn) was added to the tower.
The
lighthouse has witnessed many changes over the years, but the greatest change has been to
the Sandy Hook peninsula itself. In 1764, the
lighthouse stood just 500 feet from the tip of Sandy Hook.
Ocean currents continued to move sand up the coast, extending the tip
further out into the harbor, so that by 1864, the lighthouse stood about 4,000 feet from
the tip. The lighthouse now stands about one
and one half miles from the northern end of Sandy Hook.
On June 11,
1964, the Sandy Hook Lighthouse was declared a National Historic Landmark on the 200th
anniversary of its first lighting. This
faithful sentinel by the sea still continues its original function. The light is currently an automated, 3rd
order Fresnel lens, fixed, white light, visible for nineteen miles on clear nights. The light is maintained by the United States Coast
Guard and is kept on 24 hours a day.
The New
Jersey Lighthouse Society is a partner with the National Park Service in the preservation
and interpretation of the Sandy Hook Lighthouse. For
information about the Society, write: New Jersey Lighthouse Society, Inc., PO Box 4228,
Brick, NJ 08723.
For further
information write: Sandy Hook, Gateway National Recreation Area, PO Box 530, Fort Hancock,
NJ 07732 or phone 732-872-5970. Web address:
www.nps.gov/gate
The above information is from a
brochure I picked up at the Sandy Hook Lighthouse.
The text is by Thomas J. Hoffman, Park Historian.
Return to the New Jersey State Page
Return to the: Alphabetical Listing or the Listing by States