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Fire Island Lighthouse
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Description:
History of light:
Current use: Active aid to navigation. The surrounding area: Fire Island National Seashore and Robert Moses State Park. The Atlantic Ocean and the Great South Bay are right there. The Captree Boat Basin and Jones Beach are nearby. The traffic in summer can be tough, but the light is worth the trouble. Public access? Yes. Grounds open daily. Call for tower and center hours. Tours available. Park in Robert Moses Parking Field 5 and follow the boardwalk approximately .72 miles to the light. The staff at the lighthouse are friendly, knowledgeable and helpful. Similar Lights: The old Shinnecock Bay tower was similar, but was a little shorter and lacked Fire Island's parabolic curve. Other information: When the original tower was built, it was on the western tip of the inlet. Time has since added about 5 miles of beach to that tip. Original light cost about $10,000 to build. Congress appropriated $40,000 for the construction of the new tower. While the light was deactivated, a light was displayed on the nearby water tower. With the approximately $1.2 million raised by the Fire Island Lighthouse Preservation Society, the light was repaired, the keeper's quarters turned into a museum, and the light relit May 25, 1986.
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| Research materials for this lighthouse can be found at the East Islip Public Library, East Islip, New York. | |
| Visit my Fire Island Light Photo Gallery to see some digital pictures I took during a visit a while ago. | |
| See a report, and photos, from a sunrise tour at the Fire Island Light on January 30, 2000. | |
| Back to NewYorkLighthouses.com | |
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