
Cape Flattery Washington
Harbour Lights #303
In 1778, explorer Capt. James Cook was visiting the northernmost tip of
the Olympic Peninsula when an opening along the coast was mistaken for a
harbor or passage, which “flattered” him. Thus he named the inlet Cape
Flattery, and writing in his logbook: In this very latitude geographers
have placed the pretended Strait of Juan de Fuca. But nothing of that kind
presented itself to our view, nor is it probable that any such thing ever
existed.
However, the Strait was, indeed, not far away and was confirmed by later
explorers. The island of Tatoosh lies about a half mile off Cape Flattery
and it is on this land – owned, in fact, by the Makah Indians and named in
honor of an 18th Century chief – that Cape Flattery Lighthouse was built
and first lit in 1857. Located at the northwestern-most point of the
continental US, Tatoosh Island is still owned by the Makah Nation, though
the lighthouse is owned and maintained by the US Coast Guard.
When construction was underway, workers were on guard against any
resistance by the Makah to the intrusion on their ancestral hunting land.
However, the Indians did nothing to hinder or harm the crew. As with most
early west coast lighthouses, the building was a one-and-a-half-story
dwelling with the tower protruding through the center of the roof. With
the wet and wild weather of the region, the design permitted keepers to
access the tower without exposure to the elements.
The island was remote and lonely, and there was a succession of keepers
who quit over low pay and poor conditions. In a bureaucratic show of
nepotism, a customs inspector named his father as chief keeper, and during
his tenure, the facility and the light fell into disrepair. This prompted
a decision to hire families so the lighthouse would not “be at the mercy
of rollicking bachelors.” It was more than 20 years before the first
family was employed as keepers. And though conditions improved over the
years, the isolation prompted keepers to hire local Indians $1 per trip to
transport people, supplies and mail on calm days; twice that amount on
days the sea was rough. The “Indian delivery service” even delivered a
piano!
The First Order Lens was replaced with a Fourth Order Fresnel Lens around
1930. In 1977, the station was automated. With automation came the
island’s last inhabitants. Currently the island is not open to the public.
The Cape Flannery Trail leads to the tip of the cape where observation
platforms offer views of Tatoosh Island and the beautiful old lighthouse.
|
HL# |
Name |
MSRP |
Introduced |
Retired |
Edition |
|
303 |
Cape Flattery WA |
$65 |
1/04 |
|
4,000 |
|