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Point No Point, Washington
Harbour Lights #354
In 1841, US
Navy Lt. Charles Wilkes began the exploration of Puget Sound and from
his ship named a small piece of land, barely visible, Point No Point.
Three local Indian Tribes, the S’kallum, Chimacum and the Skokomish had
settled this small parcel of land. In 1855 they came together on the
site to sign the Point No Point Treaty with Territorial Gov. Isaac
Stevens ending the Indian Wars.
In the 1850’s and 60’s lighthouses were being built along the coast of
Washington state. The Puget Sound, the destination of many vessels, was
still without a single Light.
Point No Point had presented mariners with many obstacles and shipwrecks
became commonplace.
While the US government had appropriated funds to build a Light, there
was a problem securing the necessary parcel of land from one Francis
James, owner of the Point. James, a former Keeper at Cape Flattery, had
earned a reputation as a fighter having engaged a fellow Keeper in a
gunfight. Finally, in April 1879, James agreed to sell forty acres on
the Point for $1,000.00
Construction began immediately but there were problems. The Lighthouse
Board was determined to have the new lighthouse operational by year’s
end and while construction was on time the lens and glass for the
lantern room had not arrived. The first Keeper, John Maggs a Seattle
dentist, hung a kerosene lantern in the tower on January 1, 1880. A
Fifth Order Fresnel Lens arrived on January 10, 1880 with the glass
panes following on February 1st. Point No Point was then fully
operational.
In 1900 the fog bell was replaced by a Daboll Trumpet. The lens in the
tower was later upgraded to a Fourth Order Lens in 1915 and is still in
place today.
The Lighthouse was automated in 1977 and declared surplus by the United
States Coast Guard in 1999. A long-term lease for management of the
property was granted to Kitsap County.
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HL# |
Name |
MSRP |
Introduced |
Expected |
Edition |
Guide |
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354 |
Point No Point WA |
$70 |
Jun 2007 |
TBD |
1,500 |
NA |
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