Thursday, November 16, 2017

GREEN HILL LIGHT


GREEN HILL LIGHT

The Delaware Breakwater Rear Range lighthouse, better know locally as Green Hill Light, was a navigation aid to ship master to help determine an exact location as they came around Cape
Henlopen to enable them to navigate shoals of the Delaware Bay. It was in use between 1881 and
1918 when shifting sand changed the shoreline and the Green Hill Light was no longer usable as am
navigational aid.

Located two miles NW of Lewes on a slight elevation above the marsh, a Sussex county hill, it
consisted of 100 foot high steel tower fitted with a “3d order red light”, which was 108 feet above sea level . Along the side of it was a two story keepers house. Between 1881 and 1889 a kitchen was added, also a red brick shed for oil and a iron hand rail for the keepers safety for the tower. 1910 saw
a one story block structire for the assistant keeps. Shrubs and trees were set out in 1901, over 600 of them. The two story house was sold to Robert Arnell who had it moved to his Old Landing farm.

Decommissioned in 1918 the light was recycled, the lens and clockworks were moved to be used at San Francisco 's 18th Lighthouse District. The steel tower, disasembled and loaded on railway cars went to the west coast of Floiad, for use on Gasparilla Island.

The property of Green Hill was abandoned, overgrown, structures were left to deterioate, and returned to the State of Delaware in 1930 which gave the land to Lewes.



Source: Green Hill Light by Gary Grunder, Volumer V, 1002 Journal of the Lewes Historical Society.

Abstract by Harrison H, November 2017.   

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