The Cape Hatteras lighthouse : sentinel of the shoals

cover image

Where to find it

Library Service Center — Request from Storage

Call Number
VK1025.C27 C37 2000
Status
Available

North Carolina Collection (Wilson Library)

Call Number
C614.865 C31c 2000
Status
In-Library Use Only
Call Number
C614.865 C31c 2000 c. 2
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Since 1871 the Cape Hatteras lighthouse has been a welcome sight for sailors entering the treacherous region off North Carolina's Outer Banks known as the Graveyard of the Atlantic. At 208 feet high, it is the tallest lighthouse in the country and one of the state's most famous landmarks. Through the years, it has withstood the ravages of both humans and nature, weathering numerous violent storms and two wars. But perhaps the gravest threat the structure faced in recent history was the erosion of several hundred yards of beach that once stood between it and the ocean. As powerful tides and rising sea levels increasingly endangered the lighthouse's future, North Carolinians debated fiercely over how best to save it, eventually deciding on a controversial plan to move the beacon inland to safety.

First published by UNC Press in 1991, this book tells the story of the noble lighthouse from its earliest history to the present day. In this new edition, Dawson Carr details the recent relocation of the treasured landmark. For now, it seems, North Carolinians have succeeded in protecting their lighthouse, as it has protected them for over a century.

Contents

  • Preface Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 1 Lighthouses and Shipwreck
  • Chapter 2 Early History of North Carolina's Outer Banks
  • Chapter 3 The First Cape Hatteras Lighthouse
  • Chapter 4 The Second Cape Hatteras Lighthouse
  • Chapter 5 Winds of Change
  • Chapter 6 The Lighthouse in the Twentieth Century
  • Chapter 7 The Lighthouse Is Restored
  • Chapter 8 Save the Lighthouse
  • Epilogue
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • Illustrations
  • Debris from a ship wrecked on the Outer Banks
  • The Tower of Pharos Timbers of a shipwreck on Hatteras Island
  • Approximate North Carolina shoreline forty-five million years ago
  • Satellite view of the Outer Banks of North Carolina
  • Map of the region around Diamond Shoals Inside view of a Fresnel lens
  • The double keepers' quarters Union troops bivouacked around the Cape Hatteras lighthouse
  • Sketch of the first Cape Hatteras lighthouse in Base of the present Cape Hatteras lighthouse
  • Cutaway view of the Cape Hatteras lighthouse
  • Sketch of the top of the lighthouse
  • Doorway to the chamber that houses the lantern
  • View from the watch room to the lantern above
  • Clockwork gears of the lantern
  • The base of the spiral stairway
  • The principal keeper's quarters
  • The lantern chamber View at two hundred feet
  • Foundation of the first Cape Hatteras lighthouse
  • Cape Lookout lighthouse Diamond Shoals lightship
  • The George W. Wells Bull's-eye of a Fresnel lens Unaka B. Jennette and Unaka B. Jennette and sons
  • Skeleton steel light tower Diamond Shoals light tower
  • Modern lamp of the Cape Hatteras lighthouse
  • Former President Ronald Reagan
  • Artist's conception of a seawall surrounding the lighthouse
  • Scaffolding surrounds the Cape Hatteras lighthouse
  • Artist's rendition of an earlier plan for moving the lighthouse
  • Workers remove granite blocks and rubble from under the lighthouse
  • Hydraulic push jacks placed at the rear of the platform
  • Steel roller beams serve as tracks

Subjects

Subject Headings A:

Other details