Leading Point Light

Lighthouse in Maryland, United States
Lighthouse
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The Leading Point Light was an unusual lighthouse which displayed the rear light to the Brewerton Channel Range. It was eventually superseded by an iron tower on the same foundation.

History

This light was built in 1868, along with the Hawkins Point Light, to provide range lights marking the Brewerton Channel, excavated in the 1850s to provide a fixed deepwater channel into Baltimore Harbor. In form, it was like no other lighthouse in the area, a brick house with a short tower holding the lantern surmounted with a tall pole supporting a large ball, to be used as a daymark.

In 1924 both lights in this range were torn down and replaced with skeleton towers, which remain in use.

References

  • "Historic Light Station Information and Photography: Maryland" (PDF). United States Coast Guard Historian's Office.
  • Brewerton Range Front Light, from the Chesapeake Chapter of the United States Lighthouse Society

External links

  • flagMaryland portal
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Lighthouses of Maryland
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Baltimore Harbor approaches
Craighill Channel (lower)
Upper Craighill Channel (cutoff)
Brewerton Channel
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Authority control databases: Geographic Edit this at Wikidata
  • Admiralty
    • J2251.1
  • ARLHS
  • USCG
    • 2-8155