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South Carolina Lighthouses: Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)

Autor Margie Willis Clary, Kim McDermott
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 iun 2008
Boasting one of the oldest lighthouses in North America and the most working lighthouses today, South Carolina has a long seafaring history. In 1767, the Morris Island Lighthouse was built at the entrance to Charleston Harbor, and before 1860, there were lighthouses in Georgetown, Cape Romain, Bull's Bay, and Hunting Island. During the Civil War, all lighthouses on the eastern coast were darkened. Many were destroyed. After the war, towers that had been damaged were repaired, and additional lights were erected on Daufuskie and Hilton Head Islands. In 1962, the new Charleston Light on Sullivan's Island replaced the Morris Island Lighthouse, which was suffering from erosion by the ever-encroaching sea. The new light contained an elevator and two rotating beacons capable of producing 28 million candlepower, a light that can be seen 26 miles out to sea. At that time, it was considered one of the most powerful lights in the Western Hemisphere.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780738554006
ISBN-10: 0738554006
Pagini: 127
Dimensiuni: 168 x 235 x 9 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)


Descriere

Boasting one of the oldest lighthouses in North America and the most working lighthouses today, South Carolina has a long seafaring history. In 1767, the Morris Island Lighthouse was built at the entrance to Charleston Harbor, and before 1860, there were lighthouses in Georgetown, Cape Romain, Bullas Bay, and Hunting Island. During the Civil War, all lighthouses on the eastern coast were darkened. Many were destroyed. After the war, towers that had been damaged were repaired, and additional lights were erected on Daufuskie and Hilton Head Islands. In 1962, the new Charleston Light on Sullivanas Island replaced the Morris Island Lighthouse, which was suffering from erosion by the ever-encroaching sea. The new light contained an elevator and two rotating beacons capable of producing 28 million candlepower, a light that can be seen 26 miles out to sea. At that time, it was considered one of the most powerful lights in the Western Hemisphere.

Recenzii

Title: Reading Room
Author: Julie Bookman
Publisher: Charleston Style and Design Magazine
Date: Winter 2009
South Carolina Lighthouses
By Margie Willis Clary and Kim McDermott
(Arcadia, S19.99)
Morris Island in Old Charleston. Cape Romain on Lighthouse Island. Bloody Point and Haig Pont on Daufuskie Island. The beacons of South Carolina's Lowcountry hold ghosts whose tales go back some 240 years. They are tales of murder, mystery and mayhem, and of long-gone keepers who warned and guided sailors, braved cruel elements and living conditions, and battled profound loneliness.

Lighthouses appeal to our sense of romance and wonder, to our yearning for a supposedly simpler time. These stalwart towers rise up in places of rugged beauty. They are symbols of purpose and hope, of light and safety emerging on a black, starless night of uncertainty.

When so much of our history is bulldozed these days, lighthouses such as Morris Island are being rescued and restored; this volume covers that effort and updates us on the status of other beacons, from Hilton Head and Hunting Island to Georgetown Light at the entrance to Winyah Bay.

For so compact a book, Clary and McDermott have compiled an immense amount of historical facts and anecdotes. When tooling about the Palmetto State coastline, be sure this book's in the glove compartment.

Notă biografică

South Carolina lighthouses have aided in marine navigation and saved lives for almost 250 years. With this in mind, Margie Willis Clary, South Carolina author and lighthouse enthusiast, has joined forces with Kim McDermott, Charleston author and educator, to present this history of the Palmetto State's lighthouses. The authors hope that Images of America: South Carolina Lighthouses will provide insight into how each light played a part in making our state's shores safer for seafarers from home and abroad.