Thimble Shoal Light
Cyberlights Lighthouses - Thimble Shoal Light  

Thimble Shoal Quick Facts

Year Station Established: 1870

Is the Light operational? Yes

Year Light First Lit: 1914

Year Automated: 1964

Shape: Conical Spark Plug

Tower Height: 40   ft.

Original Optic: 4th Order, Fresnel

Present Optic: RB 355, Solar

Existing Keepers Quarters? Yes
     Year Constructed: 1914
      Number of Stories:
      Architectural Style: Integral Spark Plug
      Construction Materials: Cast Iron



         Cyberlights Lighthouses

Thimble Shoal Lighthouse
Chesapeake Bay
Near Hampton, VA

Cyberlights Lighthouses - Thimble Shoal Lighthouse

[Photo 2]

Last Visited: June, 2008

History:
The first light at this location was a hexagonal screw-pile lighthouse erected in 1872, replacing the last lightship stationed within the bay. It was destroyed by fire in 1880 and replaced in the same year with a new house on the same foundation. This was facilitated by the availability of a newly constructed house originally intended for the Bells Rock Light, so that the light was out of service for only fifty-five days.

The second light was plagued by collisions with passing ships: it was struck by a steamer in 1891, by a coal barge in 1898, and finally by the schooner Malcolm Baxter, Jr., which struck the lighthouse on December 27, 1909 while under tow. This last collision damaged the foundation and overturned the stove in the house, which was destroyed by fire.

A caisson light was placed next to the old site in 1914; in the meantime, a temporary light perched on the remains of the old screw-pile foundation. This light has several unusual features for such lights in the bay area, most notably the diamond-shaped panes in the lantern and the round porthole windows. Unlike its predecessors, it passed time relatively uneventfully, with automation coming in 1964. The broken, skeletal remains of the old foundation remained next to the light until their removal in the 2000s. As with most lights the original Fresnel lens has been removed, replaced by more modern beacons; in this case the lens is displayed at the Coast Guard Training Center in Yorktown, Virginia. Though worn from years of vacancy, it retains most of the canopy over the lower level gallery. In 2005 it was sold at auction to a private interest, but remains an active aid to navigation.

Source: Wikipedia

Personal Note:
The light is definitely best seen by boat. We had a VERY distant view from Fort Munroe, and the photo shows

Latitude/Longitude: 37.01457, -76.23995

Nearest Address: Gulick Dr, Hampton, VA

Directions:
  • From Norfolk take I-64W.
  • Take exit 268 and head east on S. Mallory St.
  • In about 0.3 miles turn right onto E. Mellen St.
  • Continue on E. Mellen St for 0.7 miles,when it turns into Ingalls Rd.
  • Pass through the gate onto the grounds of the fort and continue on Ingalls Rd. for about another 0.7 miles then turn left on Fenwick Rd.
  • Take Fenwick Road about 0,5 miles (past Old Point Comfort Lighthouse) to a parking lot on the right. Head onto the beach where far off in the distance you may get a small view of the lighthosue


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