Covesea Skerries Lighthouse

Covesea Skerries Lighthouse

The lighthouse photographed in June 1983
Location Nr Lossiemouth, Moray, NE Scotland.
Coordinates 57°43.4′N 03°20.3′W / 57.7233°N 3.3383°W / 57.7233; -3.3383Coordinates: 57°43.4′N 03°20.3′W / 57.7233°N 3.3383°W / 57.7233; -3.3383
Year first constructed 1845—46
Year first lit 1846
Automated 1984
Construction Brick
Tower shape Conical tower
Markings / pattern White
Height 36 m
Focal height 49 m
Range 44 Km (white),
37 Km (red)
Characteristic

Fl. white/red every 20 secs

Listed Building – Category A
Designated 26 January 1971[1]
Reference no. LB37605

Covesea Skerries Lighthouse, belonging to the Northern Lighthouse Board (NLB), is built on top of a small headland on the south coast of the Moray Firth at Covesea, near Lossiemouth, Moray, Scotland.

History

Following a storm in the Moray Firth in November 1826 when 16 vessels were sunk, applications were made for lighthouses at Tarbat Ness, on the opposite coast, and at Covesea Skerries. The Commissioners of Northern Light Houses (the precursor of the NLB) and Trinity House[2] felt that a lighthouse at Covesea was unnecessary but this was against public opinion. Many letters and petitions were delivered to them. Eventually, the engineer and a committee of the Board surveyed the coastline and the Elder Brethren[3] were asked to look for the best location. They recommended a lighthouse on the Craighead with a beacon on Halliman's Skerries, which the Commissioners agreed to. A grid iron tower was erected on the Halliman's Skerries in 1845, and in 1846, the Covesea Skerries Lighthouse was completed at a cost of £11,514.[4]

The surrounding walls, because of their height, caused vortices in the yard area in strong winds. This interfered with lightkeepers lookout so the walls were lowered in 1907.

In 1984, the lighthouse was automated being remotely monitored and controlled at the Northern Lighthouse Board's offices in Edinburgh, but originally, the lens was rotated by a clockwork mechanism with gradually descending weights providing the energy. The original lens is on display at the Lossiemouth Fisheries and Community Museum.

The lighthouse in 2011

The light was extinguished on 2 March 2012 in effect replaced "by a North Cardinal navigational lit buoy fitted with X Band Radar Beacon at the north eastern extremity of the Halliman Skerries on 21 February 2012".[5]

Engineer

The lighthouse was designed and built by Alan Stevenson, a member of the Stevenson lighthouse engineering dynasty and uncle of the novelist Robert Louis Stevenson.

Covesea Lighthouse Community Company Limited

Following the discontinuation of the light on 2 March 2012 the Board no longer required the site at Covesea and plans were put in place to sell the Category A Listed property. In July 2012 the Northern Lighthouse Board received notification from The Scottish Government that the Covesea Lighthouse Community Company Limited had registered an interest in the Covesea Skerries property under the terms contained in Part 2 of The Land Reform (Scotland) Act 2003. The Covesea Lighthouse Community Company was formed by the local business association in Lossiemouth to develop the lighthouse site for tourism.

The Covesea Lighthouse Community Company managed to secure a major grant from the Scottish Land Fund and on 4 April 2013 the Northern Lighthouse Board sold the entire lighthouse complex at Covesea Skerries to the Covesea Lighthouse Community Company. The plan is now to develop the iconic landmark as a major tourism hub to promote local heritage, the area's unique wildlife and environment and its links to the nearby airbase at RAF Lossiemouth.

[6]

Footnotes

  1. "COVESEA SKERRIES LIGHTHOUSE, KEEPERS' COTTAGES AND STEADING". Decisions Portal. Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 4 October 2015.
  2. The Corporation of Trinity House had three functions:
    1. General Lighthouse Authority for England, Wales, the Channel Islands and Gibraltar
    2. Pilotage Authority for London and forty other districts (known as outports) including Southampton but excluding Liverpool, Bristol and several ports in the North-East of England
    3. Charitable organisation for the relief of mariners and their dependants in distress
  3. The Corporation of Trinity House has had many other functions, largely carried out or supervised by the Board of 10 Elder Brethren. Elder Brethren are elected (for life) from the pool of around 300 Younger brethren who are primarily Merchant Navy captains (with a few Royal Navy officers)
  4. £11514 in 1846 was equivalent to around £742,000 in 2005
  5. Northern Lighthouse Board
  6. https://www.nlb.org.uk/LighthouseLibrary/Lighthouse/Covesea

Source for money calculations at -

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