Waackaack Rear Range Light

Waackaack Rear Range Light
Location Keansburg, New Jersey
Coordinates 40°26′39″N 74°8′10″W / 40.44417°N 74.13611°W / 40.44417; -74.13611Coordinates: 40°26′39″N 74°8′10″W / 40.44417°N 74.13611°W / 40.44417; -74.13611
Year first lit 1856 (1st tower)
1894 (second tower)
Deactivated ca. 1955
Construction Wood (orig.)
Iron
Tower shape square skeleton tower (final)
Height 96 feet (29 m) (first)
106 feet (32 m) (second)

The Waackaack Rear Range Light was built in 1856 off the shore of Keansburg, in Monmouth county, New Jersey, United States. It stood about 96 feet (29 m) tall. Although it stood near the water’s edge, it was the rear range light in conjunction with the Point Comfort Light on the beach. The light's main purpose was to guide vessels coming into the Raritan Bay. It was initially made of wood, but was replaced in the 1860s by an iron tower.

History

In 1883 a high-powered electric lamp was installed that was magnified by a glass lens. Preparations were made to replace the light-tower beginning in 1891. The tower built for use at the Waackaack Rear Range Light Station was part of the United States Lighthouse Board's exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893. This lighthouse was built of iron rings, and as the site for the lighthouse was not ready for its erection at the time the light tower was completed, it became possible for the lighthouse to become an exhibit at the Exposition.

When the Borough of Keansburg officially incorporated as a Borough in 1917, it adopted the outline of the Waackaack Range Light as its seal. By the end of the 1950s the lighthouse was dismantled and sold for scrap.

References

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