Browse Items (228 total)

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This wall panel provides the history of the Fresnel lens and its inventor Agustin Jean Fresnel.

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This lamp was introduced in 1892. It was the standard lamp that was used in the 4th Order lenses in many lighthouses. It was a standard "Argand lamp" with a single 1 1/8 inch wick. With a few alterations, the same lamp was used for the 5th and 6th…

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1000 Watt Bulb - used in Beavertail's DCB-24 Beacon from 1991 until 2018. Automatic bulb changer. - This was most commonly used in buoys and fixed lights. This mechanism sensed a burned-out bulb and automatically replaced it with a new one.

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A poster depicting the various navigation lights on display in the Lens Room at Beavertail Lighthouse Museum.

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This storyboard highlights preservation efforts that have rescued some local lighthouses. Included are Pomham Rocks, Plum Beach, Rose Island, Sokonnet, Dutch Island, Block Island, and Beavertail.

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This storyboard tells the story of several lighthouses that no longer exist due to weather events, deterioration over time, or by being intentionally destroyed. Included are Sabin Point, Gull Rock Light, Whale Rock Light, Bristol Ferry Light, and…

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This storyboard summarizes the building and expansion of lighthouses in Rhode Island and Narragansett Bay waters in the 18th and 19th century

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This storyboard presents stories of the earliest lighthouses in Rhode Island and Narragansett Bay.

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This is a stone from the original foundation of the 1st Lighthouse, built in 1749. The erosion caused by the Great Hurricane of 1938 exposed the foundation and in 2012 it was restored to its original state. The foundation can be viewed in front of…

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Painted wooden model of the Beavertail Light Station, 11 1/2" tall on a 16" wide by 11 1/2" wooden base. Created by Robert Dennis

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This oil can was used to carry the whale oil up to the top of the tower to keep the light lit. Visitors are invited to try and lift the can and imagine carrying that can of oil up the 49 steps.

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The lens on display in the center of this room is a fourth-order lens that was in the tower at Beavertail until it was replaced in 1991 by a rotating beacon. The lens can be open to allow visitors to see inside. Touching the glass prisms is…

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This Detector was in operation at Beavertail for 20 years and was replaced by the Mariner Radio Activated Sound System (MRASS) in 2019 Designed by Fidelity Technologies, PA as a backscatter particle light detector. It comprises a XENON Flash…

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Carl Chellis (right) is shown receiving an award from Commanding Officer NAS Quonset Point for 40 years of federal service. Mr. Chellis was the lighthouse keeper at Beavertail Station from January 1938 to 1945. He was there during the devastating…

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Lighthouse Keeper at Beavertail for 33 years. He served for 42 years in Naval Service (US Navy, Us Lighthouse Service, US Coast Guard). Donahue was assigned to Beavertail Light in 1920 as an Assitant Keeper to Keeper George Manders.He succeeded…

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Henry Whaley and his father, Joseph, kept this light from 1862 to 1908. Joseph's sister married Henry Cark, the first keeper of Block Island's Southeast light. Joseph Whaley Jr was born at Point Judith Lighthouse in 1893 and lived there until he was…

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As the Coast Guard automated their lighthouses and removed Keepers who visually sighted fog and turned on the fog signal, a means to detect fog electronically was invented. This device became the standard sensor used by the US Coast Guard to detect…

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Martin Thompson was keeper of Sandy Point lighthouse from 1905 until his retirement in 1933. Thompson was one of five people drowned when the 1938 hurricane swept away the keeper's house where they had gathered for protection from the storm. As a…

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During the Civil War. Peter Lee applied to become keeper in order to free a younger man to enlist in the Union Army. His daughter Ella was nine at the time, the third of six children. In later years Ella liked to tell stories of those days to her…

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Linda Levesque also grew up at Beavertail, one of eleven children. Her father, Domenic Turillo, was keeper there in the 1950s and 1960s. One thing my mother didn't like very much was the inspections the Coast Guard had. My father would go bananas.…
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