I visited Corbiere Lighthouse this past July with the U.S. Lighthouse Society. It's an amazing little tower, perched on a rock. I'm sharing some images of that visit, plus some old postcards and minutia of interest about the lighthouse.
Two black and white images from Corbiere Lighthouse's past were hanging in the nearby restaurant. |
Corbiere Lighthouse has appeared on many postage stamps.
Two old postcards and an old painting on a postcard are below.
The name means "a place where crows gather." I did not see any crows on my visit, but there were plenty of gulls.
There have been several shipwrecks here, even in recent years. Two famous wrecks occurred in 1859--a mail packet--and in 1995--a French catamaran called Saint-Malo. Over three hundred passengers were aboard the latter wreck, and all were rescued. A monument to the rescue sits on the waterfront.
The lighthouse was first commissioned in 1874 and is 62-feet tall and 119-feet above the sea. It is built of concrete but has a lovely stone block look.
After a lighthouse keeper drowned in 1946 trying to rescue a visitor who attempted to get ashore after the tide rose, a tidal alarm was installed at the lighthouse to alert people when they need to get off the island.
The lighthouse beacon remains in service and has a range of 18-nautical miles.
This is the most popular tourist stop on the island of Jersey.
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