St. Augustine Lighthouse Part 2

The audio version of post was first shared in Episode 39: A Book-chat about The Bride of Blackfriar’s Lane with Michelle Griep & a Review of Until Leaves Fall in Paris by Sarah Sundin

Today we take a peek at the women who served at St. Augustine Lighthouse, World War II and beyond.

St. Augustine Lighthouse: Photo credit-Darcie Fornier

The New Lighthouse

  • By 1871, rising sea levels made it clear the lighthouse tower which had stood for 130 years would eventually be washed away. A new 165-foot lighthouse was built farther from the water, and was completed in 1874. It housed a beautiful, first-order Fresnel lens that shone three fixed-flashes 19-24 nautical miles out to see, depending on the atmospheric conditions.
  • A large keeper’s house was built near the base of the lighthouse. The head lighthouse keeper and the first assistant each had two rooms downstairs and two bedrooms upstairs for their families’ use. The second assistant had a single bedroom upstairs that straddled the entrance hall below in the middle of the house. The house featured no indoor kitchens due to the heat and fire hazard, so instead two outdoor kitchens flank the house. A basement provided storage, as well as cisterns for rainwater.
  • Lighthouse keepers took shifts keeping the light shining all night, climbing every two and half hours to refuel the lamp and wind the mechanism that turned the massive lens. They maintained the structure and even tended the navigational buoys offshore. Their families were respected members of the community and often entertained rich tourists staying in St. Augustine who came across the bay by cart or by rowboat to visit the lighthouse. Older children had to know how to tend the light in case some emergency incapacitated all the keepers.
  • Two women served as keepers at the St. Augustine lighthouse, both after they were widowed. Maria Andreu’s husband fell to his death while painting the lighthouse in 1859, and she took over. Thirty years later in 1889, a second assistant keeper died of tuberculosis, and his wife Kate Harn stayed on in his place.
The Keeper’s House: Photo credit–Darcy Fornier

World War II and beyond

  • Five years after the lighthouse lamp was converted to electricity 1936, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. A Coastal Lookout Building was constructed at the St. Augustine Light Station, but it didn’t receive too much attention until a German submarine sank a U.S. ship off the coast of Jacksonville in April of 1942. While citizens used blackout curtains, the lighthouse reduced candlepower. In June, another German submarine dropped four men carrying explosives just a few miles north at Ponte Vedra Beach. They were caught and executed within weeks, but after that Coast Guard patrols on the beach were constant. Armed guards watched from the lighthouse 24 hours a day. Barracks for the Coast Guardsmen and a large shed for their Jeeps still stand on the lighthouse property today, now housing a museum and a WWII-themed snack shop.
  • By 1970, the keeper’s house was no longer in use, and a fire destroyed the interior. In 1980, the lighthouse was nearly bulldozed to make way for development, but the local Junior Service League fought to keep it operational. A vandal shot the Fresnel lens and broke 19 of its prisms, so in 1991 the light was replaced with an airport beacon.
  • Finally in 1993, the restored original lens was once again lit in the lighthouse. Today, the lighthouse and the restored keeper’s house operate as a non-profit museum. Its daymark, which identifies it during daylight for navigation purposes, is black and white stripes swirling up the tower with a red lantern on top. Its beacon sweeps in a thirty-second rotation, still keeping watch over the St. Augustine waters.
Inside the keeper’s house: Photo credit–Darcy Fornier

To the seafarers hundreds of years ago, lighthouses could mean the difference between life and death. In our days of GPS and radar navigation, we don’t rely on their light. But I find them inspiring. No matter how dark the night, a light still shines.

A Book-chat about The Bride of Blackfriar’s Lane with Michelle Griep & a Review of Until Leaves Fall in Paris by Sarah Sundin

Join Christy Award-winning author Michelle Griep for a chat about her novel The Bride of Blackfriar’s Lane, and don’t forget to enter to win a copy of this great book!

Today’s Pinch of the Past once again visits a historic landmark in Darcy’s hometown. Over four hundred years of history, the St. Augustine Lighthouse has a fascinating history you will enjoy. (View full blog post here.)

We have a special guest sharing a review today! Alison Treat shares her review of Until Leaves Fall in Paris by Sarah Sundin. If you’d like to read a World War II romance set in the midst of German-occupied Paris, with a bookstore based on Shakespeare & Co as a main feature, you will love Until Leaves Fall in Paris. You can connect with Alison at AlisonTreat.com (View full review here.)

Mentions in the show: 

Dust Yard link “Surviving the Victorian Era” 

By Way of the Moonlight by ELIZABETH MUSSER 

Connect with Michelle at her website MichelleGriep.com, her blog, newsletter, Bride of Blackfriar’s Lane Pinterest board, Facebook, Instagram, and Goodreads.

Michelle’s previous visits to the show Ep. 2: Guest Michelle Griep and a Review of Veiled in Smoke. A bookworm review of her book Lost in Darkness

Episode 38: Guest Tracie Peterson  and a Review of This Hallowed Ground by Donna E. Lane

Tracie Peterson gave her life to Jesus at the age of six. She knew at an early age that God was calling her to ministry. Often called the “Queen of Historical Christian Fiction,” Tracie Peterson is an ECPA, CBA and USA Today best-selling author of more than 132 books, most of those historical. Join Tracie for a chat about her book BEYOND THE DESERT SANDS, book 2 in the Love on the Santa Fe series and don’t forget to enter to win a copy of this great book!

Today’s Pinch of the Past once again visits a historic landmark in Darcy’s hometown. Over four hundred years of history, the St. Augustine Lighthouse has a fascinating history you will enjoy. (View full blog post here.)

We have a special guest sharing a review today! Naomi Craig, who we interviewed in Episode 37 (which you can listen to here,) gives 5 things you didn’t know about This Hallowed Ground by Donna E. Lane. (View full review here.)