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| Esopus Meadows Lighthouse |
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Only one of two Hudson River lighthouses still under the supervision of the US Coast Guard, Esopus Meadows Lighthouse is suffering from years of neglect and indifference. Long abandoned as a navigational aid, the lighthouse has begun the fast paced sequence of decay and disintegration. Only recently has the lighthouse been shored and placed back into correct horizontal alignment. Now the major work of saving and restoring the lighthouse has begun. First the lighthouse must be turned over from the Coast Guard to the hands of a not-for-profit corporation established to receive the lighthouse and undertake its restoration. In 1838 the US Government appropriated $6,000 to erect a lighthouse at the Esopus Meadows to warn shipping of the dangerous shallows and mud flats laying between the lighthouse and the shore. The lighthouse was constructed as a near identical match to the neighboring lighthouse then in use at the Rondout Creek. By the late 1860s the lighthouse was in ruinous condition and funding was approved to rebuild the lighthouse. This time a more substantial foundation with a facing of cut stone was created to protect the lighthouse from winter ice and flooding.
The Coast Guard took over operations in 1939 and the light was eventually closed in 1965 when an automated navigation aid was erected outside. Visiting the Lighthoue The Esopus Meadows Lighthouse is not open for visitation as it is structurally unsafe. To see the lighthouse your best bets are:
Lighthouse Contacts & Address Barbara Lewis Pat Ralston |