Tag Archives: Cape Hatteras Light Station

Beach Day in the Outer Banks

I have been to the Outer Banks before, but this was the Hubster’s first visit here.

We went to the Bodie Light Station.

Bodie Island Light Station

*Clicking on a photo will give you a closer look!

Bodie Island Light Station

According to a local resident, during the previous ten years or so, more than forty-one vessels of various sizes had wrecked within six miles of Bodie Island, so in 1838, Congress appropriated $5,000 to build a lighthouse. It was finished in 1847.

Bodie Island Light Station

It did not last and replacements have been built since. You can read the history here.

Bodie Island Light Station

We also visited the Cape Hatteras Light Station.

Cape Hatteras Light Station

Built in 1870, the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse protects one of the most hazardous sections of the Atlantic Coast.

Due to threatening beach erosion, the Bureau of Lighthouses decommissioned the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse in 1935.

Cape Hatteras Light Station

In 1999, after years of study and debate, the Cape Hatteras Light Station was moved to its present location. The lighthouse was moved 2,900 feet in 23 days and now lies 1,500 feet from the seashore, its original distance from the sea. The Double Keepers’ Quarters, the Principal Keeper’s Quarters, the dwelling cisterns, and the oil house were all relocated with the lighthouse.

Cape Hatteras Light Station

The National Park Service currently maintains the lighthouse and the keepers’ quarters. The U.S. Coast Guard operates and maintains the automated light.

Cape Hatteras Light Station

You can read about this lighthouse here.

Cape Hatteras Light Station

This lighthouse is under restoration.

Cape Hatteras Light Station

After visiting the lighthouses, we headed to the beach.

Coquina Beach North Carolina

Coquina Beach was named after the colorful coquina clams that are commonly spotted along the ocean wash of the Outer Banks, and can appear in abundance in the warm spring and summer months.

Coquina Beach North Carolina

Coquina Beach North Carolina

The beach has a local claim to fame as the final resting place of the shipwreck Laura Barnes, a four-masted schooner from Maine that was driven onshore in June of 1921. The entire crew was rescued by the Bodie Island Lifesaving Station personnel.

Coquina Beach North Carolina

Coquina Beach North Carolina

See the world around you!