segunda-feira, março 14, 2005
domingo, março 13, 2005
PONCE DE LEON INLET LIGHTHOUSE

Site Established: 1834
Current Bldg. Erected: 1886
Height of Light Structure: 176.5 ft.
Focal Plane of Light: 164.5 ft.
Active: Yes
Lens: First-Order Fresnel
Beacon Visibility: 18 miles
In 1569, Spanish Captain Antonio de Prado's expedition explored an ocean inlet in the northeast corner of present-day Florida that he christened "the Mosquitoes" because of the abundance of insects that greeted them.
Although this initial landing did not result in the establishment of a colony for Spain, after a short era of English control in the middle of the 18th century Spain regained this land in 1784.
The area soon flourished with plantations and the correlating commerce that followed created the need for a navigational aid for the shipping of goods.
In 1834, the U.S. Congress authorized the establishment of a lighthouse at Mosquito Inlet.
William H. Williams was appointed the first light keeper but never had the chance to carry out his duties because the oil needed to light the tower was not delivered to the location.
After a severe hurricane in 1835 and 18 months of no oil deliveries, Williams took his family away from the lighthouse, leaving it to the whims of ransacking Seminole Indians, who broke into the tower and beacon room and confiscated the reflectors used in the lens.
This action was the beginning on the Second Seminole War, and the Battle of Dunlawton soon followed a few weeks later. It was recorded that these Seminoles used the stolen reflectors in their headdresses at this battle. Upon the Seminole victory, the area and lighthouse were abandoned for more than 50 years.
A new and exquisite lighthouse was designed by Francis Hopkinson Smith and built at the north side of Mosquito Inlet in 1886 as the need continued for a beacon between St. Augustine and Cape Canaveral to combat the dangerous currents.
In 1897, Stephen Crane, famous author of the Civil War classic novel The Red Badge of Courage was shipwrecked off Mosquito Inlet and used this new, grand light to navigate his raft back to shore. Afterwards, he wrote the famous short story "The Open Boat" to commemorate his shipwreck experience.
As the area grew in population, the location name was changed in 1926 to Ponce de Leon Inlet in the hopes of helping the real-estate market with a more appealing name.
In 1933 the lighthouse tower received electricity and within a decade the grounds were used to house Coast Guardsmen in World War II, who watched and patrolled the shores for enemy submarines.
In 1970 the Coast Guard built another beacon south of the present lighthouse land and deeded the current land to the town of Ponce Inlet, spurring the founding of the Ponce de Leon Lighthouse Preservation Association. The association acquired the designation of a National Historic Landmark for the lighthouse in 1972 and reactivated the light in 1982.
Over the past 30 years the Ponce de Leon Lighthouse Preservation Association painstakingly restored this lighthouse to its former splendor and glory.
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Ponce Inlet, Florida
sábado, março 12, 2005
PENSACOLA

Established: in 1858
Lit: on January 1, 1859
Materials: brick with concrete, granite foundation
Tower height: 150 feet
Tower height above sea level: 191 feet
Lens Optic: First-Order Fresnel
Light visible: 27 miles
Number of steps to lens: 177
Light pattern: white every 20 seconds
Lighthouse automated: in 1965
It is the fourth tallest lighthouse in the US
The site selected for a lighthouse was a bluff west of Fort Barrancas and on December 20, 1824the new lighthouse was lit for the first time. This Pensacola Lighthouse was a short, round tower ofonly 30 feet in height and 18 feet in diameter at the base. The short tower was on a high bluff which added to it's total focal height. The total height of the tower, on the bluff, with the lantern on top putit at 75 feet above sea level. The lantern consisted of 10 whale oil lamps which flashed a beam of light from 15 to 20 miles out.
In 1852 the Lighthouse Board recommended a "first class seacoast light" for Pensacola. The existing lighthouse was little better than the local lights that were along the coast. They recommended the newlighthouse have a First-Order Fresnel lens, be a height of at least 150 feet and must be different from theMobile Point Lighthouse for ships at sea.
In 1856 a new site was selected for the second (and present) lighthouse in Pensacola. The original site wasnot a suitable place for the new tower and the new site was on the second bluff west of Fort Barrancas, aboutone half mile from the original lighthouse location. The new lighthouse was first lit on January 1, 1859 and was140 feet in height, 30 feet in diameter at it's base and 15 feet in diameter at the top. The lantern at the top wasa First-Order Fresnel Lens, giving the total height of the lighthouse the 150 feet required. The total height ofthe tower, the lens and the bluff it rested upon put the height 191 feet above sea level.
On January 10, 1861 Florida succeeded from the Union. The Union troops stationed at Fort Barrancasleft to stay at Fort Pickens across the bay, since they knew they were outnumbered by state forces.Florida and Alabama troops soon took control of all Federal property in Pensacola. The troops used thetower to spy on the Federal soldiers across the bay at Fort Pickens. On the night of April 12 the PensacolaLighthouse was extinguished by the Confederates, due to Union reinforcements landing across the bay at Fort Pickens. On this same night the Confederate Army fired upon the Union held Fort Sumter in Charleston,South Carolina. The war had begun.
On November 22, 1861 Fort Pickens fired across the bay at Fort Barrancas and the lighthouse. For 2 daysthe firing didn't stop and the lighthouse was hit by Union artillery but caused little damage. On December 20,1862 the lighthouse was once again lit and in the hands of the Union troops. The retreating Confederates destroyedmuch of Pensacola in their retreat, but the lighthouse remained in good condition.
In 1875 the lighthouse suffered 2 lightning strikes and was hit by a tornado in 1877.
In 1938 the Pensacola Lighthouse entered the electrical age and with this change the duties of a lighthouse keeperbecame much easier.
sexta-feira, março 11, 2005
quarta-feira, março 09, 2005
segunda-feira, março 07, 2005
domingo, março 06, 2005
LIGHTHOUSE WEST QUODDY

The lantern is fitted with a third-order fresnel lens. The distinctive red and white bands make this light picturesque and a popular photographic choice for calendars and commercials.
The light is located in Quoddy Head State Park, as far east as you can drive in the U.S.
quarta-feira, março 02, 2005
terça-feira, março 01, 2005
THE OREGON COAST - CITY OF COQUILLE

domingo, fevereiro 27, 2005
quinta-feira, fevereiro 24, 2005
quarta-feira, fevereiro 23, 2005
domingo, fevereiro 20, 2005
LONG BEACH WASHIGTON LIGHTHOUSE

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Fotografia Anónimo
sábado, fevereiro 19, 2005
sexta-feira, fevereiro 18, 2005
quinta-feira, fevereiro 17, 2005
segunda-feira, fevereiro 14, 2005
FAROL DE TRINIDAD

sexta-feira, fevereiro 11, 2005
quarta-feira, fevereiro 09, 2005
A ONDA
A onda anda lá pelo mar fora
Não sei aonde anda agora
Não sei mas vou perguntar
A uma onda que passar
A onda encontrou uma gaivota
Que lhe quis seguir a rota
Deu uma grande cambalhota
Mas a gaivota voou
A onda chorou, chorou
A onda está zangada com o atum
Que furou a onda...pum
E a onda já não nada
E não lhe serviu de nada
Ser onda tão viajada
A onda
Encontrou uma baleia
Estava escondida na areia
A ondaEncontrou um tubarão
E pregou-lhe um encontrão
Que levou o tubarão
A caminho do Japão
Foi lá ver o seu irmão
Vai a baleia na onda
Vai na onda o tubarão
Vai a pedra que é redonda
Vai também o matacão
Vai o camarão
Vai o mexilhão
E vai a sardinha
Arrastados na maré
Vai o caranguejo
E vai a santola
Vai o que eu não vejo
Vai rola que rola
Vai tudo fora de pé
A onda
Que era ainda pequenina
Fez-se onda grande na China
A China
Estava cheia de Chineses
A Inglaterra com Ingleses
A França com Franceses
Portugal com Portugueses
Vejam lá vocemeceses
A onda
Andava roda ondulada
Sem permanente nem nada
A onda
Encontrou o namorado
Que também estava ondulado
Lá foram de pingo dado
Lá no mar todo molhado
Que também estava ondulado
A onda
Leva tudo quanto quer
Leva homem ou mulher
A onda
Encontrou uma gaivota
Viu-lhe a meia toda rota
Por isso mudou de rota
É uma onda com batota
A onda
Leva uma alga marinha
Que roubou a outra ondinha
A onda
A nadar não se alterou
Nadou p'ra terra e nadou
Nadou para o alto mar
Sempre a nadar a nadar
A onda
Anda no mar alterado
Só lá pode andar a nado
Olha a onda que é redonda
Olha a terra que é quadrada
Foi p'ra rimar com a onda
Que eu dei esta calinada
A alga
Que a onda grande roubou
Verdinha da cor do mar
Anda a chorar coitadinha
Com saudades da ondinha
A onda
Encontrou uma sereia
Sentada numa baleia
A onda
Que conheci a baleia
Não tinha visto a sereia
Mas tinha uma vaga ideia
De a ter visto ao pé d'areia
A onda
Estava deitada na areia
A olhar p'ra lua cheia
A onda
Estava-lhe a pular o pé
P'ra vir atrás da maré
Apanhou um burrié
Deitou-lhe fora o boné
Tão má qu'esta onda é
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Amália Rodrigues
Fotografia Anónimo
domingo, fevereiro 06, 2005
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