BODIE ISLAND LIGHTHOUSE

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In 2009, prior to even touching the lens to restore it, a “micro-climate” was installed to cool the air in the lantern room and release humidity. Next, the entire lens was cleaned, prism by prism; any existing prism damage was repaired and all putty joints renewed. In this picture, working above the lens, Nick Johnston is standing on a platform built around the lens to access the upper lens support system. The lens had to be freed from its sixteen-armed metal support. Conservators had to support the lens from above before the release.

Cautious movement and concentration are required for safe removal of a prism panel from its frame. Here, one conservator eases an upper catadioptric panel from inside the lens toward three others outside the lens. Each panel weighs in at 150 pounds or more, and the handling of these delicate panels of prisms is tedious work.

Once the panels were freed from the lens frame, the next step is just as difficult. Each part of the lens had to be taken from the lantern room to the level below. Iron steps on glass prisms are unforgiving; therefore, all caution was made not to create one tiny chip in any prism.

Once a panel was on the top landing, it was wrapped, boxed, and prepared to be lifted over the stair railing by block and tackle. It was then carefully lowered down the center of the “well” to the bottom of the stairs. A ramp had been built to help ease each panel out of the lighthouse to be transported to the warehouse/museum area of the park in Manteo twelve miles to the northwest on Roanoke Island.

Volunteers for the Outer Banks Lighthouse Society and National Park Service cleaned, specially wrapped any prism needing more attention, and packed the lens for storage. At left foreground is Kim Fahlen, photo- grapher for the lens restoration process for conservators of Lighthouse Lamp Shop.

Photographs and information are courtesy of Kim Fahlen. Volunteer photograph is by Diana Chappell.

Bodie Island Lighthouse

Bodie Island, NC

 

Latitude:  35° 49' 06.8" N

Longitude:   75° 33' 48.0" W

 

The Bodie Island Lighthouse and its Double Keepers’ Quarters are situated midway between the Atlantic Ocean and the Pamlico Sound within the protection of Cape Hatteras National Seashore. It was completed by the U.S. Light-House Board (aka U.S. Lighthouse Service) in 1872 during the Golden Era of American lighthouse building. Its name originally was spelled “Body’s” on U.S. Lighthouse Service documents. It is alternately suggested that the land was bought from a family with the surname Body or was named for the “body of land” that surrounds it.

 

This lighthouse had two predecessors. The first was built in 1847 about 1.5 miles south of Oregon Inlet. Due to lack of foresight or in the name of economy, the first tower had no foundation. When the 54-foot tall white brick tower began to lean, its lighting mechanism was damaged. In 1854, the Light-House Board made some repairs including the installation of a fourth-order Fresnel lens, but the failing tower was eventually  abandoned.