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Scituate Lighthouse
100 Lighthouse Road
Scituate
Lighthouse, 1811
In the year 1810 the United States Congress voted $4000
to build a lighthouse at Scituate Harbor. The Light, of split granite
blocks with a one and one half story house attached, was activated in
1811.
Captain
Simeon Bates, the first keeper of Scituate Lighthouse, his wife, and nine
children lived at the house. During the War of 1812 Abigail and Rebecca,
young daughters of the lighthouse keeper, prevented the British from sacking
the town. Noting the approach of two redcoat-filled barges from a British
ship of war, the girls snatched fife and drum and hiding behind a thick
cluster of cedar trees made such a din that the British mistook them for
an entire regiment and made a hasty retreat. Abigail and Rebecca Bates
have gone down in history as 'The American Army of Two" and their
courageous act has been recorded in many textbooks and story books.
Due to complaints from mariners that the light could
not be seen from far enough away to make proper heading adjustments, the
government added fifteen feet in height to the tower in 1827, mortaring
red brick on top of the granite blocks. The light was deactivated in 1860
with the construction of the new Minot’s Light to the north, and
the lantern room removed. A minor beacon was kept at the end of the breakwater
extending to the south from Cedar Point.
In 1916 the Town of Scituate purchased the lighthouse
for $1000 from the federal government, saving it from public auction.
In 1930 the Town built a new lantern room atop the light, justifying it,
even during the first year of the Great Depression, by stating that "a
community is judged by the condition of its public buildings; therefore
the lighthouse should be well kept and in pleasing looking condition."
In 1968 Town Meeting awarded custody and administration
of the Lighthouse to the Scituate Historical Society, and in 1994 the
light was relit for the first time in 134 years. In 2001 the Scituate
Historical Society completed the Scituate Lighthouse Runway Exhibit, more
than twenty graphic panels on the history of the lighthouse lining the
walkway from the house to the tower.
Scituate Lighthouse is open on open house days
during the summer, and for special events.
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