The Long Tail Point Light, also known as the Tail Point Light, was a lighthouse in Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA. Long abandoned but still standing, it was succeeded by two further structures, both since destroyed.
![]() The third light in the 1940s (USCG) | |
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Location | Southern end of Green Bay |
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Coordinates | 44.5959°N 87.9835°W / 44.5959; -87.9835[1] |
Tower | |
Construction | Fieldstone (first tower) Wood frame (second and third) |
Automated | 1936[2] |
Shape | Conical tower (first) Square house with lantern on roof (second and third) |
Light | |
First lit | 1848 (first) 1859 (second) 1899 (third)[2] |
Deactivated | 1973[2] |
Long Tail Point is a sand bar lying at the southern end of the bay; as it lies adjacent to the channel into the city of Green Bay, a lighthouse was constructed in 1848. The structure was built from fieldstone collected at Bay Settlement on the opposite shore,[3] and was originally lit with an array of oil lamps.[2] These lamps were replaced with a Fresnel lens in the 1850s,[2] but soon the light was surrounded by water, and it was abandoned in 1859 in favor of a new house a short distance to the north.[2] The new lighthouse was an integral frame dwelling with the old lantern placed on its roof; it employed a fourth order Fresnel lens.[3] In 1899 the light's distance from the newly dredged channel prompted the construction of a third light, this time on a concrete pier resting on a wooden crib offshore;[2] the fog bell was moved to the Sand Point Light in Michigan.[4] This new crib house was much smaller than the second house, and the keepers continued to live in the latter until automation of the light in 1936.[2] A storm in 1973 washed this structure away and it was replaced by a skeleton tower.[2]
The second house was sold to a private interest on the understanding that it would be moved; however, during the attempted relocation, the structure fell through the ice and was destroyed.[5] The defunct first tower was given away in 1870, to be torn down.[2] The tower's massive stone walls, however, defeated the new owner's attempts to destroy it, and the truncated tower still stands on the sandy spit.[2][3]
Lighthouses of Wisconsin | ||
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Main: List of lighthouses in the United States | ||
Lake Superior |
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Lake Michigan |
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Lake Winnebago | ||
Historical (lost) lights |
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