Portishead Point Lighthouse, which is more commonly known as Battery Point Lighthouse, in Portishead, Somerset, England was built in 1931.
Portishead Point Lighthouse also known as Battery Point Lighthouse | |
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| Location | Portishead Somerset England |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 51.494626°N 2.773586°W / 51.494626; -2.773586 |
| Tower | |
| Constructed | 1931 |
| Foundation | concrete base |
| Construction | metal skeletal tower |
| Height | 9 metres (30 ft) |
| Shape | square pyramidal tower enclosed with balcony and light |
| Markings | black tower, white basement |
| Operator | Bristol Port Company[1] |
| Light | |
| Focal height | 9 metres (30 ft) |
| Lens | 4th-order dioptric[2] |
| Range | 16 nautical miles (30 km; 18 mi) |
| Characteristic | Q (3) W 10s. |
The 9-metre-high (30 ft) lighthouse was built at Battery Point by the Chance Brothers of Smethwick. It consists of a black metal pyramid on a concrete base.[3]
Originally it had been intended to provide Portishead Point with a diaphone fog signal, but in response to local unrest at the prospect the decision was taken to commission a fog bell instead.[2] The two tonne bell was cast by Gillett & Johnston of Croydon in 1938,[4] and installed the following year.[2] Due to structural concerns the bell was removed in 1998; later, following public campaigning for restoration, the bell was acquired by Portishead Town Council and returned to the town in 2012.[5] It is installed in Wyndham Way close to the High Street.[6]
The lighthouse is maintained by the Bristol Port Company.[7] The light was refurbished in 2012.[8]