Bangkok Post

Buyers beware: America’s historic lighthouse­s come with hidden costs

New owners can expect to face off against years of neglect, vandalism, limited access and hammering by the elements, writes Roger Schneider of The Associated Press in Port Austin Reef Light, Michigan

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When Lou Schillinge­r and his volunteer cadre began restoring an 1890s lighthouse more than two miles off the Michigan shore in Lake Huron’s Saginaw Bay, they first needed to remove 30 years’ accumulati­on of gull and pigeon feces whose depth measured in feet rather than inches.

That was in the mid-1980s, when he reached an agreement with the US Coast Guard to prevent the Port Austin Reef Lighthouse — his “Castle in the Lake’’ — from being dismantled and lost forever.

“That first summer my dad and I ran out there with a 14-foot rowboat and a 20-foot ladder because there was no access ladder and we just began shovelling manure,’’ said Schillinge­r, 66, president of the Port Austin Reef Light Associatio­n, a non-profit group that in 2013 took title of the property from the federal government.

No keeper had lived in the brick building with its fivefloor tower since 1952. The roof was gone.

“We shovelled diligently,’’ Schillinge­r said. “I’d get friends out there, they would come out and volunteer and they’d show up for one day and they would never come back again because it was such a miserable job.’’

About 120 lighthouse­s no longer critical to the US Coast Guard in 22 states and Puerto Rico have been acquired at no cost by government entities and non-profits, or sold to private individual­s eager to preserve the landmarks and maybe tap into their tourism potential since they became available under the National Historic Lighthouse Preservati­on Act of 2000. Upkeep was too expensive and their usefulness was in decline with the advent of GPS.

Winning bids have ranged from $10,000 for the Cleveland East Pierhead Light in Ohio to $934,000 for the Graves Light in Boston Harbour.

More are auctioned every year, but buyers beware: Years of neglect, vandalism, limited access and hammering by the elements often make for labour-intensive money pits that are for neither the weak of heart nor stomach.

“People who are into this I believe have to have an internal fire, an internal passion, a conviction that these buildings and the history they represent are worth saving,’’ said Terry Pepper, 68, executive director of the Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers Associatio­n.

Port Austin Light was built on a shallow reef. It’s accessible only by boat when winds are light, otherwise waves are too choppy to dock and disembark.

Pepper’s associatio­n overcame similar access issues when it renovated a lighthouse on the 160-acre St Helena Island, seven miles west of the Mackinac Bridge. It took about 20 years and $1.5 million to finish the job in 2005.

Nobody had lived in the 1870s lighthouse since 1922, making it a destinatio­n for partiers, scrappers and vandals, said Pepper.

His associatio­n acquired the lighthouse before the 2000 act and also is restoring the Cheboygan River Front Range Light in Michigan.

“The roof had huge holes in it,’’ Pepper said. “Somebody had lit a fire on the floor in one of the bedrooms on the second floor and embers from that fire dripped down to the first floor and started burning that floor also.

“Every single window in the lighthouse was gone. All the doors on the inside of the brick lighthouse were gone. Railings on the stairs were gone and the plaster inside the lighthouse had been kicked down.’’

Pepper estimates the group has spent $1.5 million and “untold thousands of hours of volunteer labour’’ restoring the St Helena property, which must meet state and federal standards for historic preservati­on.

“We who are in this business, with this passion, have to be asking for money all the time,’’ Pepper said, “whether it’s through grants, donations, selling memorabili­a or offering Great Lakes lighthouse cruises.’’

He is often contacted by prospectiv­e buyers because of his knowledge of lighthouse­s, particular­ly those in Michigan, where there are 129 — the most in the United States.

“I will tell people if you end up spending $100,000 to get that lighthouse, that’s a lot of money,’’ Pepper said. “But $100,000 is the tip of the iceberg.’’

Onshore lighthouse­s are no bargain either.

A volunteer group spent about a decade and nearly $1.9 million to acquire and renovate North Point Lighthouse in Milwaukee.

The lighthouse opened to the public in 2007 and since has attracted more than 80,000 tourists. It has cost more than $1.1 million to run it, mostly paid through entrance fees and events, donations, fundraisin­g and grants.

About 30 miles to the north, Port Washington is in the process of acquiring an 81-year-old light on its breakwater with plans to raise and spend $1.5 million for restoratio­n. And that structure does not have living quarters.

Back on the Port Austin Reef Light, time is measured in decades, not years, of work. Schillinge­r and his crews put on a new roof.

They installed new windows and oak doors, and replaced the chimney. Vandals have been constant. Last autumn, they started putting in a dock for easier access by boats, but a nasty late November gale wiped out their work and they had to start over this year.

“We’ve invested close to half-a-million dollars in that property in time and material over the last 30 years and almost I would say 95% of it’s all been out-of-pocket or donated time,’’ said Schillinge­r.

He estimated it would take three years and at least $1.6 million more in grants and donations to prepare it for tours and renters who want to experience the keeper’s life.

“It’s been really been kind of a labour of love for all community members here in Port Austin.’’

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 ??  ?? A family walks out of the North Point Lighthouse in Milwaukee after a tour.
A family walks out of the North Point Lighthouse in Milwaukee after a tour.
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