The Day

NL Maritime not interested in lighthouse­s set as surplus

- By BRIAN HALLENBECK

New London — Don’t look for the owners of three lighthouse­s directing New London Harbor traffic to be snapping up any more of the aging sentinels anytime soon — including two the Coast Guard’s trying to shed off the coast of nearby Rhode Island.

“New London Maritime Society will not be applying for either of these Rhode Island lighthouse­s,” Susan Tamulevich, the society’s executive director, said Friday of Watch Hill Lighthouse in Westerly and Beavertail Lighthouse in Jamestown.

Declared excess to the Coast Guard’s needs, the lighthouse­s, both of which date to 1856, can be had for free. But you have to keep them up, which is the whole reason they’re being made available.

In notices officially issued a week ago, the General Services Administra­tion, the federal agency in charge of such things, announced “eligible entities” interested in a lighthouse or two — federal, state and local agencies, nonprofits, educationa­l services and community developmen­t organizati­ons — could submit a letter of interest and inspect the properties with contractor­s in tow. Applicatio­ns are due within 90 days of a site visit.

The process, spelled out in the National Historic Lighthouse Preservati­on Act of 2000, is the very one the New London Maritime Society followed in landing New London Harbor Light at the foot of Pequot Avenue in 2010; Race Rock Light at the eastern end of Long Island Sound off Fishers Island, N.Y., in 2013; and New London Ledge Light at the entrance to the harbor in 2014.

Tamulevich said the availabili­ty of the two Rhode Island lighthouse­s was “disappoint­ing news.”

“Lighthouse­s are not obsolete,” she wrote in an email. “These two lights (as well as the three owned by NLM) are all active aids to navigation. They are important back-ups, like street signs in support of today’s GPS — a system that is not infallible. Lighthouse­s are important day markers for the ferries, fog sirens in a storm, beacons in the dark. They are significan­t, meaningful, historic landmarks.”

Tamulevich said the federal government was asking a lot

in turning over lighthouse­s to small, nonprofit groups while providing them with little support. Potentiall­y worse, she said, are cases in which lighthouse­s are auctioned to insolvent entities or individual­s who pass away.

She cited the example of Little Gull Light, a lighthouse off Fishers Island that the society sought to acquire in 2012. The businessma­n who outbid the society died a couple of years ago, Tamulevich said.

At times, the society has struggled to maintain its three lighthouse­s.

Litigation between the society and neighbors living near

New London Harbor Light prevented the society from conducting tours of that lighthouse for years. No tours of the hard-to-reach Race Rock Light have taken place since 2019. The society intends to unveil plans for the property’s preservati­on this summer.

Hoping to reinstate New London Ledge Light tours, the society’s looking for a licensed captain with a boat.

In good hands

Current operators of the “excess” Rhode Island lighthouse properties are seeking to retain control of them.

“We’re very much looking

forward to being chosen to continue our stewardshi­p of the lighthouse,” Ann Snowden Johnson, president of the Watch Hill Lighthouse Keepers Associatio­n, said Friday.

She said the associatio­n, supported by grants and donations, has been licensed to oversee Watch Hill Light since 1986, and is required to maintain the property “financiall­y and physically.” The 4.5-acre site includes a 45-foot lighthouse tower and an attached two-story, brick keeper’s dwelling, as well as other buildings. It’s located on a peninsula accessible by Lighthouse Road.

If the associatio­n gets to keep the lighthouse, the change in ownership will be “mostly emotional,” Johnson said. “The group that’s part of the associatio­n, all the directors, are from Greater Westerly. Everyone has a deep and abiding love for the town and this iconic landmark. It’s truly a labor of love to preserve it in perpetuity.”

In anticipati­on of the Coast Guard’s move to rid itself of Beavertail Light, the Rhode Island Department of Environmen­tal Management, the Town of Jamestown and the Beavertail Lighthouse Museum Associatio­n agreed to have the

DEM pursue the property. The associatio­n has long operated the museum and helped maintain the site, which includes the 64-foot granite lighthouse at the mouth of Narraganse­tt Bay.

The original lighthouse was built in 1749 and was burned down by British soldiers leaving the Newport area in 1779. The foundation remains.

“We are engaged in the surplus process with a plan, and remain optimistic about acquiring and preserving this gem for generation­s to come,” Gail Mastrati, assistant to the DEM director, said in a statement.

 ?? DANA JENSEN/THE DAY FILE PHOTO ?? Watch Hill Lighthouse overlooks strong waves rolling toward the shore of East Beach on Nov. 16, 2017, in the Watch Hill section of Westerly.
DANA JENSEN/THE DAY FILE PHOTO Watch Hill Lighthouse overlooks strong waves rolling toward the shore of East Beach on Nov. 16, 2017, in the Watch Hill section of Westerly.

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