Sunderland Echo

Landmark lighthouse prepares to mark its 150th anniversar­y

- Ross.robertson@jpimedia.co.uk @pressbench

One of our area’s most prominent landmarks is preparing to mark its 150th – despite Covid robbing it of a birthday party.

It will be 150 years on Monday that Souter Lighthouse, a landmark familiar to resid e nt s a n d v i s i to r s o n th e South Tyneside coast, began its working life on January 11, 1871.

The site is run by National Trust as a heritage attraction, but remains closed to visitors due to the pandemic, with lockdown restrictio­ns meaning to anniversar­y celebratio­ns can be held.

The lighthouse was a technologi­cal marvel of its age. At the time it was built, the coastline between the River Wear and River Tyne was treacherou­s to shipping; with submerged rocks and constant smog from local industry, it claimed up to 20 ships per year.

Trinity House, the organisati­on which is still responsibl­e for lighthouse­s today, recognised that a new beacon was needed, and work began to create Souter.

K at e D e vl i n , N at i o n a l Trust Collection­s and House Officer at Souter Lighthouse, said: “We’re proud of the fact that Souter plays an important part in the history of lighthouse­s.

"It was designed by Sir James Douglass, who was engineer-in-chief to Trinity House, as the first lighthouse purpose-built to use an electric light.

"This was a huge leap as, at that time, lighthouse­s were usually lit with oil lamps. This new technology was very exciting and meant a brighter, more reliable light could be produced by an arc lamp.”

Steam-powered generators at the lighthouse produced an alternatin­g current which was forced to jump between two carbon rods, creating the light.

Douglass also came up with a pioneering method to divert the light that would otherwise shine inland and be ‘wasted’.

He used a series of prisms to make it shine from a window on the floor below the main lamp instead. The light guided shipping around submerged rocks in the bay south of the lighthouse.

The window was split into two colours, red and white. If the white light could be seen, the ship was safe. If the red could be seen, the ship was on course for the rocks.

"Visitors can spot the window near the top of the tower and know it’s no ordinary window,” said Kate.

Souter remained an operationa­l lighthouse until 1988 and was taken on by the National Trust and opened to

Souter Lighthouse lantern diagram of 1871, Trinity House.

visitors in 1990.

Souter Point Lighthouse, to give it its full name, is built on Lizard Point. Souter Point was the original site identified for the lighthouse, but Lizard Point, a little further north, was considered a better site due to its higher cliffs.

T h e re wa s a p rob l e m though – there was already a Lizard Lighthouse in Cornwall, so Souter Lighthouse’s name stuck.

Souter Lighthouse, circa 1871-78.

S oute r l i g hth ou s e c o s t £15,148 to build, which would be in the region of £7.5million today.

The Optic, the glass lens at the top of the lighthouse used to magnify the light, is made up of 1,008 glass prisms. This lens, like those in lighthouse­s all over the world, was designed by a man named Augustin-Jean Fresnel. Fresnel lenses are still used today, including in car headlights.

 ??  ?? Souter Lighthouse entrance in winter.
Souter Lighthouse entrance in winter.

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