Green Island Light (Wisconsin)

The Green Island Light is a lighthouse located on Green Island in Green Bay. Abandoned since its deactivation in 1956, it survives as a hollow shell near the existing skeleton tower.

Green Island Light
Green Island Light in September 1914 (USCG)
LocationGreen Island in Green Bay
Coordinates45.0564°N 87.4929°W / 45.0564; -87.4929[1]
Year first constructed1863
Year first lit1863
Automated1933
Deactivated1956
Foundationstone
Constructionbrick
Tower shapetwo story house with tower on roof
Tower height48 feet (15 m)
Focal height55 feet (17 m)
Original lensfourth order Fresnel lens
Range7 nautical mile 
CharacteristicFl W 6s 

History

Calls for a lighthouse in the area were first heard in the 1850s, and in 1861 George Gordon Meade was sent to the area to investigate requests for lights on the island and on the shore north of the mouth of the Menominee River.[2] He reported that a light on Green Island would be sufficient for both requests, and the light was constructed in 1862-1863.[2] A two-story brick structure, it displayed a fixed light provided by a fourth order Fresnel lens.[3] The first keeper was one Samuel Drew, who also happened to be the person from whom the land for the light station was purchased; he and his wife Mary remained at this station until 1881, when they transferred to the Menominee Pier Light.[2] In addition to their official duties, they farmed much of the remainder of the island.[4]

The year after activation, a severe fire in the lighthouse required erection of a temporary beacon and shelter during reconstruction of the light.[3] The Drews had five children on the island, two of whom were destined to become lighthouse keepers themselves; a third died on the island in infancy and is buried there.[2][4]

1871 is remembered in the Green Bay area as the year of the Great Peshtigo Fire; the island escaped the conflagration, but the smoke was so thick that Samuel Drew kept the light burning during daylight as well as at night.[2] Nevertheless, the three-masted schooner George L. Newman was wrecked offshore, but the crew was rescued without loss.[2][4]

1876 saw the first of several changes to the docking facilities, as an additional plot was purchased from the Drews and a new landing was constructed.[3] In 1883 the boathouse was moved due to dropping water levels in the bay.[3] This house was damaged by ice in 1902 and had to be rebuilt.[3] In the meantime the well went dry in 1893 and had to be redug.[3]

Frank Drew became assistant keeper in 1902, transferring from the Port des Morts Island Light.[2] The son of Samuel and Mary Drew, he was joined by his brother George after Frank became head keeper in 1909. Frank and his brother gained a reputation for heroism, with over thirty rescues credited to them over the years.[4] In 1928 the beacon was changed to a new flashing signal with a reduced range; this lamp, however, was able to be operated in the winter months.[2] Frank Drew retired in 1929 and died in 1931; in 1998 a USCG coastal buoy tender, USCGC Frank Drew (WLM-557), was christened in his honor.[2]

The light was automated in 1933, and in 1956 a new steel tower was erected and the old house abandoned.[3][4] The following year the light station was sold to the Roen Steamship Company, which had already purchased the rest of the island in 1955.[2] Vandalism, fires and weather have reduced the original site to an empty shell, but the 1956 tower remains active.[2][4]

gollark: No, it's 600ms off.
gollark: Wherever my phone attains time from, it's offset by this ridiculous amount.
gollark: If you have root, you can apparently manually set it from NTP.
gollark: In theory it could pull it from the GNSS hardware, but I don't know if anything actually does this.
gollark: I'm not actually sure how Android sets time, since it seems to disagree with an NTP client app I have installed by as much as 0.5 seconds.

References

  1. Light List, Volume VII, Great Lakes (PDF). Light List. United States Coast Guard. 2014.
  2. "Green Island Lighthouse". Terry Pepper. Retrieved 2010-11-26.
  3. "Historic Light Station Information and Photography: Wisconsin". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01.
  4. Wardius, Ken; Barb Wardius (2003). Wisconsin Lighthouses: A Photographic & Historical Guide. Black Earth, Wisconsin: Prairie Oak Press. pp. 41–43.
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