Kevich Light

The Kevich Light is a lighthouse located in the town of Grafton, Wisconsin.

Kevich Light
Kevich Light
LocationTown of Grafton, Wisconsin, Twenty minutes north of Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Coordinates43°19′23.7″N 87°53′18.5″W[1]
Year first constructed1981
Year first lit1981
Tower height40 feet (12 m) from on top of bluff, 120 feet (37 m) from lake level
Focal height50 metre 
Range20 miles (32 km)
Characteristicrotating shield causes a 4 seconds on, 4 seconds off effect
USCG number7-20765

This lighthouse was built privately by a person who has a general interest in lighthouses. It is built on the former site of the unincorporated community of Ulao, Wisconsin. It is listed on the USCG navigation maps as a private light. In 1990 it was officially registered as a United States Coast Guard Class II Private Aid Light. It is listed as light no. 20765. The light sits on a bluff and is 120 feet (37 m) above the lake level, making it the second highest light on Lake Michigan. Its 1,000 and 400 watt bulbs are surrounded by a rotating shield, resulting in four seconds of light, and then four seconds of darkness. Kevich Light is believed to be one of the last few privately owned lights in the entire United States.[2][3]

Notes

Further reading

  • Havighurst, Walter (1943) The Long Ships Passing: The Story of the Great Lakes, Macmillan Publishers.
  • Oleszewski, Wes, Great Lakes Lighthouses, American and Canadian: A Comprehensive Directory/Guide to Great Lakes Lighthouses, (Gwinn, Michigan: Avery Color Studios, Inc., 1998) ISBN 0-932212-98-0.
  • Pepper, Terry. "Seeing the Light: Lighthouses on the western Great Lakes". Archived from the original on 2008-01-30.
  • Sapulski, Wayne S., (2001) Lighthouses of Lake Michigan: Past and Present (Paperback) (Fowlerville: Wilderness Adventure Books) ISBN 0-923568-47-6; ISBN 978-0-923568-47-4.
  • Wright, Larry and Wright, Patricia, Great Lakes Lighthouses Encyclopedia Hardback (Erin: Boston Mills Press, 2006) ISBN 1-55046-399-3.
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gollark: https://github.com/jgamblin/Mirai-Source-Code
gollark: I passed it on to someone else, and they said it looked like a variant on the "mirai" botnet thing, which was open-sourced by its creators a few years back.
gollark: Those are some of the random strings in it, I don't know if it uses them at all.
gollark: Here's the script it tries to run.


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