Lightvessel

A lightvessel, or lightship, is a ship that acts as a lighthouse. They are used in waters that are too deep or otherwise unsuitable for lighthouse construction.[1] Although some records exist of fire beacons being placed on ships in Roman times, the first modern lightvessel was off the Nore sandbank at the mouth of the River Thames in England, placed there by its inventor Robert Hamblin in 1734. The type has become largely obsolete; lighthouses replaced some stations as the construction techniques for lighthouses advanced, while large, automated buoys replaced others.[1]

Lightship Finngrundet, now a museum ship in Stockholm. The day markers can be seen on the masts.

Construction

Former Belgian lightship West-Hinder II, now a museum ship in Zeebrugge
Some lightships, like this one in Amsterdam, were also equipped with a foghorn for audible signals at foggy times.

A crucial element of lightvessel design is the mounting of a light on a sufficiently tall mast. Initially, this consisted of oil lamps that could be run up the mast and lowered for servicing. Later vessels carried fixed lamps, which were serviced in place. Fresnel lenses were used as they became available, and many vessels housed these in small versions of the lanterns used on lighthouses. Some lightships had two masts, the second holding a reserve beacon in case the main light failed.

Initially, the hulls were constructed of wood, with lines like those of any other small merchant ship. This proved to be unsatisfactory for a ship that was permanently anchored, and the shape of the hull evolved to reduce rolling and pounding. As iron and steel were used in other ships, so were they used in lightvessels, and the advent of steam and diesel power led to self-propelled and electrically lighted designs. Earlier vessels had to be towed to and from station.

Much of the rest of the ship was taken up by storage (for oil and the like) and crew accommodations. The primary duty of the crew was, of course, to maintain the light, but they also kept record of passing ships, observed the weather, and on occasion performed rescues.

In the early 20th century, some lightships were fitted with warning bells, either mounted on the structure or lowered into the water, the purpose of which was to warn of danger in poor visibility and to permit crude estimation of the lightship relative to the approaching vessel. Tests conducted by Trinity House found that sound from a bell submerged some 18 feet (5.5 m) could be heard at a distance of 15 miles (24 km), with a practical range in operational conditions of 1–3 miles.[2][3]

Mooring

Lightship Portsmouth (LV-101) shows its mushroom anchor. It can be seen at downtown Portsmouth, Virginia, and is a part of the Naval Shipyard Museum.

Holding the vessel in position was an important aspect of lightvessel engineering. Early lightships used fluke anchors, which are still in use on many contemporary vessels. These were not very satisfactory, since a lightship has to remain stationary in very rough seas which other vessels can avoid, and these anchors are prone to dragging.

Since the early 19th century, lightships have used mushroom anchors, named for their shape, which typically weigh 3-4 tons. They were invented by Robert Stevenson. The first lightvessel equipped with one was an 82-ton converted fishing boat, renamed Pharos, which entered service on 15 September 1807 near to Bell Rock, and had a 1.5 ton anchor.[4] The effectiveness of these anchors improved dramatically in the 1820s, when cast iron anchor chains were introduced (the rule of thumb being 6 feet of chain for every foot depth of water).

Appearance

LV-11 (originally British lightship Trinity House) is docked in Rotterdam, Netherlands, as Breeveertien serving as a restaurant
The North Carr Lightship showing a large foghorn

As well as the light, which operated in the fog and also at night, from one hour before sunset to one hour after sunrise, early lightvessels were equipped with red (or very occasionally white) day markers at the tops of masts, which were the first objects seen from an approaching ship. The designs varied, filled circles or globes, and pairs of inverted cones being the most common among them.

United States lightship Huron circa 1922

Later lightships, for purposes of visibility, normally had bright red hulls which displayed the name of the station in white, upper-case letters; relief light vessels displayed the word RELIEF, instead. A few ships had differently coloured hulls. For example, the Huron Lightship was painted black since she was assigned the black buoy side of the entrance to the Lake Huron Cut. The lightvessel that operated at Minots Ledge, Cohasset, Mass. from 1854 until 1860 had a light yellow hull to make it visible against the blue-green seas and the green hills behind it.

Lightvessel service

British lightships

Calshot Spit lightship, now an attraction at Ocean Village marina, Southampton

David Avery and Robert Hamblin in 1731 placed the earliest British lightship at The Nore near the mouth of the River Thames. This was a private venture that operated profitably and without the need for government enforcement of payment for lighting services.[5]

Further vessels were placed off Norfolk in 1736, at Owers Bank in Sussex in 1788, and at the Goodwin Sands in 1793.[6]

Over time, Trinity House, the public authority charged with establishing and maintaining lighthouses in England and Wales, crowded out the private light vessels. Trinity House is now responsible for all the remaining lightvessels England and Wales, of which there are currently eight unmanned lightvessels and two smaller light floats.[7]

The British were the first to deploy unmanned lightships, called crewless lightships in the early 1930s, which could operate for six months to one year.[8]

The first lightvessel conversion to solar power was made in 1995, and all vessels except the '20 class' have now been converted. The '20 class' is a slightly larger type of vessel that derives its power from diesel electric generators. Where a main light with a visible range in excess of 20 nautical miles (37 km) is required, a '20 class' vessel is used, as the main light from a Trinity House solar lightvessel has a maximum range of 19 nautical miles (35 km).

Hull numbers: 19, 22, 23 and 25 (the 20 class); 2, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 17 (solar lightvessels); and LF2 and LF3 (solar lightfloats).

American lightships

Lightship Columbia, WLV-604

History

The first United States lightship was established at Chesapeake Bay in 1820, and the total number around the coast peaked in 1909 with 56 locations marked. Of those ships, 168 were constructed by the United States Lighthouse Service and six by the United States Coast Guard, which absorbed it in 1939. From 1820 until 1983, there were 179 lightships built for the U.S. government, and they were assigned to 116 separate light stations on four coasts (including the Great Lakes).[9]

Lightship #51 at Sandy Hook, New Jersey, as it appeared in the 1890s.

The first United States lightships were small wooden vessels with no propelling power. The first United States iron-hulled lightship was stationed at Merrill's Shell Bank, Louisiana, in 1847. Wood was still the preferred building material at the time because of lower cost and ability to withstand shock loading. Wooden lightships often survived more than 50 years in northern waters where the danger of rotting was reduced. Lightvessel 16 guarded Sandy Hook and Ambrose stations for more than 80 years; she had both an inner hull and an outer hull with the space between filled with salt to harden the wood and reduce decay. Several lightships built with composite wood and steel hulls in 1897 proved less durable than either wood or steel. The first modern steel lightship in United States service was lightvessel 44 built in 1882. One of the last United States wooden hulled lightships built, lightvessel 74, went into service at Portland, Maine, in 1902. The first United States lightships with steam engine propulsion were built in 1891 for service on the Great Lakes where seasonal ice required prompt evacuation of light stations to avoid destruction of the lightships.[10]

The official use of lightships in the United States ended March 29, 1985, when the United States Coast Guard decommissioned its last such ship, the Nantucket I. Many lightships were replaced with Texas Towers or large navigational buoys - both of which are cheaper to operate than lightvessels. In fact, lighthouses often replaced lightships.[11]

Naming and numbering

The naming and numbering of American lightships is often confusing. Up to and through the Civil War lightships were identified by name, usually that of the station where they served. As they were moved from station to station, however, the keeping of records became hopelessly tangled. Therefore, in 1867 all existing lightships were given numbers by which they would be permanently identified, and the station at which they were presently serving was painted on their sides, to be changed as needed. Lightships held in reserve to serve in place of those in dock for maintenance were labeled "RELIEF".[12] Surviving lightships are commonly taken to be named according to these labels, but for instance the "Lightship Chesapeake" actually served at two other stations as well as being used for examinations, and last served at the Delaware Light Station. In another case, the LV-114 was labeled "NEW BEDFORD", though there has never been such a station.[13] In an attempt to sort out the early lightships, they were assigned one or two letter designations sometime around 1930; these identifications do not appear in early records, and they are to some degree uncertain.[12]

There are three different and overlapping series of hull numbers. The Lighthouse Service assigned numbers beginning with "LV-" and starting from 1; however, not all numbers were used. When the Coast Guard took over the lighthouse service, all existing lightships were renumbered with "WAL-" prefixes, beginning with "WAL-501". In 1965 they were renumbered again, this time with "WLV-"; however in this case the numbers given were not sequential. Given that only six vessels were constructed after the Coast Guard takeover, the "LV-" series numbers are most commonly used.

Surviving American lightships

It is estimated that there are 15 United States lightships left today. Among them:

German lightships

FS3 at position German Bight
FS3 in Wilhelmshaven

There are currently three identical unmanned German lightvessels in service, named FS1, FS3 and FS4. The initialism FS is short for Feuerschiff , which means lightvessel in German. Two of them are normally located at

  1. 54°10.8′N 007°27.5′E German Bight (GB in charts and notices, G—B on vessels)[27][28]
  2. 54°09.9′N 006°20.7′E German Bight Western Approach (GW/EMS)[29][30]

Both positions have the same characteristics:

All three ships are operated by the Waterways and Shipping Office Wilhelmshaven and can be seen in the harbour of Wilhelmshaven during maintenance.

Russian lightships

Lightship Nekmangrund (1898)

In Russia lightships have been documented since the mid 19th century. The lightvessel service was subordinated to the Russian Hydrographic Office and most of the lightships under it were in the Baltic Sea. In the early 1900s there were about ten lightships in the Russian sector of the Baltics. Among these the following may be mentioned:

Yelaginsky, located on the Yelagin Channel —later moved to the Petrovsky Channel and renamed, Nevsky in the middle of the main channel to St. Petersburg, and Londonsky on Londonsky Shoal off Kotlin Island on the approach to Kronstadt.[31] Other Baltic lightships were located further to the West, with Werkommatala by Primorsk (Koivisto) harbour, Lyserortsky at the entrance of the Gulf of Finland, and Nekmangrund over the treacherous shoals off Hiiumaa Island's NW shore, known as Hiiu Madal in Estonian.[32]

Another well-known lightship was Irbensky of the Soviet Union era. It was the next-to-last Russian lightship. Having been located in the Baltic in the 1980s,[33] it was briefly renamed Ventspilssky while serving near Ventspils port in the Latvian Socialist Soviet Republic.

The last Russian lightvessel in service was Astrakhansky-priyomniy, of the same class as Irbensky. Until 1997 she was marking the deepwater channel leading to Astrakhan harbour while it was doing service in the Caspian Sea.[34]

Other countries

Lightship CLS4 Carpentaria at wharf close to the ANMM, Sydney

Lost lightships

The duty that lightvessels serve places them in harm's way. Many lightships have been lost in hurricanes.[36]

Some destroyed lightships:

In United States
  • Lightship No. 84 (135 feet long, weighing 683 tons), lies sunk in a shallow section of New York Harbor and its two masts are still visible above the surface.[37]
  • Lightship LV-82 Buffalo foundered in Lake Erie near Buffalo, during the Great Lakes Storm of 1913 with the loss of six lives.[38] See Shipwrecks of the 1913 Great Lakes storm and List of victims of the 1913 Great Lakes storm.
  • Lightship No. 61 "Corsica Shoals" was destroyed in the same storm on Lake Huron as Lightship 82.[39] See Huron Lightship for further details.
  • LV-6 and LV-73 were both lost with all hands.[40][41]
  • The Nantucket Lightship LV-117 was rammed and sunk in 1934 by RMS Olympic homing in on its radio beacon, with a loss of seven out of a crew of eleven.
  • Lightship No. 114 (WAL-536) served as an active lightship from 1930 to 1971. Her last assignment was at Portland, Maine. In 1975 she was purchased by the city of New Bedford, Massachusetts and had "NEW BEDFORD" painted on her sides (despite the fact there never was a New Bedford lightship). She was never adequately maintained and her hull decayed due to years of neglect. She remained in New Bedford until she sank at her mooring on May 31, 2006. She was deemed beyond repair and was sold for scrap.
  • Lightship, a 1934 novel by Archie Binns.
  • Men of the Lightship, a 1940 British propaganda film produced during World War II.
  • The Lightship, a translation of the 1960 short story Das Feuerschiff by Siegfried Lenz.
  • The Lightship, a 1985 film adapted from the Lenz novel, with Robert Duvall and Klaus Maria Brandauer.
  • The Lightship, a 1963 West German film adapted from the Lenz novel, with James Robertson Justice.
  • Lillie Lightship: A fictional lightship from the children's television series TUGS.
  • Lightship, a 2007 children's picture book by Brian Floca. A Richard Jackson Book: Atheneum Books for Young Readers. Simon & Schuster Children's Books A Junior Library Guild Selection. ISBN 1-4169-2436-1.
  • In the 1990s, the Boston Beer Company produced a light beer that was called Lightship, with a picture of a 19th-century lightship in rough seas on the label. The line has since been discontinued with the advent of Sam Adams Light.
  • In the 2015 video-game Sunless Sea , the player can visit several lightships moored around the game's world, an underground body of water called the Unterzee.
gollark: This is a good and useful idea.
gollark: I have incoming mail on one of my domains for an email to RSS bridge.
gollark: I have begun creating music. Fear this experimental music.
gollark: Sometimes.
gollark: Inelegant.

See also

References

  1. Flint, Willard (1993). A History of U.S. Lightships (PDF). United States Coast Guard. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
  2. Bowen, J. P. (1946). "Lighthouses". In Pendred, Loughan (ed.). The Engineer's Year-Book for 1946 (52 ed.). London: Morgan Brothers. p. 656.
  3. "THE SUBMARINE BELL RIVALS JULES VERNE; Deep Under Water, It Sends Warnings in Fog and Storm. A TEST OF THE INVENTION Through the Signal's Receiver the Throb of an Unseen Steamship's Screw Could Be Heard". 7 June 1906. Retrieved 21 February 2019 via NYTimes.com.
  4. Cadbury, Deborah (2003). Seven Wonders of the Industrial World. Fourth Estate. pp. 79.
  5. Candela, Rosolino A. and Vincent J. Geloso (September 2018) "The lightship in economics", Public Choice, Vol. 176, Issue 3–4, pp. 479–506.
  6. Marcus, G.J. (1975). Heart of Oak: A Survey of British Sea Power in the Georgian Era. Oxford University Press. pp. 53–54. ISBN 0192158120.
  7. Aids to Navigation Archived 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine, Trinity House, accessed 02-09-08
  8. "Crewless Lightship Is New Flying Dutchman" Popular Mechanics, December 1932
  9. "Maritime Heritage Program - National Park Service". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  10. White, Richard D., Jr., LT USCG "Destination Nowhere - Twilight of the Lightship" United States Naval Institute Proceedings March 1976 pp.67-68
  11. "Clarke Home - Central Michigan University". www.cmich.edu. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  12. "Early U.S. Lightships". United States Coast Guard. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
  13. "Lightship New Bedford LV 114/WAL 536". Lighthousefriends.com. 2010-05-23. Archived from the original on 2012-10-04.
  14. "1904 Lightship: No. 83, Swiftsure". Northwest Seaport. Archived from the original on 20 May 2016. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  15. "Lightship Ambrose". South Street Seaport Museum. South Street Seaport Museum. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  16. "Lightship Portsmouth". Lightship Portsmouth Museum. City of Portsmouth, Virginia. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  17. "Clarke Home - Central Michigan University". www.cmich.edu. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  18. Sellman, John J. Martin Reef: Lightship to Lighthouse. Cedarville, MI: Les Cheneaux Historical Association, 1995.
  19. Wagner, John L., Chronology of Michigan lightship and lighthouses Beacons Shining in the Night, Clarke Historical Library, Central, Michigan University.
  20. "Michigan Government on Huron Lightship". Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  21. "Nantucket Lightship/LV-112". Nantucket Lightship/LV-112. United States Lightship Museum, Inc. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  22. "Lightship Frying Pan". Lightship Frying Pan. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  23. "LV116 Chesapeake". Historic Ships in Baltimore. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  24. "Lightship Overfalls (LV-118)". Lightship Overfalls (LV-118). Overfalls Foundation. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  25. "Lightship Columbia". Columbia River Maritime Museum. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  26. "Nantucket Lightship". Nantucket Lightship. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  27. "Feuerschiff German Bight". www.baken-net.de. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  28. "OpenSeaMap - The free nautical chart". map.openseamap.org. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  29. "UFS TW/EMS". www.baken-net.de. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  30. "OpenSeaMap - The free nautical chart". map.openseamap.org. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  31. "Lightships in Russia". www.plavmayak.ru. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  32. "Плавучий маяк "Nekmangrund"". diving.ee. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  33. "Irbensky Lightship". www.plavmayak.ru. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  34. "Astrakhanskiy lightship". www.plavmayak.ru. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  35. CARPENTARIA, AN UNMANNED LIGHTSHIP - ANMM Website (accessed 2017-01-10)
  36. "U.S. Coast Guard Historical Bibliography on Lightships". Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  37. "40.672184, -74.016706". Google Maps. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  38. Vogel, Michael N. and Paul F. Redding Maritime Buffalo, Buffalo History, Lightship LV 82. Archived 2012-05-28 at the Wayback Machine
  39. "Historic Light Station Information and Photography: Michigan". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office. Archived from the original on 2017-05-01.
  40. "LV-6 history, U.S. Coast Guard". Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  41. "LV-73 history, U.S. Coast Guard". Retrieved 21 February 2019.

Further reading

  • United States Coast Guard, Aids to Navigation, (Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1945).
  • Scott T. Price. "U. S. Coast Guard Aids to Navigation: A Historical Bibliography". United States Coast Guard Historian's Office.
  • Putnam, George R., Lighthouses and Lightships of the United States, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1933).
  • Wright, Larry; Wright, Patricia (2011). Lightships of the Great Lakes. Ontario. p. 146. ISBN 9780987815101.
  • Clark, Liam. Light in the darkness - a history of lightships and the people who served on them. (Amberley, 2016) ISBN 9781445646589
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