Spectacle Island Range Lights
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The Spectacle Island Range Lights were a pair of
range lights Leading lights (also known as range lights in the United States) are a pair of light beacons used in navigation to indicate a safe passage for vessels entering a shallow or dangerous channel; they may also be used for position fixing. At night ...
on Spectacle Island in Boston Harbor. They were established in 1897 and discontinued in 1913 after changes in the entrance channels to the harbor made them obsolete.


History

A range to mark the channel into Boston harbor was requested by the Lighthouse Board in 1892; the appropriation was not passed until 1895. Two identical octagonal towers were constructed, each equipped with a red reflector light. Originally painted white, they were repainted with a red band in the midsection in 1904. At the same time the two towers were relocated south. The year before the relocation, the Broad Sound Channel Inner Range Lights had been built on the island, immediately adjacent to the older lights. The two sets of lights were often confused, and when it was proposed to discontinue the Spectacle Island range because the channel had shifted, the discontinuance was objected to because it was thought the other range was going to be eliminated. The confusion was cleared up and the objections withdrawn, and the Spectacle Island range was discontinued in 1913.


References

{{Authority control , additional=Q109127704 Lighthouses completed in 1897 Lighthouses in Boston Boston Harbor