Interior Staircase at Prospect Harbor Light Needs Dire Restoration

By Bob Trapani, Jr.


During a recent site visit to Maine’s Prospect Harbor Light, the American Lighthouse Foundation made some alarming discoveries inside the historic 1891 beacon. Deterioration to many of the interior wood components of the tower was very vivid, a dire situation that has been accelerated by both the age of the wood and the unusually heavy amount of moisture experienced throughout the region over the past couple of years.

In the summer of 2004 the American Lighthouse Foundation carried out emergency restoration measures in a collaborative effort with the United States Coast Guard and United States Navy to save Prospect Harbor’s lantern from collapsing into the tower. During the process it was evident to both ALF and professional contractors for the project that the restoration work saved the 38-foot tall Prospect Harbor Lighthouse from imminent collapse.

Despite the benefit this critical work served to the well being of the lighthouse, the tower still had many other restoration needs, partially stemming from the fact that the beacon has been automated since 1934. ALF contracted Spear Millworks in Machias, Maine, to attend to an important component of the tower in spring 2006 through the installation of new windows in the structure, which was generously funded by a grant from the New England Lighthouse Lovers, a chapter of the American Lighthouse Foundation.

“While it is true that we saved the lighthouse from collapse two years ago, and installed new windows this year, the interior of the tower is deteriorating rapidly from the previous water damage and now from the excessive moisture we had in Maine this past spring,” says Timothy Harrison, president of the American Lighthouse Foundation. “The interior walls and wooden stairway are in bad shape. In fact, I believe the stairway may be unsafe for the public to climb (during annual open houses hosted by the U.S. Navy) and I can assure you that the railing is so loose that it won’t hold anyone from falling straight down.”

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My best, smile
Paul Conlin
ALF Secretary


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