Under contract for the United States Government, John Donahoo (1786–1858) of Havre de Grace built twelve of Maryland's lighthouses. These include the Blackistone Island Lighthouse, Clay Island Lighthouse, Concord Point Lighthouse, Cove Point Lighthouse, Fishing Battery Lighthouse, Fog Point Lighthouse, Lazaretto Point Lighthouse, Piney Point Lighthouse, Point Lookout Lighthouse, Pooles Island Lighthouse, Thomas Point Shoal Lighthouse, and the Turkey Point Lighthouse.
Seven-Foot Knoll Lighthouse (Historic Ships in Baltimore), Inner Harbor, Baltimore, Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Early lighthouses were simple and inexpensive. Some were built as integral lighthouses (houses with enclosed lights on top), while others were towers from which a light shone. Later, lighthouses tended to be more elaborate and therefore more costly to build.
Screw-pile lighthouses were structures perched on iron piles or stilts that were screwed into the sea floor, while caisson lighthouses displayed towers built atop round, hollow waterproof shells that were sunk to the bottom and filled with sand or concrete.
Lightships were ships that served as lighthouses. They had a light mounted on a tall mast. Later vessels usually were painted bright red with the station name in white letters. Multi-functional, they could be stationed in both shallow and deep waters, and could be moved according to need.
Lightship 116 Chesapeake (Historic Ships in Baltimore), Pier 3, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, Maryland, July 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Nun buoys are red, cylindrical, and have even numbers. They mark the starboard (right) side of the channel for vessels returning to land (thus the "3R" rule: "red, right, returning").
Green-lighted buoy, marking port (left) side of Baltimore Harbor channel for incoming vessels, Baltimore, Maryland, July 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Lighted buoys usually are found in deeper water, and their body and light color vary depending on their location. When they are green (including the light), they perform the same duties as can buoys, marking the port side of a channel for incoming vessels. When red, they mark the starboard side, like nun buoys. If buoys are red and green, the top color (with matching light, if present) indicates the preferred channel, and they may have letters.
Isolated Danger Marks are anchored on or near hidden dangers. They are black with red bands, and may have a white light and letters.
Hooper Strait Lighthouse at Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels (Talbot County), Maryland, August 2016. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
Special Aids, yellow buoys with or without yellow lights and letters, alert mariners to nets, cables, jetties, military exercise areas, and other special areas. Mooring buoys are white with a centered blue band, and they may have a white light or reflector.
BALTIMORE CITY
[also known as Hawkins Point Lighthouse] (screw-pile lighthouse): Hawkins Point, Brewerton Channel of Patapsco River, near Curtis Bay
Fort McHenry Channel Range Front Light (left), Fort McHenry National Monument & Historic Shrine, Baltimore, Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Fort McHenry Channel Range Rear Light (right), Locust Point, Baltimore, Maryland, October 2016. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Lazaretto Point Lighthouse replica, Baltimore, Maryland, July 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Lightship 116 Chesapeake (Historic Ships in Baltimore), Pier 3, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, Maryland, July 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
Seven-Foot Knoll Lighthouse, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
CALVERT COUNTY
Drum Point Lighthouse, Solomons, Maryland, April 2018. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
CHARLES COUNTY
DORCHESTER COUNTY
HARFORD COUNTY
Concord Point Lighthouse Keeper's House, 700 Concord St., Havre de Grace Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY
QUEEN ANNE'S COUNTY
ST. MARY'S COUNTY
SOMERSET
COUNTY
TALBOT COUNTY
Hooper Strait Lighthouse at Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, St. Michaels (Talbot County), Maryland, August 2016. Photo by Diane F. Evartt.
WICOMICO COUNTY
© Copyright Maryland State Archives
First lit in 1828
Electrified in 1928
Automated in 1986
Ownership transferred from U. S. Coast Guard to Calvert County in 2000
Opened by Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons to public in 2002
First lit in 1883
Electrified in 1944
Automated in 1960
Deactivated in 1962; replaced by light buoy
Ownership transferred from U.S. Coast Guard to Calvert County Historical Society
Relocated to grounds of Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons in 1975 and opened to public
CECIL COUNTY
First lit in 1833
Electrified in 1942
Automated in 1947; Fannie Mae Slate, last woman lighthouse keeper in nation, retired
Deactivated 2000
Relit in 2002 by TPLS as a "private aid to navigation"
Ownership transferred from U. S. Coast Guard to Maryland Department of Natural Resources in 2006
First lit in 1889
Damaged by fire in 1939
Dismantled in 1940; replaced by light on original foundationFirst lit in 1867; replaced lightships (1825-61, 1864)
Destroyed by fire in 1893
Rebuilt in 1896
Deactivated in 1951; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
DismantledFirst lit in 1892
Automated and electrified in 1954
Deactivated in 1963; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
DismantledFirst lit in 1876
Automated in 1951
Deactivated in 1961; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
DismantledFirst lit in 1867; replaced lightships (1821-67)
Tended by African-American keepers during 1870s (one of few lighthouses in nation)
Deactivated in 1876
Reactivated in 1882
Automated in 1951
Deactivated in 1963; replaced with beacon on original foundation
Dismantled
First lit in 1832
Deactivated in 1892; replaced by Sharkfin Shoal Light
Abandoned and collapsed in 1894First lit in 1889
Damaged by "friendly fire" in 1957
Deactivated in 1960; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
DismantledFirst lit in 1902
Electrified in 1936
Automated in 1961
Solar-powered in 1976
Ownership transferred from U.S. Coast Guard to U.S. Lighthouse Society in 2009
Ownership offered by U.S. Lighthouse Society in 2017
Sold on Sept. 22, 2022First lit in 1892; replaced Clay Island Light
Deactivated in 1964; replaced with skeleton tower
Dismantled
First lit in 1827
Automated and electrified in 1920
Deactivated in 1975
Ownership transferred from U.S. Coast Guard to Havre de Grace in 1977
Stewardship undertaken by Friends of Concord Point Lighthouse in 1979
Relit as "private aid to navigation" in 1984 and opened to public
Concord Point Lighthouse, 700 Concord St., Havre de Grace Maryland, June 2015. Photo by Sarah A. Hanks.
First lit in 1825
Bought by U.S. Army in 1917 and made part of Aberdeen Proving Ground
Automated in 1918
Island used for bombing practice from 1918 to 1960s (unexploded ordnance still present)
Deactivated in 1939; transferred to War Department
Relit by U.S. Army in 2011
Island now a wildlife sanctuary
First lit in 1870; replaced lantern on iron pole from 1857
Light added in 1901 to converted fog bell tower from 1882; original tower dismantled
Electrified in 1920
Automated in 1954
Ownership transferred from U.S. Coast Guard to National Park Service in 2005
Deactivated in 2020
First lit in 1882
Developed 6° list due to scouring of sand in 1884; sand removed from opposite side of lean, reduced tilt by half
Structure on seabed secured by stones in 1885
Damaged by fire in 1960
Automated in 1961; now solar-powered
Sold to private owner in 2006First lit in 1872
Damaged by ice in 1873
Automated in 1953
Deactivated in 1964; replaced with automated light on original foundation
Dismantled
First lit in 1851
Raided by Confederates under former island owner Capt. John Goldsmith in 1864
Bought by U.S. Navy in 1919
Automated and decommissioned in 1932
Destroyed by fire in 1956 and razed
U.S. Navy leased island to Maryland in 1962
Island's original name of St. Clement's restored in 1965
Replica completed in 2008First lit in 1896
Erosion and sand dredging shrank land surrounding lighthouse; peninsula eventually became small island
Deactivated in 1928 and sold to Arundel Corporation; automated beacon installed
Lighted buoy installed in mid-1950s; bell tower with beacon collapsed in 1957
Acquired by U.S. Navy in 1958
Lighthouse cupola removed in 1981
Dismantled in 1996; gables and bricks taken to Calvert Marine Museum for use in pavilion constructionFirst lit in 1836; replaced lightships (1821-36)
Automated in 1939
Point acquired by U.S. Navy in 1941
Naval Torpedo Test Center & Range operated on Point from 1941-45
German submarine, U-1105 (Black Panther), sunk by U.S. Navy off Point in 1949
Deactivated in 1964
Ownership transferred from U.S. Coast Guard to St. Mary’s County Department of Parks and Recreation in 1980
Opened to public in 2002First lit in 1830
Hammond General Hospital for wounded Union soldiers erected on land near lighthouse in 1862
Prisoner-of-war camp for Confederates established near lighthouse in 1863
Expanded and raised in 1883
Remodeled in 1927
Electrified in 1930
Land near lighthouse bought by U.S. Navy in 1951
Land around lighthouse bought by Maryland in 1964
Light moved to offshore steel tower in 1965
Deactivated in 1966; ownership transferred from U.S. Coast Guard to to U.S. Navy
Ownership transferred to Maryland Park Service in 2006; Point Lookout Lighthouse Preservation Society formed to restore lighthouse
Opened to public for special eventsFirst lit in 1905
Automated in 1938
Converted to unmanned operations in 1962First lit in 1910
Automated in 1951
Strafed by U.S. Navy pilots on training mission in early 1960s
Deactivated in 1962; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
Dismantled
First lit in 1827
Deactivated in 1875; replaced by Solomons Lump Lighthouse
Abandoned and destroyedFirst lit in 1867; replaced lightships (1853-67)
Destroyed by ice in 1879; replacement built
Destroyed by ice in 1935
Replaced with skeleton tower in 1936
First lit in 1875; replaced Fog Point Light
Destroyed by ice in 1893
Current structure lit in 1895
Automated in 1950First lit in 1867
Automated in 1928
Deactivated in 1932; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
Dismantled
First lighthouse lit in 1871; replaced lightship (1870-71)
Destroyed by ice in 1918
Replacement structure (formerly Cherrystone Bar Light) lit in 1921
Deactivated in 1964; replaced with skeleton tower
Dismantled
Replica built in Cambridge in 2012
First lit in 1867; replaced lightship (1827-67)
Destroyed by ice in 1877
Replacement structure lit in 1879
Automated in 1954
Deactivated in 1966; replaced by skeleton tower; relocated to Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michaels
Opened to public in 1967
First lit as movable shore light in 1838
Replacement lit in 1866
Destroyed by ice in 1881
Current structure lit in 1882
Automated in 1938
Damaged by ice in 1977; currently listing between 15° & 20°
Sold by U.S. Coast Guard to private owner in 2008
Deactivated in 2010 (island now submerged in Chesapeake Bay, marked as "Sharps Island Obstruction" on charts)
First lit in 1884
Deactivated in 1966; replaced with skeleton tower on original foundation
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