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Aids to Navigation

Primary seacoast lights were located to warn mariners of their proximity to land, the presence of navigational dangers, and to help set their course. By 1852, however, lighthouses and lightships often looked so much alike that it was difficult to distinguish one from another.

Today, each lighthouse has a “characteristic” or coded sequence of light flashes making it possible for the mariner to identify the light and its location along the coast. For example, Barnegat Light’s “Characteristic” was a flash every ten seconds at each point of the compass.

Each lighthouse tower also has a “daymark” or distinctive design and paint pattern. The yellow-black-yellow painted pattern on Absecon Lighthouse helped mariners to distinguish it from others. Some lighthouses, especially those located on dangerous shoals in the harbors and bays, are also equipped with fog signals to warn mariners of potential danger. What other unique characteristics and features help make each of New Jersey’s lighthouses distinctive?

Lighthouses of New Jersey

1. Sandy Hook Lighthouse

2. Robbins Reef Lighthouse

3. Romer Shoal Lighthouse

4. Twin Lights of Navesink

5. Conover Beacon

6. Great Beds Lighthouse

7. Chapel Hill Lighthouse

8. Sea Girt Lighthouse

9. Barnegat Lighthouse

10. Absecon Lighthouse

11. Hereford Inlet Lighthouse

12. Cape May Point Lighthouse

13. East Point Lighthouse

14. Finns Point Rear Range Lighthouse

15. Brandywine Shoal Lighthouse

16. Elbow of Cross Ledge Lighthouse

17. Miah Maull Shoal Lighthouse

18. Ship John Shoal Lighthouse

19. Tinicum Rear Range Lighthouse

Marker is at the intersection of N Central Avenue and E 1st Avenue, on the right when traveling north on N Central Avenue.

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB