Fowey Rocks Lighthouse in Biscayne National Park Listed as One of Florida’s Most Endangered Historic Places

“A lighthouse that has kept mariners and their ships from danger is now in danger itself."
The Fowey Rocks Lighthouse is located offshore in the northeast corner of Biscayne National Park and within sight of the park's northern islands as well as Cape Florida.

Mike Beach

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News Release Date: May 18, 2015

Contact: Matt Johnson, 786-335-3679

HOMESTEAD, FLORIDA –The Fowey Rocks Lighthouse in Biscayne National Park was listed by the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation as one of the eleven most endangered historic sites in Florida. The Fowey Rocks Lighthouse is included along with five other reef lighthouses in the Florida Keys.

"A lighthouse that has kept mariners and their ships from danger is now in danger itself," said Charles Lawson, Biscayne National Park's Cultural Resource Manager. "Hopefully the Trust's designation will help draw attention to the plight of the Fowey Rocks Lighthouse and to the needs of the other five offshore reef lights along the Florida Keys as well."

The Fowey Rocks Lighthouse is located offshore in the northeast corner of Biscayne National Park and within sight of the park's northern islands as well as Cape Florida. The lighthouse was first lit in 1878. It has guided mariners away from dangerous reefs for over 130 years. The structure is showing its age. Years of deferred maintenance have resulted in unsafe conditions and a long list of projects needed in order to restore and stabilize the lighthouse. Its current condition is what led the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation to identify it as one of the most endangered historic properties in the state.

In 2012 Biscayne National Park accepted ownership of the lighthouse from the U.S. Coast Guard. The lighthouse structure belongs to the park but the light itself continues to be maintained by the Coast Guard. The original lighthouse lens was replaced with a modern solar powered light visible for approximately seventeen miles out to sea. The park has been working to find the substantial funds necessary to rehabilitate the lighthouse structure. The Florida Keys Reef Lights Foundation and the Florida Lighthouse Association provided funds for initial stabilization efforts, but the structure is in need of much more work. The park hopes to someday restore the lighthouse as a functional residence and to establish a volunteer lighthouse keeper program.

The Florida Trust for Historic Preservation promotes the preservation of the architectural, historical and archaeological heritage of Florida through advocacy, education and historic property stewardship. The Trust annually announces Florida's eleven most endangered historic sites in order to increase the public's awareness of the urgent need to save Florida's neglected or threatened historic resources and empower local preservationists and preservation groups in their efforts to preserve Florida's rich history.

For more information about the Fowey Rocks Lighthouse please see the park website at www.nps.gov/bisc/learn/historyculture/fowey-rocks-lighthouse.htm. For more information about Biscayne National Park please visit the park website at www.nps.gov/bisc or follow the park on Facebook at www.facebook.com/biscaynenps, Twitter at www.twitter.com/biscaynenps or Instagram at www.instagram.com/biscaynenps.

-BISC-

About the National Park Service. More than 20,000 National Park Service employees care for America's 407 national parks and work with communities across the nation to help preserve local history and create close-to-home recreational opportunities. Learn more at www.nps.gov.



Last updated: May 19, 2015

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