The Tampa Lighthouse That's Still Standing A Century After The 1921 Hurricane

Publish date: 2024-04-03

The Egmont Key Lighthouse was in-built 1848, a subject of months ahead of the hurricane now referred to as "the great gale of 1848" hit the area, as NOAA notes. A guy named Sherrod Edwards was once mild keeper at the moment, and the Egmont Key Lighthouse stood on an island at the entryway of Tampa Bay, the only lighthouse between the panhandle and Key West (by the use of Tampa Bay Soundings). When the "great gale" got here, it's believed Edwards rode out the hurricane in a rowboat tied  to a Palm Tree.

The unique Egmont Key construction, built at a cost of $10,000 or a bit not up to $400,000 today, didn't fare so neatly, even though (in line with Official Data). In the "great gale" the Egmont Key Lighthouse used to be damaged past repair and the lighthouse because it stands lately used to be rebuilt in 1858 for a cost of $16,000 or $624,000 in lately's money. Other within reach constructions on the website had been later added or torn down (via Official Data). 

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