Lindisfarne - Lighthouses

Lighthouses

Guile Point East and Heugh Hill lighthouses
Location Lindisfarne, Northumberland, England
Coordinates 55°40′0″N 1°48′0″W / 55.666667°N 1.8°W / 55.666667; -1.8
Year first constructed 1859 and unknown
Height 21 m (69 ft) and 8 m (26 ft)
Focal height 9 m (30 ft) and 24 m (79 ft)
Range 4 nmi (7.4 km) and 5 nmi (9.3 km)
Characteristic Occurring White, Red and Green Every 6 Seconds synchonised with each other
ARLHS number ENG 222 and ENG 314

Trinity House operates two lighthouses to guide vessels entering Holy Island Harbour, named Guile Point East and Heugh Hill. The former is one of a pair of stone obelisks standing constructed on a sandy spit on the south side of the entrance to the Harbour to act as a day mark. Since the early 1990s, a light has been fixed to it about one-third of the way up. The latter is a metal framework tower with a red triangular day mark.

Not a lighthouse but simply a day mark for maritime navigation, a white brick pyramid, 35 feet high and built in 1810, stands at Emmanuel Head, the north eastern point of Lindisfarne.

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