Currie Lighthouse 1880
 
King Island Online

 

 

Even after the Cape Wickham lighthouse was built in 1861, the shipwrecks continued. Many ship's captains mistook the Cape Wickham light for Cape Otway's, causing them to sail straight onto the coast.

Currie lighthouse was planned to address the problem. It was positioned to be visible to ships approaching form the south-west, and to remain visible to the north until Cape Wickham light could be picked up. It was set to flash, to differentiate it from Cape Wickham's fixed light.

After Currie lighthouse commenced operating in 1810, the number of shipwrecks did decrease. But no solution is perfect. In 1910 the skipper of the steel clipper Carnarvon Bay saw the Currie light and mistook it for Cape Otway - he was clearly very far off course! Scrabbling to set a new course to round King Island to the south, he cut the passage too fine and struck a reef off Stokes Point.

 

 
Continue the virtual tour - click on the links on the map:
Neva Wreck Cape Wickham Light Loch Leven wreck Shannon shipwreck Sea Elephant Bay Graasy Harbour Carnarvon Bay wreck Cataraqui wreck Blencathra wreck Currie Light Currie Harbour Netherby wreck British Admiral wreck

Facts and Figures

 
Come to
King Island:
Position Latitude 39° 57' south
Longitude 140° 51' east
Range 17 nautical miles
Commenced Operation 1 March 1880 (tower is stamped with date of construction in England, 1877)  
Height 21.3 metres; height above high water mark 48.8 metres  
Light Oil-burning wick lamp  
Lens Revolving catadioptric by Chance Brothers, Birmingham UK  
Signal One 22,000 candela flash every 12 seconds  
Staffing Originally a keeper and two assistants; automated after World War Two  

 

 
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Currie Light Wickham Light Grassy Harbour Currie Harbour Sea Elephant Bay
Loch Leven Cataraqui Shannon Netherby Blencathra British Admiral Neva Carnarvon Bay