Ballycotton
| Name | Ballycotton |
| Latitude | 51°49.522' North |
| Longitude | 007°59.169' West |
| Character | Fl WR 10s. Exhibited by day in conditons of poor visibility |
| Sectors | W 238°-048° (170°).R 048°-238° (190°) |
| Light Range | White 21 nautical miles, Red 17 nautical miles |
| Height of Tower | 15 metres |
| Height of Light above MHWS | 59 metres |
History:
Photo copyright - Philip Plisson. Ballycotton Lighthouse is
indirectly linked to numerous requests between 1828 and 1846 from
merchants of Youghal and Cork, shipowners, masters, Cork Harbour
Board, and the Admiralty for a lighthouse on Capel Island off
Knockadoon Head, 8km (5 miles) south of Youghal. Throughout this
time the Inspector of Works & Inspector of Lighthouses, George
Halpin, supported by the Ballast Board, much preferred, if there
was to be a new lighthouse, for it to be positioned on Ballymacart
Head or Mine Head as it is called today.
While legal steps were being taken to acquire ground on Capel
Island during 1846-47 an incident occurred which was to eventually
seal the fate of the proposed Capel Island lighthouse and set the
wheels in motion for Ballycotton. On 16 January 1847 the paddle
steamship Sirius, the first vessel to cross the Atlantic
Ocean completely under steam in April 1838, struck the Smith's
Rock, south west of Ballycotton, in dense fog and later became a
total wreck when Captain Moffatt tried to run the crippled vessel
into Ballycotton harbour.
A Board of Trade enquiry under Captain Denham, RN was held on the
loss of the Sirius and in his report he drew the attention
of the Ballast Board to the propriety of forthwith establishing two
lighthouses on a transit to clear Smith's Rock, one on Ballycotton
the other either on Helvick Head or Ballymacart (Mine) Head to
avert the frequency of wrecks along the unlit coast between Old
Head Kinsale and Hook Head. The Board acknowledged the Board of
Trade's letter and informed them that the subject would receive
prompt attention.
Early in 1848 the Cork Steam Ship Co. together with numerous
merchants, shipowners and masters of Cork urged the Board
expeditiously to carry out the erection of the Capel Island
lighthouse. The Cork Steam Ship Co. was informed that the Capel
Island lighthouse tower was now six feet (1.8m) above the cut stone
and that a road had to be constructed from the landing to the site
due to the steepness of the island.
The Cork Steam Ship Co's letter was soon followed by another, via
the Admiralty, from the Cork Harbour Board and merchants, traders,
and shipowners of Cork City and County, requesting for lighthouses
on Ballycotton and Ballymacart (Mine) Head. No mention whatever was
made of Capel Island for which they had been looking for the
previous twenty years.
The Ballast Board pointed out this sudden change to the Admiralty,
to which the Admiralty replied that they were aware of the
differences of opinion but the Ballast Board should determine a
course which seemed best calculated for the service of the public,
also that the works on Capel Island should be suspended.
As it would not be economic to remove Capel Island's tower to
Ballycotton, Inspector Halpin suggested completing the tower to the
second storey and finishing it off as an unlit beacon which, if
required at a later date, could be made into an outer harbour light
for Youghal.
Sanction to build Ballycotton Lighthouse was obtained from Trinity
House in March 1848 and an Inquisition was held in Youghal on 16
June for the valuation of the ground required. The result of this
was made known in September and Mr M. Longfield, the proprietor of
Ballycotton Island received £36:5s:0d; twenty others including the
Archbishop of Dublin and the Bishop of Cork received one shilling
each and Queen Victoria received five shillings!
Meanwhile Inspector Halpin had designed the lighthouse and
dwellings, which were to be made from the old red sandstone
quarried on the island. Stone for lintels, sills, lantern,
blocking, tower stairs etc would have been brought in from granite
quarries on the mainland. Messrs W. and P. Brash of Cork were
awarded the contract to build the tower and dwellings in November
1848.
Building progress at first was slow but a judicious letter from the
Board reminded Brash not to delay or neglect executing his
contract. This helped to spur on progress and by July 1849 the
tower was ready to take the cut stone lantern blocking. In March
1850 the bulk of the building had been completed and the dome of
the tower was being sheeted with copper.
The first order optic (920mm focal distance) was supplied by Messrs
W. Wilkins of London who at that time relied on French optics for
their apparatus. The catadioptric apparatus was the only one of its
type around the coast, with a fixed inner optic and a rotating
outer. The fixed inner cylindric reflector consisted of upper and
lower catadioptric prisms without a centre belt. The rotating outer
optic had eight faces each with an annular lens, and a set of upper
and lower vertical condensing prisms. These prisms revolved around
the inner fixed upper and lower catadioptric prisms. The resulting
effect was a powerful beam from each face of the outer optic. The
light source would have been a multiple wick oil lamp.
A draft notice to mariners for the light to be exhibited on 1 March
1851 was approved by the Board but due to the optic being slightly
damaged before leaving Wilkins the lighting was postponed until 1
June 1851 which coincided with Mine Head's lighting.
The light's character was flashing white every ten seconds, and it
could be seen at a distance of 18 miles (29 km) in clear weather.
The overall height of the tower is 50 feet (15.2m) and the height
of the light above high water is 195 feet (59.4m). The tower was
natural stone colour and the compound walls were white washed on
the outside. A black band was painted around the centre of the
tower in 1892 so that the tower would not be confused with Capel
Islands beacon, and in 1902 the whole of the tower was painted
black, again for the same reason.
Early in June 1856 the Reverend J. Hopkins, incumbent of
Ballycotton, wrote to the Board and mentioned two possible
accidents which might have occurred during fog off Ballycotton
Island and before some sad catastrophe happened he hoped that the
Ballast Board would establish a fog bell. The matter was referred
to the Inspecting Committee who, being on tour at that time, agreed
that steps should be taken to erect a fog bell. No record can be
found of the fog bell being established. However, Inspector Halpin
reported in July 1856 that estimates for a bell and belfry had been
received and soon after that reported that difficulty had been
experienced in delivering the two items to Ballycotton, so 1856 can
confidently be taken as the year the fog bell was
established.
In July 1896 the Inspecting Committee recommended that Ballycotton,
along with three other stations, should be converted to relieving
and the Keepers and their families granted lodging allowance
pending dwelling being built ashore. Bringing families ashore from
rock stations was triggered off by a storm on 29 December 1894
which damaged, beyond repair, the dwellings of the east station on
Eagle Island, off the Mullet Peninsula, Co. Mayo.
Houses in Ballycotton were offered early in 1898 by Mr O'Keeffe and
Mr Power. Mr O'Keeffe's four houses overlooked the lighthouse but
were too exposed and lacked a water supply. Mr Power's were better
situated, marginally superior, but required coal houses and earth
closets. Mr Power's houses were recommended by Mr William Douglass
the Board's Engineer. By March 1899 the dwellings were occupied by
the four keepers and their families.
In 1904 the light source was converted to an incandescent vaporised
paraffin burner.
Proposals to build new shore dwellings were made by Mr Scott, the
Board's Engineer, in 1904 and 1910; both were unsuccessful. The
first time Mr Power reminded the Board that they had not given him
six months notice to surrender the lease and the second time the
Board of Trade questioned the excessive price compared with Coast
Guard houses in England and Scotland. Over the years the lease was
renewed periodically and in 1958 the Commissioners bought the four
houses.
In June 1908 Mr Scott reported that the bell tower was unsafe and
suggested that either the bell should be re-positioned on the
lighthouse tower or, alternatively, a reed horn should be
established. With the sanction of both Trinity House and the Board
of Trade the bell was replaced on 30 December 1909 by a reed horn
fog signal with a character of six blasts every two minutes. The
horn was positioned on the lantern balcony rail, with two Crossley
compressor sets on the first floor and an air receiver on the
ground floor of the tower.
By 1921 Mr Scott recommended replacing what had become an
unsatisfactory reed horn by an 'A' type diaphone. Approval was
obtained. The Crossley compressor sets were retained and an extra
air receiver, transferred from Tory Island, was installed. The
diaphone, again positioned on the balcony rail, went into operation
towards the end of 1924 with the same character as the reed
horn.
With Board of Trade sanction early in 1937 the fog signal underwent
a complete change in 1938. A 'G' type diaphone was located in one
of the first floor windows of the tower, two new Ruston and Hornsby
3 XHR engines driving Reavell DSA7E compressors were located in the
two end rooms, converted into one, of the dwelling nearest to the
tower, and two extra air receivers were located in the yard near
the tower. The improved fog signal went into operation on 16
February 1939, with a different character: four 1.5 second blasts
every ninety seconds, (blast 1.5, silent 2.0, blast 1.5, silent
2.0, blast 1.5, silent 2.0, blast 1.5, silent 78.0).
The station was converted to non-dwelling status on 1 September
1972, the lightkeepers and their families moved out to homes of
their own, and the terrace of three houses sold in 1973. The fourth
house was retained as a staff holiday house until 1997.
On 28 August 1974 a Radio Beacon and Radio Direction Finder
Calibration Beacon was established, the aerial being slung between
a mast and the tower.
The main light was converted to electric on 15 January 1975 when
the original 1851 optic was replaced by an AGA sealed beam lamp
array with a character of Fl W 10 seconds. On 14 August 1975 a 175°
landward red sector was incorporated into the main light.
A modernisation of the station was carried out in 1976-77. New
quarters were built for the keepers and tradesmen, with a watchroom
on the roof, and the old keepers' dwelling became a general store.
The other dwelling nearest the tower which housed the two
compressor sets was further converted to accommodate the three
Lister HR2 generator sets. The two Ruston engines and Reavell
compressors were replaced by two Lister HR3 engines and Ingersol
Rand 40 compressors and the two older air receivers were
repositioned nearer the two 1939 receivers in the yard. The
diaphone itself was repositioned in a new diaphone house in the
south-east corner of the compound complete with an ex
Osprey lightvessel air receiver and an ex Inishtrahull
diaphone trumpet. An eleven metre diameter concrete helicopter
landing pad was constructed. Since April 1978 the light is
exhibited in poor visibility when the fog signal is sounding.
The Radio Beacon and Radio Direction Finder Calibration Beacon
service was discontinued on the 26th November 1991.
In 1991 the diaphone fog signal was changed to an electric horn
retaining the same character.
On 28 March 1992 the lighthouse was converted to automatic
operation. The three keepers were withdrawn from the station, and
the station was placed in the care of an Attendant. The aids to
navigation are also monitored via a telemetry link from Irish
Lights Dun Laoghaire.
An undersea mains electricity cable was laid by the ESB from the
pier at Ballycotton to Ballycotton Island on 17 July 2004. The
three generator sets were replaced with a 10 kW mains fail
generator on 16 April 2005, and the batteries and chargers were
upgraded. The existing light and 4 nautical mile fog signal were
retained. This project was designed to provide reliable operation
of the station for the ensuing 10 years.
On 11 January 2011, following a review of aids to navigation, the fog signal at Ballycotton was permanently disestablished. The light continues to be exhibited in poor visibility during daylight hours.
