Hook Head
| Name | Hook Head |
| Latitude | 52°07.424' North |
| Longitude | 006°55.770' West |
| Character | Fl W 3s. Also exhibited by day in poor visibility. |
| Light Range | 23 nautical miles |
| Height of Tower | 35 metres |
| Height of Light above MHWS | 46 metres |
| Radar Beacon | Morse 'K' on vessel's radar display. |
| AIS | 992501079 |
History:
In the 5th century a Welsh monk named Dubhán, seeking to lead a
life of solitude, founded a monastery on the site where the old
church of Churchtown now stands, 1.6 km north of Hook Head
overlooking the entrance into Waterford Harbour. The promontory
became known as Rinn Dubhán or Point of Dubhan. By coincidence, the
word dubhán or duáin in the Irish language means
fishing hook. Following the Anglo-Norman invasion,
Dubhán was translated to Hook or Point of Hook. Later it
was also known as Hook Head and sometimes just The Hook.
According to tradition, Saint Dubhán established a beacon on Hook
Point which is almost certain to have been a chauffer on top of a
mound or pile of stones burning either timber or other local
combustible fuels-a valuable navigational light for vessels
entering the natural haven of Waterford Harbour.
Between 1170 and 1182 a Norman from Pembrokeshire, Raymond LeGros,
husband of Strongbow's only sister, landed at Baginbun, a small
promontory on which were the remains of a Celtic fort, Dundonnell
circa 100 to 200 BC 9km north east of the Point of Hook. Here,
LeGros set up another fort and subsequently crushed the Norse and
Irish advance from Waterford, regarded by some as a turning point
in Irish history. "At the creek of Baginbun, Ireland was lost and
won."
LeGros was killed in 1182 but, according to some authorities, had
left his mark by building the first Tower of Hook, c.1172, to
replace the original beacon and which also acted as a castle to
guard the entrance into the harbour. However, more recent
authorities attribute Hook Tower to William Marshal, Earl of
Pembroke, in 1245. The tower, and the beacon on its top, was vested
in the custody of the monks who were by then affiliated to the
Priory of Saint Augustine in Ross and whose own monastery had been
renamed Saint Saviour's of Rendevan.
Monks continued to tend the beacon even through Henry VIII's
suppressions. Over the years the land on which the tower was built
changed hands many times. At the outbreak of civil war in 1641 the
monks left Churchtown and their lightkeeping duties ceased.
Cromwell did nothing to maintain the beacon and shipwrecks became
commonplace. Mariners engaged the Governor of Duncannon Fort,
Colonel Cymon Rudgeley, to petition the Revenue Commissioners in
1657 to re-establish the Hook beacon. This petition was
unsuccessful and mariners had to wait until Charles II granted
Letters Patent to Sir Richard Reading in 1665 to erect six
lighthouses around the coast of Ireland, one of which was at Hook.
By 1667, or soon after, the six lighthouses had been built and Hook
re-established.
Hook Tower was originally 18m high and approximately 8.5m in
diameter. It was subsequently enlarged to 24m high and to
approximately 12m in diameter (it is not truly circular) with a
spiral stone stairway sandwiched between the outside of the old
wall and the inside of the newer wall. When the tower was enlarged
has not been established; definitely not in Reading's time, but he
may have been responsible for the construction of a lantern to
house the beacon fire on top of the tower. This was not uncommon
practice in those days. It shielded the fire from gusty winds and,
with a flue through the roof or dome, conducted the smoke clear of
the fire thus exhibiting a better and brighter light for the
mariner. In their book Lighthouses, Rosemary Christie and
Douglas Hague quote an estimate for the alteration and repair of
the lantern at Hook Lighthouse from a 1704 report on the state of
Irish lighthouses. Whilst this does not categorically state there
was a lantern, it mentions among other things, items such as -
"lyme for pointing and reffcasting the outside of the tower and
other mason's work about the lanthorn and battlements, also 140
foott of glass for the lanthorn, iron for the grate, bricks for the
breast of the lanthorn."
During 1704 Queen Anne transferred the lighthouses around the Irish
coast to the Revenue Commissioners. Hook was not immediately taken
over because one Henry Loftus, of nearby Loftus Hall, held the
tower under a twenty-one year lease. It passed to his son Nicholas,
who then engaged the Revenue Commissioners in a dispute regarding
the renewal of the lease. In 1726 he threatened to extinguish the
light unless a rent of £200 was advanced by the Commissioners. The
dispute went on for two years. Fortunately the light was not
extinguished and the outcome of the lease was that it was renewed
for a rent of £120.
The tower fell into disrepair as can be seen from a contemporary
engraving dated 1792, but in 1791 the Revenue Board granted Thomas
Rogers a contract to maintain and staff Hook Point along with other
lighthouses, namely Howth, Cranfield Point, Kilwarlin (South Rock),
Copeland, Aranmore, Loophead, Old Head (Kinsale), Charlesfort
(Kinsale) and Duncannon Fort.
At Hook Rogers erected a new 3.65 m diameter lantern and installed
twelve Argand oil lamps with reflectors. This was confirmed in
Rogers's report to the Board of the Corporation for Preserving and
Improving the Port of Dublin (the Ballast Board) in August 1810,
but the following month the Ballast Board's own inspecting
committee, Messrs Halpin, Baker and Bigger reported that Hook had
thirteen lamps and the lantern was fitted with ten lenses (panes of
what today we call bottle glass) and three sheets of plate
glass.
The apparatus was improved in 1812 and again in 1864 when a new
lantern and fixed dioptric lens replaced Rogers's lantern and the
1812 catoptric apparatus. During the replacement of the 1791
lantern cinders from the coal burning grate were found on top of
the tower. J. S. Sloan, Clerk of Works in 1864, describes in his
book Manual for Lightkeepers (1873) Reading's turret of
1665 - 67 as being, "9m high and 6m in diameter with an external
staircase to about half its height which continued to the top
inside the thick wall." The turret had a strong vaulted roof to
carry the coal fire. This was removed to Sloan's redesigning
together with 3.2m of the wall. A cast iron lantern floor was set
on top of the wall and the present lantern was then added.
Coal gas replaced oil lamps in 1871 and lasted until 1910. On New
Year's Day 1911, a revolving third order 500mm focal distance optic
replaced the dioptric lens, and vaporised paraffin took over from
coal gas as the source of light; paraffin succumbed to electricity
in 1972 when the intensity was increased to 480,000 candelas. The
duration of the flash was decreased to 0.11 seconds, the character
being Fl W 3 secs. The range of the light was 25 nautical
miles.
Another aid to navigation, a fog signal bell, was introduced in
1838. This in turn was replaced by a gun in 1872 and in 1905 by an
explosive charge on the end of a jib attached to the dome of the
lantern with a character of two shots every six minutes. This was
changed to one shot every 5 minutes in June 1937 with a brilliant
flash accompanying the fog signal when sounded by night. This flash
was discontinued during World War Two and re-introduced in 1949.
With the tightening of security in the early 1970s the explosive
fog signal was discontinued and in 1975 was replaced by a
compressed air operated supertyfon emitter which gave one blast
every 30 seconds. In 1995 this pneumatic fog signal was replaced by
an electric horn with a character of 2 blasts every 45 seconds.
Since 1978 the light is exhibited in poor visibility whilst the fog
signal is sounding. On 11th January 2011 the fog signal
at Hook Head was permanently discontinued. The light continues to
be exhibited in reduced visibility during daylight hours.
In 1933 the colour of the tower was altered from white with three
red bands to white with two black bands.
A Racon (radar beacon) was established in November 1974.
Lightkeepers families were withdrawn in 1977 and Hook Lighthouse
became relieving like its offshore counterparts. Six Keepers, two
Principal and four Assistant Keepers were attached to the station,
three being on duty at any one time. The Keepers' tour of duty was
four weeks on and four weeks off.
The station was converted to unwatched and the Keepers were
permanently withdrawn on 29 March 1996. The Aids to Navigation and
equipment are controlled and monitored through a telemetry link
with Dun Laoghaire. Monitoring equipment for Coningbeg Lightfloat
is also installed at the station and all information is
automatically relayed to the Central Control at Dun Laoghaire.
In January 2009 AIS (Automatic Identification System) functionality was added to Hook Head Lighthouse.
While remaining a fully operational lighthouse in the care of an
Attendant, Hook Head now also accommodates a heritage centre with
tours of the lighthouse. Information of this visitor attraction can
be obtained on Hook Heritage Ltd website at
www.thehook-wexford.com.
