Mew Island
| Name | Mew Island |
| Latitude | 54°41.923' North |
| Longitude | 005°30.824' West |
| Character | Fl (4) W 30s. Exhibited by day in poor visibility. |
| Light Range | 24 nautical miles |
| Height of Tower | 37 metres |
| Height of Light above MHWS | 37 metres |
| Radar Beacon | Morse 'O' on vessel's radar display. |
History:
The present lighthouse and fog signal on Mew Island was
established on 1st November 1884 and its predecessor on Lighthouse
Island or Lesser Copeland Island was discontinued. The latter was
established in the early 18th century being one of four cottage
type coal burning lights around the Irish coast. The others were at
Loophead, Old Head of Kinsale and Howth Head. A fifth coal burning
light was at Hook Tower. Prior to Copeland there had been a light
at Island Magee near Carrickfergus, probably another cottage type
light. It lasted only three or four years in the 1660s.
In 1796, Thomas Rogers added a six foot diameter lantern into a
corner on top of the Copeland Island 40 foot high square tower and
changed the lighting from coal to oil using six Argand lamps each
with its own reflector.
After the Revenue Commissioners had handed over the lighthouses to
the Corporation for Improving the Port of Dublin in 1810, one of
the first stations to be improved was Copeland. A new 52 foot high
tower and lantern was built alongside the old tower to the design
of the Corporation's Inspector of Works and Inspector of
Lighthouses, Mr George Halpin, and a fixed light with 27 Argand
lamps and reflectors were lit on 24th January 1815. The actual
light was 131 feet above sea level.
Early in 1851 a large fog bell operated by a weight driven
machine, which was periodically wound up by the Keepers, was
located in the old Lighthouse Tower.
As commerce increased and sailing vessels were replaced by steam
driven vessels, a better positioned light was looked for and in
January 1875 the Belfast Harbour Commissioners were the first to
request the removal of the Copeland light to Mew Island. Work on
the new station eventually commenced in 1882, designed by the
Engineer of the Commissioners of Irish Lights, William Douglass.
The new light and fog signal came into operation on 1st November
1884. The light had a character of four four second flashes in 20
seconds repeated every minute, and the optic was triform, that is
three superimposed eight sided optics each with its own burner. In
clear weather only 32 of the 108 jets were lit in the lowest
burner, in hazy weather all jets were lit in the lowest burner, and
in foggy conditions all three burners were lit with a total of 324
jets - the candle power increasing from 13,500 to 189,500. The
optic was manufactured in Paris by Messrs Barbier and Fenestre and
supplied by Messrs Edmundson & Co of Dublin. Edmundson's also
supplied the lantern, gas works and fog signal plant.
Messrs Dixon & Co of Belfast were the contractors for the
buildings and Messrs H. Fulton of Belfast for the five keepers'
shore dwellings at Donaghadee.
The siren fog signal was in duplicate, the air compressors were
driven by Crossley 8 HP Otto gas engines and each set had a wrought
iron air receiver and two sirens, one high note and one low,
operated at 40lbs per square inch. The character of the signal was
a four second blast low note, twelve seconds silence, four seconds
blast high note, one hundred seconds silence.
Gas was made from cannel coal in retorts burning furnace coal.
After processing, gas was stored in two, later increased to three,
25 foot diameter gas holders each with a 46,000 cubic foot
capacity. The average gas consumption per annum was 525,000 cubic
feet.
The tower and dwellings are of rubble masonry quarried on the
island, with granite dressings quarried near Newry. The tower is
stuccoed in Portland cement.
The siren fog signal was improved in 1899 by replacing the two
Crossley compressor sets with three Crossley 13 HP engines with a
14" diameter, 21" stroke air compressing cylinder. The new siren
was repositioned under the balcony of the tower instead of on top
of the engine room roof.
Two further changes took place with the fog signal machinery in
1929 when the siren was replaced by a diaphone giving 4 blasts
every 30 seconds positioned on the lantern balcony and three single
cylinder Petten oil engines drove Reavell rotary compressors. In
1948 three Ruston and Hornsby 24 hp, 5YHR oil engines drove Reavell
DSA9 compressors. From 1978 the light was exhibited in poor
visibility when the fog signal was sounding.
In 1928 the gas making plant, the last around the coast, was
discontinued and a biform (two tier) optic transferred from Tory
Island replaced the original triform which had been giving trouble
for some time. Paraffin vapour burners were used instead of coal
gas. The character was altered to four flashes every half minute.
Paraffin gave way to electric lamps on 15th July 1969 when the
intensity of the light was increased giving a range of 30 nautical
miles. The duration of the flash was decreased to 0.2
seconds.
A radiobeacon was established on 8th August 1949.
Repairs to the tower were carried out from September 1953 to
January 1954 when the tower which had always been painted black
acquired a 27 foot deep white band approximately half way up. The
lantern was painted white.
The Keepers' shore dwellings at Donaghadee were discontinued and
sold in October 1957 and the Keepers then lived in homes of their
own, travelling to and from Donaghadee when their tour of duty on
the island commenced or finished. A local boat contractor carried
out the reliefs from Donaghadee every two weeks.
From the 14th July 1981 the Keepers on Mew Island monitored the
South Rock Automatic Lightfloat situated 32km to the south, off the
County Down coast.
In June 1991, the diaphone fog signal service at the station was
permanently discontinued.
A radar responder beacon (Racon) was established at Mew Island on
1st March 1993.
The lighthouse was converted to automatic operation and, as a
consequence the lighthouse keepers were permanently withdrawn from
the station on 29th March 1996. The station is in the care of an
Attendant and the aids to navigation are also monitored via a
telemetry link from Irish Lights Dun Laoghaire.
By the early 1990s utilisation of radio direction finders by
mariners was to a great extent superseded by more modern
technology. Following the mandatory requirement for ships to carry
radio direction finders as part of their equipment the
Commissioners discontinued their medium frequency radiobeacon
service on 1st February 1999.
