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}} Sombrero Key Light is located near Key Vaca in Marathon, Florida. The lighthouse is located on a mostly submerged reef. The name ''Sombrero Key'' goes back to the Spanish, and old charts show a small island at the spot, but by the later 19th Century the island had eroded away, with some parts of the reef exposed at low tide. As a result, the reef and the lighthouse have also been called Dry Banks. The lighthouse was put in service in 1858, automated in 1960, and is still in operation. The foundation is iron pilings with disks, and the tower is a skeletal octagonal pyramid of cast iron. It is a tall brown painted tower. It has two platforms. The lower one, above the water, held water and fuel tanks, the generator (after the light was electrified), boat hoists and a workshop. The upper platform, above the water, held the quarters for the staff. The original lens, a first-order Fresnel lens, is now on display in the Key West Lighthouse Museum. The Sombrero Key Light is the tallest lighthouse in the Florida Keys, and was the last lighthouse constructed under the supervision of Lieutenant George Meade of the Bureau of Topographical Engineers. ==Keepers== * Joseph Bethel 1858 – 1859 * Joseph F. Papy 1859 – 1860 * Anthony Davis 1860 – 1862 * James Bryson 1862 – 1864 * John H. Singleton 1864 – 1866 * ohn Carroll 1866 – 1870 * Peter Crocker 1870 – 1872 * Adolphus A. Seymour 1872 – 1873 * Jeremiah Buckley 1873 – 1881 * Thomas J. Pinder 1881 – 1884 * Melville Evans Spencer 1884 – 1889 * Rudolph Rieke 1889 – 1904 * John Watkins 1904 – 1913 * Miguel Fabal 1913 – 1919 * William H. Pierce 1919 – at least 1933 * Edward P. Johnson 1936 – 1941 * Furman C. Williamson 1958 –1960〔(Lighthouse Friends )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sombrero Key Light」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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