Mikomotoshima Lighthouse

Mikomotojima Lighthouse
神子元島灯台

Mikomotojima Lighthouse
Japan
Location S of Shimoda
Shizuoka Prefecture
Japan
Coordinates 34°34′31.3″N 138°56′30.1″E / 34.575361°N 138.941694°E / 34.575361; 138.941694
Year first constructed 1871 (1871)
Foundation brick and concrete
Construction brick and concrete tower
Tower shape tapered cylindrical tower with gallery and lantern
Markings / pattern white and black bands tower, white lantern
Height 23.3 metres (76 ft)
Focal height 51 metres (167 ft)
Original lens Third Order Fresnel
Range 19.5 nautical miles (36.1 km; 22.4 mi)
Characteristic Fl (2) W 16s.
Admiralty number M6290
NGA number 5548
ARLHS number JPN-353
Japan number JCG-2447[1]

Mikomotojima Light (神子元島灯台 Mikomotojima tōdai) is a lighthouse located on Mikomotojima, a small (0.1 km2) uninhabited islet located 11 kilometres (5.9 nmi) south of Shimoda port, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan.

History

The Mikomotojima Lighthouse was one of eight lighthouses to be built in Meiji period Japan under the provisions of the Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Amity and Commerce of 1858, signed by the Bakumatsu period Tokugawa Shogunate. The lighthouse was designed and constructed by British engineer Richard Henry Brunton, and is noteworthy in that it is the first concrete structure to have been built in Japan. Brunton went on to construct another 25 lighthouses from far northern Hokkaidō to southern Kyūshū during his career in Japan.

This lighthouse was one of the first that Brunton designed and was also one of the most difficult to design. The island is situated in a turbulent part of the sea, and the sides of the island are very steep. Brunton wrote in an 1871 essay [2] that:

The lighthouse is of stone, 58 feet high to the sole-plate of the lantern. It is in the shape of a truncated cone, and is surmounted by a capital having twenty-four Gothic arched recesses round it. The diameter at the base is 22 feet and at the top 16 feet. The thickness of the walls at the base is 6 feet and at the top 3 feet. It is fitted with a spiral staircase of keaki. The light shows all round the horizon, and a red ray of 55" is inserted, which covers all dangers between it and the shore. The work of cutting away the rock to prepare for the foundations of the tower was commenced in April 1869, and the lighthouse was first illuminated on 1 January, 1871.

The lighthouse was first lit on January 1, 1871 in a ceremony attended by British consul-general Sir Harry Smith Parkes, and Japanese officials Prince Sanjō Sanetomi, Ōkubo Toshimichi and Ōkuma Shigenobu.

The Mikomotojima Lighthouse is currently the oldest lighthouse still in use in Japan. It is registered with the International Association of Lighthouse Authorities as one of the “One Hundred Most Important Lighthouses in the World” and by the Japanese government as a National Historic Monument.

See also


References

Notes

  1. Lighthouses Directory
  2. Brunton, The Japan Lights
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