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== External links ==
== External links ==
{{commons category|Cape Enrage Lighthouse}}
{{commons category|Cape Enrage Lighthouse}}
* [http://www.ccg-gcc.gc.ca/aids/home Aids to Navigation] Canadian Coast Guard
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20160820222239/http://www.ccg-gcc.gc.ca/aids/home Aids to Navigation] Canadian Coast Guard
*[https://maps.google.com/maps?q=47.425,-84.483889&ie=UTF8&om=1&z=13&ll=45.610795,-64.777794&spn=0.082496,0.21698&t=h&iwloc=addr aerial view]
*[https://maps.google.com/maps?q=47.425,-84.483889&ie=UTF8&om=1&z=13&ll=45.610795,-64.777794&spn=0.082496,0.21698&t=h&iwloc=addr aerial view]
*[http://www.capeenrage.ca Official website]
*[http://www.capeenrage.ca Official website]

Revision as of 13:54, 14 November 2016

Cape Enrage lighthouse

Cape Enrage is the name given to the southern tip of Barn Marsh Island, an island located in Albert County, New Brunswick, roughly half way along the coastline between the villages of Riverside-Albert and Alma at the eastern entrance to Fundy National Park.

Accessible from Route 915, the island itself is surrounded by jagged sea cliffs that are often more than 50 metres (145 ft) high, and is separated from the mainland by a narrow tidal creek.

Cape Enrage derives its name from the large reef that extends south into Chignecto Bay, which causes the water off the point to become extremely violent, particularly at half tide when the reef is partially exposed and the water is moving quickly.

Cape Enrage Lighthouse

Cape Enrage Lighthouse
Cape Enrage Lighthouse in panorama
Map
LocationBarn Marsh Island
County Albert
Canada
Coordinates45°36′38″N 64°46′48″W / 45.610636°N 64.779956°W / 45.610636; -64.779956
Constructed1838 (first)
Constructionwooden tower
Height9 metres (30 ft)
Shapesquare frustum tower with balcony and lantern
Markingswhite tower, red lantern and rail
OperatorCape Enragé Adventure Centre[1]
Light
First lit1870 (current)
Focal height38 metres (125 ft)
CharacteristicFl G 6s.

The oldest lighthouse on the New Brunswick mainland, dating from 1838, is located at Cape Enrage.[citation needed] The lighthouse itself has been automated and unmanned since the 1980s, but it has recently become a popular tourist destination, as a result of a concentrated effort by local students to renovate the property and run it as a summer project. In 2004, Frommer's travel guide listed it as one of the 'Best Views in Canada'.

view of lighthouse and Nova Scotia

Acadian sailors made early mention of 'Cap Enragé,' and after the Acadian expulsion, British settlers anglicised the name to Cape Enrage. During the 1840s, Cape Enrage won a contested debate as the location of the first lighthouse in Chignecto Bay, and the lighthouse was erected in 1847.[citation needed] A variety of boathouses and temporary lighthouse keeper's houses were built over the next decades, but were frequently damaged or destroyed in the region's numerous storms and harsh winters. The lighthouse itself was heavily damaged in one storm in the 1840s, and was extensively repaired. The current lighthouse keeper's house dates from 1952.

The lighthouse was automated in the late 1980s by the Canadian Coast Guard, and the last lighthouse keeper, Noel Justison, left the property in 1988. The property quickly began to suffer from neglect and vandalism, and by 1993 all of the buildings except the lighthouse were scheduled for demolition by the government. However, in 1993 a small group of high school students from Moncton, under the supervision of Dennison Tate, their physics teacher, began a restoration project at the site, renovating all of the buildings and slowly turning the site into a tourist destination.[citation needed] From 1993 to 2009 Cape Enrage Interpretive Centre, a not-for-profit, student-run organisation, maintained the property and the students also offered climbing, rappelling, and kayaking in the summer months through the for-profit business, Cape Enrage Adventures. In 1995 the keepers house transferred from the Canadian Coast Guard to Province of New Brunswick along with 4+ acres of land. In the summer of 2004 the Canadian Coast Guard formally transferred ownership of the lighthouse to Cape Enrage Adventures and Cape Enrage Interpretive Centre.[citation needed]

See also


References

  1. ^ Rowlett, Russ. "Lighthouses of Canada: Southern New Brunswick". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved December 28, 2015.