Big Sable Point Lighthouse, MI
The Michigan Historic Site sign at Big Sable Point Lighthouse reads: Called Grande Pointe au Sable by French explorers
and traders, Big Sable Point was an important landmark for mariners traveling a treacherous stretch of Lake Michigan shoreline
between Big Sable Point and present-day Ludington. In 1855, twelve ships wrecked in that area. Commerce linked to the burgeoning
lumber industry required that Big Sable Point be suitably lighted. State senator Charles Mears pressed the legislature to
ask the federal government for a light station at Big Sable. In 1866 the U.S. Congress appropriated $35,000 for a lighthouse,
which was built the following year. As the lumbering era waned, steamers carrying coal, foodstuffs, and tourists continued
to rely on the lighthouse for navigation. The Big Sable Point Lighthouse is one of the few Michigan lights with a tower
reaching 100 feet. Completed in 1867, Big Sable's tower measures 112 feet high. In 1902 the deteriorating brick tower
was encased in steel. The keeper's dwelling, which once housed a single family, has been enlarged over the years, resulting
in the present three-family residence. Indoor plumbing and heating and a diesel electric generator were added in 1949. In
1953, power lines were extended to the Point. In 1968 the tradition of light-keeping begun in 1867 by Alonzo A. Hyde and his
wife, Laura, ended when the station was fully automated. Big Sable Point Light Station is listed in the National Register
of Historic Places.
Item #4117
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