![]() Angel's Gate Lighthouse
American Merchant Marine Veterans Memorial
Angel's Gate
Assistance League
Drum Barracks
Fort MacArthur Military Museum
Old St. Peter's Episcopal Church
Point Vicente Interpretive Center
U.S.S. Los Angeles Naval Memorial
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Situated on eight acres, this historic lighthouse was erected
in 1926, in response to a petition from ship's masters who deplored this disastrous
stretch of costal waters. The two million candlepower white light is developed from
a fifteen-watt bulb focused through a handcrafted five-foot lens. Made in Paris in 1886,
the lens saw forty years of service in Alaska before being brought to the Peninsula.
The 67 foot high tower is perched on a cliff, resulting in a light source 197 feet above
sea level, which can be seen twenty miles at sea.
Point Vicente was manned by civilian lighthouse keepers until 1939, when the U.S. Coast Guard became responsible
for its maintenance and operation. The light and radio station have since been
automated. Addition of a radio station and helicopter service has made the lighthouse
the Coast Guard's principal communications center in Southern California, as well
as the base for numerous rescue operations. It is one of the biggest and brightest
lights along the coast of California. Point Vicente Lighthouse is open to the public the second Saturday of every month, from 10 am to 4 pm. Free admission.
For the romantically-inclined, there are several legends
attached to the lighthouse. Most famous is that of the ghost lady who, having hurled
herself into the same sea that took her sailor sweetheart, walks the tower every night
awaiting his return. Explanations that the phantom is caused by reflections from the
huge lens have done little to dissuade lovers from joining the lady in her somber watch.
Other Point Vicente Points of Interest
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