Georgia Lighthouses

This page is for the lighthouses of the U.S. state of Georgia, and not for the former Soviet republic that coincidently has the same name. Located just north of Florida, Georgia has a relatively short Atlantic coastline with six surviving historic lighthouses (3 active). Although there is no state preservation society, there has been excellent public support in Georgia for lighthouse preservation. Three tall coastal towers have all been beautifully restored, and efforts are beginning to save the endangered Cockspur Island lighthouse.

ARLHS numbers are from the ARLHS World List of Lights; Admiralty numbers are from volume J of the Admiralty List of Lights & Fog Signals; USCG numbers are from Vol. III of the U.S. Coast Guard Light List.

What's Hot:

General Sources
Georgia Lighthouses
Fine photos and descriptions by Kraig Anderson.
Beach Bum's Lighthouses: Georgia
This site by Stephen Wilmoth has accounts and photos of recent visits to most of the lighthouses.
Lighthouses of Georgia
Photos from Bob and Sandra Shanklin.
Lighthouses in Georgia, United States
Aerial photos posted by Marinas.com.
Historic Light Station Information and Photography - Georgia
Information and historic photos posted the U.S. Coast Guard.
Roger Bansemer's Lighthouses of the South
Bansemer is an artist and author active in lighthouse preservation; his site has excellent information on Georgia lighthouses.


Tybee Island Light, May 2007
Creative Commons photo
by Richard Roberson

Lighthouses
Cockspur Island (2)
1857 (station established 1849). Inactive since 1909 (a decorative light has been displayed since March 2007). 46 ft (14 m) round brick tower with lantern and gallery, painted white. The keeper's house (formerly located at Fort Pulaski) has been destroyed. Dan Castleberry's photo is at right, the Coast Guard has a historic photo, and Google has a satellite view. The tower is a reconstuction of the 1849 tower. Despite being transferred to the National Park Service in 1958, the lighthouse has long been endangered by high water and years of neglect. Bryan Penberthy has a photo of the lighthouse before it was restored. A Park Service restoration project completed in 2000 addressed the tower's immediate problems, but it remains vulnerable to wave damage during hurricanes or other severe storms. The NPS web site has photos of the restoration. Lighthouse Digest has an August 2000 article on the restoration and a September 2003 article on the history of the light station. In March 2007 the park service relit the lighthouse. Later in that year it was discovered that shipworms have invaded the foundation, threatening to topple the tower. The Park Service has requested $1.4 million for a complete restoration, but expects no funds before fiscal 2011. The Tybee Island Historical Society is coordinating other fundraising efforts. In November, the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation placed the lighthouse on its 2008 Places in Peril list. Located on a sandbar covered by water at high tide, on the north side of the entrance to the south channel of the lower Savannah River. Accessible only by boat, but tours from Tybee Island provide a good view of the lighthouse. Site and tower open. Owner: U.S. National Park Service. Site manager: Fort Pulaski National Monument. ARLHS USA-181.

Cockspur Island Light, July 2007
Creative Commons photo by Dan Castleberry
* [Savannah Harbor Range Rear (Beacon Range, Old Harbor Light)]
1858. Inactive (a decorative gas light is displayed). Ornate 25 ft (7.5 m) cast iron tower, rather like a giant streetlight, painted dark green. This structure is not a lighthouse, but it is a unique and historic light tower built by the U.S. Lighthouse Board. Originally it was the rear light of a range, the front light being on Fig Island downstream. In 1999 the Savannah Morning News and CSX Real Property contributed $125,000 to restore the rusting tower as part of a larger city effort to spruce up historical monuments. The restoration began in August 2000 and the light was relit January 11, 2001. Located in Savannah's Emmet Park, off East Bay Street. Site open. Owner/site manager: City of Savannah.
**** Tybee Island (4)
1867 (station established 1736). Active; focal plane 144 ft (44 m); continuous white light. 145 ft (44 m) tapered octagonal brick tower attached to workroom; upper and lower portions painted black, center white. The 1° Fresnel lens has been in use since 1867. Richard Roberson's photo is at the top of this page, Anderson has a great page with many photos, the Coast Guard has a historic photo, Marinas.com has fine aerial photos, and Google has a satellite view. This light station, the oldest in the South and second oldest in the nation, was established less than four years after the colony of Georgia was founded. The lower section of the lighthouse incorporates 60 ft (18 m) of the 100 ft (31 m) octagonal tower built in 1773. A major restoration in 1998 restored the tower to its original appearance and its black and white 1916 daymark. This is a remarkably well preserved light station with three keeper's houses and other historic buildings; the restoration of these buildings is continuing. The 1881 principal keeper's house has been restored recently and furnished as a museum. The second assistant keeper's house was built in 1861 as a Confederate Army barracks. The brick summer kitchen, built in 1812, is the oldest building preserved. Ownership of the station was transferred to the Tybee Island Historical Society in 2002 under the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act. Located on the south side of the Savannah River entrance, off US 80 in Tybee Island. Site and tower open daily (admission fee for buildings). Owner/site manager: Tybee Island Historical Society. ARLHS USA-864; Admiralty J2776.1; USCG 3-0345.
** Sapelo Island (1)
1820 (Winslow Lewis). Reactived (inactive 1905-1998, now privately maintained and unofficial). 65 ft (20 m) round old-style brick tower, painted with horizontal red and white bands; lantern and gallery painted black. The keeper's house has been demolished, but the brick oil house (1890) survives. A photo is at right, Butch Petty has a 2007 closeup, the Coast Guard has a historic photo, Marinas.com has aerial photos, and a Google satellite view is available. This is the nation's second-oldest brick lighthouse and the oldest survivor of Winslow Lewis's many lighthouse projects. The light was moved in 1905 to a pyramidal skeletal tower, which was deactivated in 1933 and relocated in 1934 to South Fox Island, Michigan. The original lighthouse was restored to its 1890 appearance in 1997-98, thanks to more than $200,000 in donations matched by federal and state grants. Located near the southern tip of Sapelo Island. The island is a nature reserve, accessible by passenger ferry Monday through Friday. Tours are available from the Sapelo Island Visitor Center in Meridian on Wednesdays and Saturdays all year and also on Fridays in the summer. Site and tower open. Owner: Georgia State Parks. Site manager: Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve. ARLHS USA-738.
Sapelo Island Range Front (2)
1877 (range established 1868). Inactive for many years. 25 ft (7.5 m) square pyramidal cast iron skeletal tower with enclosed square lantern room, painted white. The Shanklins have several photos, and Google has an indistinct satellite view. It's not known how long this lighthouse remained in use; it had been inactive for years when it was used as an observation tower during World War II. Restored in 1997, it is a rare survivor of a once-common class of range lights. Located 200 yards (180 m) southeast of the 1820 lighthouse. Site open, tower closed. Owner: Georgia State Parks. Site manager: Sapelo Island National Estuarine Research Reserve. ARLHS USA-1014.


Sapelo Island Light
Georgia State Parks photo

[Wolf Island (2)]
1868. Inactive since 1898. 55 ft (16.5 m) wooden beacon destroyed by the hurricane of 1898; its pilings can be seen in the surf off the north end of Wolf Island across the entrance to Doboy Sound from the Sapelo Island Light. No photo available. Accessible only by boat. Site open, but the adjacent shoreline is closed as a federally-protected wilderness area. Owner: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Site manager: Wolf Island National Wildlife Refuge. ARLHS USA-1015.
**** St. Simons Island (2)
1872 (Charles Cluskey). Active; focal plane 104 ft (32 m); continuous white light with a more intense flash every 60 s. 104 ft (32 m) round brick tower, painted white; original 3° Fresnel lens. Unusual 2-story brick Victorian keeper's house is now the Museum of Coastal Georgia. Brick oil house (1890) and a Victorian gazebo also preserved. Anderson has a fine page for the lighthouse, the Coast Guard has a historic photo, Marinas.com has aerial photos, and a Google satellite view is available. This lighthouse replaced a 75 ft (23 m) early federal octagonal lighthouse built in 1810 and destroyed during the Civil War. The tower was restored in 1989-91 and again in 1997-98. On May 26, 2004, ownership of the lighthouse was transferred to the Coastal Georgia Historical Society under the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act. Located at the end of 12th Street off Beachview Street, on the southern end of St. Simons Island. Site and tower open daily (museum admission fee). Owner/site manager: Coastal Georgia Historical Society. ARLHS USA-805; Admiralty J2842; USCG 3-0520.
Little Cumberland Island
1838 (Joseph Hastings). Inactive since 1915 (a decorative light is now displayed). 60 ft (18 m) round old-style brick tower, painted white. The keeper's house and all other light station buildings were demolished in 1968. The Coast Guard has a historic photo, Marinas.com has aerial photos, and Google has an indistinct satellite view. The tower was renovated in 1994-98. Sand dunes are migrating toward the light, and as a result the tower is now barely visible from the water. Bansemer has a good account of current conditions, and the Shanklins report on the 1990s renovation. Located on the north end of Little Cumberland Island. Site and tower closed; the island is privately owned and closed to the public. Owner/site manager: Little Cumberland Island Association. ARLHS USA-439.

St. Simons Island Light, December 2007
anonymous Creative Commons photo

Information available on lost lighthouses:

  • Savannah (1964-1996), off the mouth of the Savannah River. This light was destroyed by a collision with the freighter Neptune Jade in November 1996. ARLHS USA-1320.
  • Tybee Cut Range Front, (?-?), Savannah River. ARLHS USA-863.

Return to the Lighthouse Directory index | Ratings key

Checked and revised May 16, 2008. Lighthouses: 6. Site copyright 2008 Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.