Lighthouses of Canada: Sable Island

One of Canada's most remote outposts, Sable Island is a long, slender, sandy island located in the open Atlantic about 150 km (95 mi) southeast of mainland Nova Scotia and about 240 km (150 mi) east of Halifax. The island is crescent shaped and nearly 42 km (26 mi) long, but nowhere more than 2 km (1.25 mi) wide. Low and sandy, the island is migrating rapidly eastward, about 60 m (200 ft) per year. Since the lighthouses were automated in 1960 there have been no long-term residents on the island, but Environment Canada maintains a staff at all times at its Sable Island Station. The island is attached administratively to Halifax County, Nova Scotia.

Access to the island is restricted; visitors require written permission. The Sable Island Station, administered by the Meteorological Service of Canada, provides the only accommodations.

Rip Irwin's book, Lighthouses and Lights of Nova Scotia (Halifax: Nimbus Publishing, 2003) is an essential reference for understanding these lighthouses.

Lighthouses in Canada are maintained by the Canadian Coast Guard, a unit of Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

ARLHS numbers are from the ARLHS World List of Lights. Admiralty numbers are from volume J of the Admiralty List of Lights & Fog Signals. U.S. NGA List numbers are from Publication 110.

General Sources
Sable Island Lighthouses
A large portfolio of photos posted by Paul Rogers.
Nova Scotia Lighthouse Preservation Society
This outstanding web site has a wealth of photos, information, and news.

Sable Island West Light
Sable Island West End Light
Canadian Coast Guard photo

Lighthouses
Sable Island West End (8)
1980s (station established 1872). Inactive since 2004, except for flashing red aircraft warning lights. 26 m (85 ft) skeletal tower; the lower 2/3 is pyramidal and the upper 1/3 is cylindrical and carries large rectangular red and white daymarks. No lantern. Rogers has many photos, but the light is not visible in Google's fuzzy satellite view. The west end of the island retreats rapidly eastward, causing the light station to be relocated in 1883, 1888, 1916, 1940, 1951, 1971, and 1980; the station is now about 10 km (6 mi) east of its original location. The 1916 tower was a pyramidal skeletal with central cylinder, a design common in the U.S. but rather rare in Canada. The present tower is almost identical to the 1940-1971 tower. The light was deactivated in July 2004; given the rapid erosion in the area, it must be considered endangered. Located near the western tip of the island. Accessible only by boat or airplane. Site open, tower closed. Site manager: Canadian Coast Guard. ARLHS SAB-002; ex-Notmar 665; ex-Admiralty H3586; ex-NGA 9568.
Sable Island (East End) (3)
1975 (station established 1873). Active; focal plane 36 m (118 ft); white flash every 10 s. 18 m (59 ft) square cylindrical steel-wood tower with aluminum siding. Tower painted white with a red vertical stripe on each face; lantern painted red. The keeper's house, abandoned in 1960, has collapsed and largely disappeared under shifting sand dunes. Rogers has several photos (at the bottom of the page), but the station is not seen in Google's fuzzy satellite view. From 1935 to 1975 this station also had a pyramidal skeletal tower with central cylinder. Still considered a major navigational aid, the light has a range of 33 km (21 mi). Due to the rapid migration of the island, the light station is now more than a third of the way westward from the east end. Accessible only by boat or airplane. Site open, tower closed. Site manager: Canadian Coast Guard. ARLHS SAB-001; Notmar 666; Admiralty H3584; NGA 9572.

Information available on lost lighthouses:

Notable faux lighthouses:

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Posted June 2003 as part of the Nova Scotia page. Checked and revised August 10, 2011. Lighthouses: 2. Site copyright 2011 Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.