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Project Title: Rehabilitate Monomoy Lighthouse (FFS #R5BB)
State: Massachusetts
Project Description: Nearly $1.4 million in Recovery Act funding were used to repair a lighthouse and light keeper’s house at Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge on Cape Cod in Massachusetts. The project restored the historic integrity and structural soundness of the lighthouse, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In March 2010, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service awarded $1.24 million to Campbell Construction Group, an eastern Massachusetts company based in Peabody, to complete the construction phase of the project.
In addition to the lighthouse, Campbell Construction restored the structural integrity of the adjacent light keeper’s house, which will be used to provide a base of operations for Refuge staff and volunteers when they are conducting wildlife surveys and management activities on the refuge.
The lighthouse is located on South Monomoy Island, the largest in a chain of sandy barrier islands that stretch eight miles from the Cape’s elbow and make up most of Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge. Most of the refuge is also a nationally designated wilderness area.
Although the lighthouse station is itself not in the wilderness area, the Service tries to manage it with wilderness principles in mind. Materials were brought two and carried away from the island using barges and trucks were equipped with continuous tracks, similar to those used on Bobcat-style tractors, to minimize impact on wildlife.
The project was completed on March 2011.
The federal government last made significant repairs to the lighthouse and its outbuildings in 1989. Since that time weather damage and age have deteriorated the structures.
Oak Point Associates, based in New England, prepared the architectural and engineering design for the project. The firm’s analysis helped determine the specific parameters of the project. The plans were reviewed and approved by the Massachusetts State Historic Preservation Officer.
Video: Lighthouse Rehabilitation at Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge
Play the video below to learn more about this project from the refuge manager and construction contractor!
The History of Monomoy Light
The original wooden lighthouse tower on Monomoy was built in 1823. It was upgraded a quarter century later to the cast-iron, brick-lined structure that stands today. In 1914, the completion of the Cape Cod Canal and the proximity of the more powerful Chatham Light and Nantucket Light rendered the Monomoy lighthouse obsolete. It was decommissioned in 1923.
In 1944, Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge was established to protect migratory birds and other coastal resources. The lighthouse and outbuildings were purchased by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from the Massachusetts Audubon Society in 1977.
For many years, the Monomoy lighthouse was a well-known landmark that guided sailors through the volatile seas off the Massachusetts coast. Before the Cape Cod Canal was finished in 1914, Monomoy was on the most convenient route for ships to reach southern New England. The light prevented sailors from getting stuck in the island’s shallows and sandbanks. More importantly, it saved many seafarers navigating through the rough currents known as “Pollock Rip.”
Monomoy’s civilian population greatly declined in 1961 after the island’s port was blocked off by a storm. While no permanent inhabitation occurred, there were a number of old fishing camps on the island. Most of these buildings were razed in the 1970s after most of the refuge was designated a National Wilderness Area by Congress in 1970.
The blizzard of February 1978 eroded the island dramatically, resulting in what is now known as North and South Monomoy Islands. Recently, gradual weather conditions have reconnected South Monomoy Island back to the mainland.
Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge
The refuge includes about 7,600 acres of lands and waters along an eight mile expanse on North Monomoy, South Monomoy and Morris Islands. The 1970 designation of most of the refuge as a national wilderness area limits the presence of humans and the impact they can have on the island’s fragile environment.
The refuge protects a significant coastal ecosystem preferred by many species of birds, including the federally protected piping plover and roseate tern. South Monomoy Island is home to what at times is the largest nesting colony of common terns on the Atlantic seaboard, averaging over 10,000 nesting pairs of terns in any given season. Monomoy Refuge is also a very important staging location for red knots, semi-palmated sandpipers, and short-billed dowitchers during fall migration.
Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge is one of eight refuges within the Eastern Massachusetts National Wildlife Refuge Complex.
Photos:
The cast-iron, brick-lined lighthouse tower has been standing since 1849, and saved passing ships from the violent seas of “Pollock Rip” for three quarters of a century. |
Press Release: Massachusetts company awarded more than $1 million in stimulus funds to repair historic Monomoy Light on Cape Cod
Originally posted 10/28/2009
Updated 04/01/2010
Updated 06/09/2010
Page Completed 04/26/2011









