Monday, June 3, 2013

Cleveland Point Lighthouse, Cleveland, Queensland Fine Art Limited Edition Metal Print From Australia

By Colin Smith


The Queensland Heritage Registered old Lighthouse in Cleveland Point is extremely important in which it had been associated with the first European village in Cleveland, it turned out one of the 1st lighthouses constructed in the colony of Queensland and would be a prototype for subsequent timber built lighthouses.

The Cleveland Lighthouse is really a hexagonal wood lighthouse roughly 12m (38ft) tall. It is made from painted weatherboards attached to a wood frame. It provides a gallery around the top made of coated iron alloy with glass windows. The top (turret) is capped using a coated iron alloy dome. The light utilised kerosene till 1934 in the event it ended up being changed into electric power.

The lighthouse was at first on the north east tip of Cleveland Point, around three metres from the cement light today at the Point. It had been relocated to its existing site in March 1976 when the brand new cement light ended up being built.

The Lighthouse was constructed approximately 1864. It lit the Point before it has been exchanged in 1975 by the concrete light.

In the 1860s, small farming settlements over the southern coast of Moreton Bay, such as at Cleveland, Victoria Point, Redland Bay and across the Logan and Albert Rivers depended on smaller ships (coastal steamers) for transport.

Travel by ship might be hazardous because the mudflats and also sandbanks on Moreton Bay shift and there are rocks. The bay is additionally really tidal, which meant it gets very shallow, particularly near shore.

Cleveland Point was a harmful place. Ahead of the lighthouse ended up being built, people located in Cleveland put up very small lights to guarantee the ships didn't run aground. Most of these small lights kept receiving destroyed, and finally the Queensland Government decided to develop a long term light.

The Cleveland Lighthouse is significant for 2 good reasons.

The lighthouse is the purely remaining timber-structured, timber-clad 19th century lighthouse in Moreton Bay. It was an experimental design and one of just three hexagonal lighthouses assembled in Moreton Bay.

The Cleveland Lighthouse is the solely clearly visible physical memory of Cleveland Point's role during the early shipping in Moreton Bay. A number of other constructions ended up built on Cleveland Point for example jetties and buildings even so the lighthouse is the only structure that is even now positioned.




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