Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
USS Highland Light (IX-48), an unclassified miscellaneous vessel, was the only ship of the United States Navy to have that name, which was retained from her previous owner. She was designed by Frank Payne and built by George Lawley & Son in 1931 for Dudley Wolfe , who raced her to the first under-three-day time in the Bermuda Race in 1932, a ...
LV-15 was replaced by Stratford Shoal Light in 1877, then was used as a barracks for workers building the Great Beds Light in 1880. She was sold at the end of that year at auction for $1,010. It is unknown what became of this ship after the auction. [B] [18] Lightship LV-16: 1854: 1935: Sandy Hook (1854 – 1891) Relief (1891 – 1935) Un ...
The IX (unclassified–miscellaneous) hull classification symbol is used for commissioned ships of the United States Navy that do not fit into one of the standard categories.
USS Hamul; HMS Heartsease (K15) HMS Heather (K69) HMS Hecla (1940) Japanese gunboat Heijo Maru; HMCS Hepatica; HMS Heythrop (L85) HMS Hibiscus (K24) USS Highland Light; Hoga (YT-146) HÅkoku Maru; HMS Holderness (L48) HMS Hollyhock (K64) HMS Honeysuckle (K27) HNoMS Honningsvåg; HMT Horatio (T153) USS Hornet (CV-8) HMS Howe (32) HMS Hyacinth (K84)
Five Fathom Bank light station; United States lightship Frying Pan (LV-115) H. USS Heliotrope; ... USS Mayflower (1897) USLHT Mayflower (1897) USS Mistletoe (1872) N.
Eagle Harbor Light: Michigan: Glen Arbor: Sleeping Bear Point Lifesaving Station: Michigan: Glen Haven: Cannery Boathouse Museum: Michigan: Grand Marais: Grand Marais Maritime Museum or Pictured Rocks Nautical and Maritime Museum: Michigan: Gulliver: Seul Choix Light: Michigan: Harrisville: Sturgeon Point Light: Michigan: Marquette
With Highland Light set to celebrate the completion of renovations, we thought we'd take a look at the history of one of Cape Cod's favorite beacons. Highland Light reopens to public after ...
As WW2 ended, she was returned to the CHESAPEAKE light station. In the 1960s with the introduction of automated buoys as well as permanent light stations, the lightship fleet was slowly mothballed. Chesapeake left her station at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay in September 1965 when she was replaced by a large, manned light tower similar to an ...