Tuesday, 13 May 2008
 
  Home arrow Lighthouses & Ships arrow Glossary
template designed by MilitaryWives.com
 
The Spouse Medal

You have your medals,
Now, give one to Them.

Spouse Medal
Child Medal
Parent Medal
Let them know you care.

 
Home
Online Store
Video News & Views
General
Newsletter
Links
Contact Us
Search
Appreciation
Poetry - Music
Care Packages
Sister Sites
Support Forums
Military Medals
War on Terror
Legal / Patriotic
Weddings
The Museum
Rank Information
CG Rates
Protocol
Cookbook
Birth Orders
Locators
Comrades in Arms
Smarty Facts
Lest We Forget
CG Creed
CG Breast Insignia
CG Mission
CG Brief History
CG Commandants
Lighthouses
Famous Lights
Lighthouses & Ships
World Time
Site Counter
11,952,397 visitors since 2001!
Glossary PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 04 February 2006
Glossary of Lighthouse Terms

ARGAND LAMP A hollow wick oil lamp. (see wick)

AEROBEACON A modern-day type of light presently used in many lighthouses to produce a characteristic.

ASTRAGAL Metal bar (running vertically or diagonally) dividing the lantern room glass into sections.

BULLSEYE A convex lens used to concentrate (refract) light.

CHARACTERISTIC Individual flashing pattern of each light.

DAYMARK Unique color scheme and/or pattern that identifies a specific lighthouse during daylight hours.

FIXED LIGHT A steady non-flashing beam.

FOG SIGNAL A device (such as a whistle, bell, canon, horn, siren, etc.) which provides a specific loud noise as an aid to navigation in dense fog.

FRESNEL LENS A type of optic consisting of a convex lens and many prisms of glass which focus and intensify the light through reflection and refraction.

FUEL A material that is burned to produce light (fuels used for lighthouses included wood, lard, whale oil, tallow, kerosene.) Today, besides electricity and acetylene gas, solar power is also used.

GALLERY On a lighthouse tower, a platform or walkway or BALCONY located outside the watchroom (main gallery) and/or lantern room (lantern gallery.)

KEEPER The person who takes care of the light in the lighthouse. (The Head Keeper is responsible for the operation of a light station.)

LAMP The lighting apparatus inside a lens.

LENS A curved piece of glass for bringing together or spreading rays of light passing through it.

LIGHTHOUSE A lighted beacon of major importance in navigation.

LIGHT STATION A complex containing the lighthouse tower and all of the outbuildings, i.e. the keeper’s living quarters, fuelhouse, boathouse, fog-signaling building, etc.

LOG A book for maintaining records, similar to a diary.

NAVIGATION Travel over water.

ORDER Size of the Fresnel lens which determines the brightness and distance the light will travel.

PARABOLIC A bowl-like metal device, silver plated, REFLECTOR with a small oil lamp in the center.

PHAROLOGIST One who studies or is interested in lighthouses.

PRISM A transparent piece of glass that refracts or disperses light.

REFLECT Bend or throw back light.

REFRACT Bend or slant rays of light.

REVOLVING LIGHT One that produces a flash or characteristic.

SPIDER LAMP Shallow brass pan containing oil and several solid wicks.

STAG LIGHT A lighthouse with no family living in it, i.e. inhabited by men only.

TOWER Structure supporting the lantern room of the lighthouse.

WATCH ROOM A room immediately below the lantern room or SERVICE ROOM where fuel and other supplies were kept where the keeper prepared the lanterns for the night and often stood watch. The clockworks (for rotating lenses) were also located there.

WICK SOLID - A solid cord used in spider lamps that draws fuel up to the flame by capillary action.

HOLLOW - A concentric cotton wick used in Argand and other lamps.

"WICKIE" - A nickname given to lighthouse keepers derived from the task of trimming the wick of the lamps.
 
The U.S. Lighthouse Society originally designed this packet to furnish teachers with basic information about lighthouses, their purpose, history, operation and technology in a form presentable to young students. with the society's permission the U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office is posting this modified version with additional photographs and information.

The U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office would like to thank Mr. Wayne Wheeler and the other members of The U.S. Lighthouse Society who produced and distributed the original version of this curriculum.

For more information on lighthouses, teachers and students should contact The U.S. Lighthouse Society, 244 Kearny Street, San Francisco, Ca 94108 or consult the lighthouse web pages on The U.S. Coast Guard Historian's web site.
Login Form
Login to check for PMs, Chat
Username

Password

Remember me
Forgotten your password?
No account yet? Create one
ONE Registration good for entire network Msg Forums have different LOGIN
Visit AWW
Visit Happy to Be Mom
Store Samplings
Click to view
    Spouse Medal
    Scrapbooking
    Military Houses
    Bracelets
    Military X-Stitch
    T-Shirts Clothing
    Gag Gifts
    Military Bears
    Wife Decals
    Lapel Pins
    Ornaments

Reading Suggestions
From YOUR Store
US Army Bottle Opener
US Army Bottle Opener
Visit Logomania - Send an Ecard
Visit Happy To Be Mom

"None of the United States Armed Services (United States Marine Corps, United States Navy,
United States Army, United States Air Force, United States Coast Guard) nor any other component of the Department of Defense
has approved, endorsed, or authorized these products / services / activities."

Information presented, while deemed to be reliable, SHOULD be verified with current applicable
orders, directives, and/or instructions governing the specific branch of the United States Armed Forces.
None of the MilitaryWives.com, Inc. officers, staff, or Board of Directors guarrantee nor do they warranty
correctness of information presented as the orders, directives, and/or instructions can be changed without notice.

Copyright 2000 - 2005 Miro International Pty Ltd. All rights reserved.
Mambo is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License.