Wondering why? : Custom House Maritimes
About NL HarborcamCalendarRentalLighthousesLibraryNewsAmistadEducation

Our monthly news of of activities at the Custom House is now found at the bottom of this page.
We have changed our method of keeping you up-to-date with the current goings-on at the Custom House by posting events, as they happen, on our three Facebook pages.
Please take a look: Custom House Maritime Museum,  New London Harbor Light,  Race Rock Light StationSentinels on the Sound - 2014 Lighthouse events.

See a photo diary of what happened at the Custom House prior to our Facebook pages in July 2012, June 2012,  May 2012,    April 2012, March 2012,     February 2012,    January 2012,    December 2011,  November 2011, at the One Big Table Community Dinner with Molly O'Neill,   in October 2011,   September 2011,    August 2011,    July 2011,    June 2011,     May 2011,   April 2011,  March 2011,     January-February 2011,     November-December  2010,   
with our new 3-year program with the NL Public Schools Lighthouse Kids,   
in  September-October 2010,    August 2010,  at summer festivities in June-July 2010,    at special Amistad events in April-May 2010,   
on our trip to the UN with the Amistad exhibition,   
in January-March 2010,  in 2009,  & in 2008

Learn how the Whale Tail fountain was made! 

See our first Sentinels on the Sound: Celebration of New London's Lighthouses

Attend One Big Table, our Community Heritage Dinner with NYT writer Molly O'Neill.

Read our Winter 2011 and Fall 2010 newsletters.

The New London Maritime Society/Custom House Maritime Museum is made possible by generous grants from The Chester Kitchings Family Foundation, the Connecticut Humanities Council, Dominion Foundation, the Bodenwein Public Benevolent Foundation, the Frank Loomis Palmer Fund, the Community Foundation of Eastern CT, &  and by the work of dedicated volunteers, members & friends. 


HAPPY 250th NEW LONDON HARBOR LIGHT!

Wondering why?

by Susan on 11/02/14

To some, taking responsibility for a third lighthouse this autumn (New London Ledge Light Station) may appear foolhardy. Well, somebody needed to do it! The photos on this page provide a cautionary tale of what can happen when a lighthouse is left to deteriorate; the simple metal tower, below right, is the modern replacement for the lovely old 1869 granite Plum Island Light. Efficent it may be, but what a loss to our sense of place!  
Today, the federal government needs local non-profit partners, like us, to help preserve our significant, evocative historic structures. NLMS was, in fact, the only non-profit applicant for Ledge Lighthouse. Without our intervention, that beloved local landmark either would have been 1.) auctioned off to a private individual or
2.) left to decay and eventually perhaps be replaced by said metal tower. As the new owners of Ledge Lighthouse, with ongoing stewardship of Ledge Light Foundation, we now work to preserve it for you and  for future generations!

There are historic precedents that also commended our decision to jump in.You may recollect that, from its inception, New London Maritime Society was a preservation force. Thirty-one years ago, citizens rallied to save the City’s 1833 US Custom House. Those founders managed to both save the building for all and also create within it a community museum that tells the stories of our waterfront. Our lighthouse connection stems from that same impulse.

New London was one of the very first US Customs ports established by George Washington, who then  created the US Revenue Service as Customs’s maritime arm and took control of all existing lighthouses (Harbor Light was number 4 on that early list). As the federal presence in New London, US Customs officials oversaw operation of all area lights - appointing the lighthouse keepers, and ordering the oil, wicks and other supplies on a quarterly basis. New London customs officials managed the rebuilding of Harbor Light in 1799, and, in the mid-1800s, Collector Ingoldsby Work Crawford directed construction of Old Saybrook light, placed spindles out at the Race, and allowed a deceased-keeper’s wife to take over her late husband’s lighthouse duties in Noank--all out of our customs house!

Customs oversaw the lighthouses until 1911.  In 1939, five federal agencies, including the Revenue Cutter & Lighthouse Services (est. 1911), were rolled into the new United States Coast Guard, (now all part of Homeland Security). Today, the Coast Guard still services the lights and fog horns, but they cannot deal with large maintenance issues such as deteriorating lighthouse structures. That is where we come back  in. Our mission is both education, and the preservation of our maritime heritage. Our heritage includes the protection of area lighthouses for future generations. That is who we are and that is why we do what we do.
The good news is, by working together,  we all benefit!                                                                     

Comments (0)


Leave a comment