Ponce De Leon Inlet Light Station Newsletters

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Issue 1, Jan 2006
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Issue 2, April 2006
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Issue 3, July 2006


Past Newsletter Stories

Lens Restoration Project

The Lighthouse Association is about to begin the restoration and exhibition of the Light Station's original lens. Ponce Inlet Light Station's original lens was once thought lost. After many years of searching by the curatorial staff of the Lighthouse Association, this priceless piece of Florida history was found in storage at the Mystic Seaport Museum in Mystic, Connecticut. It is now on long-term loan to the Lighthouse Association from the U.S. Coast Guard but, due to its poor condition, major restoration will be needed before it can be exhibited.
from the July, 2002 Newsletter

Aids To Navigation

Ever wonder who makes sure the beacon at the top of the Lighthouse is working? From Matanzas Inlet to just south of Melbourne on the intercoastal waterway, and from Lake George to Lake Monroe on the St. Johns River, the Ponce Inlet Aids to Navigation unit maintains over 600 aids to navigation. One of these is the Ponce de Leon Inlet Lighthouse.
from the September, 2002 Newsletter

The Mosquito Inlet Lighthouse

Did you know that the magnificent 175 foot red brick tower lighthouse now standing on the north side of Ponce de Leon Inlet (formerly known as Mosquito Inlet) was not the first such structure to aid mariners at this inlet? Another lighthouse, built while the State was under British rule, was completed in 1835 on the shifting sands of the south side of the inlet by Winslow Lewis for a cost of $7,494.
from the January, 2003 Newsletter

Ponce de Leon Inlet Lighthouse Preservation Association
4931 South Peninsula Drive - Ponce Inlet, Florida 32127
(386) 761-1821 Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily
Last admission one hour before closing