Travel Maps
Download or Request
Carefree Travel Guide by Mail
Request Member Info
You have 0 in your list What is the Travel Planner List?
Chambers Island

Station Established: 1868
Light Constructed: 1868
Active Beacon: N
Under Federal Ownership: N - Door County Maritime Museum
Lighthouse Accessible to Public: Y
Tower Accessible for Climbing: Y
Museum on Site: N
Rumored to be Haunted: Y
Chambers Island lies 7.5 miles northwest of Fish Creek and 11.5 miles northeast of Marinette. The island was named after Col. Talbot Chambers who sailed past it in 1816 on his way to establish a military post at the head of Green Bay. Settlement on the island began in the 1840's and grew rapidly during the 1850's. In 1865 a special committee of the Light House Board was sent to the area to make recommendations for new navigational aids. The Committee recommended that a lighthouse be built on Chambers Island to guide mariners through the west, or main channel, from Lake Michigan to the port of Green Bay. The bulk of traffic, at that time, passed west of Chambers Island rather than through the more dangerous Strawberry Channel between the Island and the mainland.
Construction
of the Lighthouse:
In July 1866, Congress appropriated funds for construction,
and in May 1867, after some months of haggling, the
US Government purchased a forty-acre peninsula on
the northwest side of the Island from Lewis and Anna
Williams at a cost of $250.
In June 1866 the steamer Rocket landed a Light House Board construction crew and construction materials at the site. After clearing the trees from several acres, the crew began digging a hole for the masons to build a rock-walled 26' x 30' basement. On the walls they erected a one and one-half story dwelling built from cream colored Milwaukee brick and an attached, 12'x 20' one-story kitchen wing several feet lower than the dwelling's main floor. A large square brick chimney near the rear of the dwellings was oriented diagonally to the rear wall. On the first floor there were five rooms, a pantry , and one closet. The second floor had two rooms and a closet.
The
Tower and Lantern:
In the northeasterly corner of the dwelling, the masons
constructed a three-story brick tower. The first two
stories were 10' x 10' square with buttressed corners,
while the third story to the lantern deck wasoctagonal
in shape. On top of the tower the crew erected a cast
iron deck and a ten-sided cast iron lantern. The tower
had a brick circular lining and a cast iron circular
stairway from the basement to the lantern deck. The
keepers used the tower stairs to go between floors
as well as to the lantern. In the lantern the men
installed a fourth order Fresnel Lens. The height
of the tower from the ground to the center of the
ventilating ball on top of the lantern measured nearly
45 feet. The focal plane of the lens was 68 feet above
the water of Green Bay.
Except for the octagonal construction of the top tower, the Chambers Island Light dwelling is almost a carbon copy of the Eagle Bluff Light dwelling constructed at the same time. The towers were deliberately built with different shapes so mariners could distinguish the two lighthouses during the day. On October 1, 1868, the Chambers Island Light shined out across the waters for the first time, with a fixed white light and a white flash every thirty seconds.
The
Keepers:
Chambers Island's first keeper was Lewis S. Williams,
the former owner of the site. Williams remained the
keeper until he resigned in 1889 at the age of 69
and moved to Sturgeon Bay. His twenty-one years was
the longest tenure of any keeper at the station. Peter
Knudsen, who had served at Pilot Island Light and
Escanaba earlier, served for two years after Williams
resigned. Charles E. Young came from Pilot Island
Light to serve for four years before being transferred
to the Plum Island Range Lights. Other keepers included
Soren Christenson, Joseph Napeizinski, Jens Rollefson,
Claude Chapman, and Alfred Cornell.
Alfred Cornell was the last civilian keeper at the Chambers Island Light. The Coast Guard absorbed the Lighthouse Bureau in 1939, and after Cornell left in 1942, all the remaining keepers were Coast Guardsmen Automation
In 1961, the Coast Guard decided to automate the station to save money. At that time they erected a 97' steel tower south of the dwelling and put a battery-powered beacon on top. The batteries have subsequently been replaced by solar panels. The lantern was removed from the tower, and the lens is now far from the waters of Green Bay in a folk museum in Nebraska. In 1976, the Coast Guard transferred the station to the Town of Gibraltar for park purposes. Since that time, Joel and Mary Ann Blahnik of Fish Creek have served as caretakers of the historic structure. Chamber's Island Light is open on a very limited basis when the Blahnik's lead summer boat tours through the Door County Maritime Museum.
Door County Maritime Museum: 920-743-5958
Door County Chamber of Commerce: 920-743-4456
West Michigan Tourist Association: 800-442-2084
Great Lakes Lighthouse Keepers Association: 313-436-9150
Reprinted with permission from the Door County Maritime Museum.
WMTA · 741 Kenmoor Ave. Suite E · Grand Rapids, MI 49546 · 800-442-2084








