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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Related Historical Markers

Presque Isle Lighthouse
 
The Loneliest Place on Earth Marker (<i>wide view</i>) image, Touch for more information
By Cosmos Mariner, August 26, 2013
The Loneliest Place on Earth Marker (wide view)
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
1Pennsylvania (Erie County), Erie — The Loneliest Place on EarthPresque Isle Lighthouse
Near Peninsula Drive 0.6 miles east of Fisher Drive, on the left when traveling east.
“The loneliest place on earth” is how Charles Waldo, the first keeper of the Presque Isle Lighthouse, described his 7 year tenure at the station. Waldo lived at the lighthouse with his family when, on July 12, 1873 he wrote: . . . — Map (db m129980) HM
2Pennsylvania (Erie County), Erie — The FlashlightPresque Isle Lighthouse
Near Peninsula Drive 0.6 miles east of Fisher Drive, on the left when traveling east.
In the early 19th Century the Great Lakes provided the single most important transportation system in the country. Throughout the lakes, mariners depended heavily on lighthouses to warn of hazards to navigation and to mark major land features. A . . . — Map (db m129989) HM
3Pennsylvania (Erie County), Erie — Five Courses ThickPresque Isle Lighthouse
Near Peninsula Drive 0.6 miles east of Fisher Drive, on the left when traveling east.
The final lighthouse design incorporated bricks five-courses thick to withstand the severe cold and winds off the lake. Overall, the structure cost $15,000. Construction began in September, 1872 and was completed by the following July. Initially, . . . — Map (db m129990) HM
4Pennsylvania (Erie County), Erie — The Peninsula's First RoadwayPresque Isle Lighthouse
Near Peninsula Drive 0.6 miles from Fisher Drive, on the left when traveling east.
For more than fifty years a narrow pathway served as the keeper’s primary link to civilization. Sand and dirt at first, and then paved in 1925, the current “sidewalk trail” led the keeper to his boathouse on Misery Bay for the second leg . . . — Map (db m129991) HM
 
 
  
 
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Nov. 6, 2020