When it opened in 1871 Souter was the most advanced lighthouse in the world. It is sited on Lizard Point but named after Souter Point about one mile south, to avoid confusion with the Lizard Lighthouse in Cornwall.
This lighthouse was designed by Sir James N. Douglas of Trinity House, with cottages for the engineer and four keepers, engine house, boiler house and workshops constructed together around a courtyard, the lantern housed at the top of a 75 foot high tapered stone tower, at a total of 150 feet above sea level.
This lighthouse was the first specifically constructed to be powered by electric illumination. The original carbon arc lamps were replaced by oil in 1915 and then modernised with electric lamps in 1952. The original power hall forms part of a group with the lighthouse, workshops and houses.
Built by Robert Allison of Whitburn. Decommissioned in 1988 and is today owned by the National Trust. The lighthouse is said to be haunted by the spirit of a former keeper and a man called Bob, a colliery worker who died in the lighthouse in the 1930s.
Grade 2 Listed. Source: Sitelines.
19th June 2024
More Information:
- Wikipedia - Souter Lighthouse
- National Trust - Souter Lighthouse and The Leas
- Sitelines - Souter Point Lighthouse, engine house with foghorn
See my other photos around South Tyneside:
- Marsden Lime Kilns
- Jarrow - The Monastery and church of Saint Paul
- South Shields Seafront
- South Shields Town Centre
- South Shields - River Tyne
- South Shields - Herd Groyne Lighthouse
- Shields Ferry
- South Shields - Mill Dam Conservation Area
- South Shields - Ocean Beach Pleasure Park
- South Shields - Old Town Hall
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