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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Derek Davis/Staff Photographer |
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The Portland Head Light is reflected in a window of an outbuilding at Fort Williams Park in Cape Elizabeth on June 24.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Derek Davis/Staff Photographer |
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The oldest lighthouse in Maine, Portland Head Light, is seen through the fog at Fort Williams Park. It was completed in 1791.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Staff Photographer |
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Doubling Point Light in Arrowsic as seen through the dune grass on June 22. Doubling Point Light is one of Maine's river lights, built in 1898 on the Kennebec River.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer |
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Ram Island Ledge Light Station peeks behind Cushing Island as viewed from the backshore of Peaks Island. The Ram Island Ledge is a dangerous ledge at the northern entrance into Portland's outer harbor. A high-profile near-disaster in 1900 helped lead to construction of the lighthouse, which was first lit in 1905.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer |
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A seagull soars through the fog above Pemaquid Point Lighthouse in New Harbor, a village in Bristol. The present tower was built in 1835, on the west side of the entrance to Muscongus Bay.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer |
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A fog-shrouded Pemaquid Point Lighthouse stands amid outbuildings. A rendition of this lighthouse is featured on the Maine quarter that was released in June 2003.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Michele McDonald/Staff Photographer |
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The Marshall Point Lighthouse is at the end of the St. George peninsula in Port Clyde. The first lighthouse at Marshall Point was built in 1832. A new tower was built at its present site in 1858. It was modernized with electricity in 1935, and by 1971, automation replaced the need for a light keeper. In the movie "Forrest Gump," Tom Hanks, as the character Forrest, concluded his cross country run here.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Michele McDonald/Staff Photographer |
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Louis Rubino helps his daughter onto the beach near the Marshall Point light.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Michele McDonald/Staff Photographer |
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The steep climb up to the base of Owls Head Light is 53 steps, and Samantha McDonald, 17, takes them two at a time. McDonald, from Connecticut, was visiting Maine for the first time.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Michele McDonald/Staff Photographer |
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Owls Head Light is in Owls Head State Park. Visitors can swim and climb at the rocky beach.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Michele McDonald/Staff Photographer |
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The Rockland Breakwater Lighthouse was built in 1902 on the south end of the breakwater in Rockland Harbor.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Michele McDonald/Staff Photographer |
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The Rockland Breakwater itself is just under a mile long and took 18 years to build. It was begun in 1881 and built by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from locally quarried granite.
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Lighthouses photo gallery -
Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer |
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Bug Light looms in the background as pedestrians walk the perimeter of Bug Light Park in South Portland. Photographer Ben McCanna, in the first of a series of three photos, gets creative photographing the lighthouse, which was built in 1875 and was modeled on an ancient Greek monument.
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Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer |
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The oil tanker Safa, out of Saudi Arabia, motors slowly past Bug Light and out of Portland Harbor.
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Ben McCanna/Staff Photographer |
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A flag waves in the breeze near Bug Light. It is called Bug Light because of its small size but is formally named the Portland Breakwater Lighthouse.
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Brianna Soukup/Staff Photographer |
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Teenagers fish near Spring Point Ledge Light on June 24. It is at the end of a 900 foot breakwater on the Southern Maine Community College campus in South Portland. The lamp was lit for the first time by its first keeper William A. Lane, on May 24, 1897.