Washington Heights & Inwood Online

Washington Heights & Inwood Online

Home / History / Article Index

Little Red Lighthouse Web Feed

NYC Dept. of Parks & Recreation
Date: August 2001

Little Red LighthouseThe Little Red Lighthouse stopped being used as a functional lighthouse long ago, but over the years this 40-foot-high structure has become a beacon of another kind. Located underneath the George Washington Bridge along this treacherous section of the Hudson River once known as Jeffrey’s Hook, this is one of the few surviving lighthouses in New York City and serves as a quaint reminder of the area’s history.

Long ago, Native Americans known locally as the Wiechquaesgeck — part of the Lenape tribe — inhabited much of upper Manhattan and eastern New Jersey. The Wiechquaesgeck, and later the Dutch and English colonists, fished and hunted along the banks of the Hudson River. The Hudson was also an important route for travel, connecting upstate cities such as Albany to New York City and the Atlantic Ocean. As traffic increased along the river, so did the number of shipwrecks at Jeffrey’s Hook. In an attempt to reduce accidents, a red pole was placed at Jeffrey’s Hook jutting out over the river to warn travelers of danger. In 1889, two 10-candlepower lanterns were placed on the pole to aid navigation. Much of the land surrounding the lighthouse, including the riverbanks of Jeffrey’s Hook, was acquired by the City in 1896, and became known as Fort Washington Park.

In the early 20th century, barge captains carrying goods up and down the Hudson demanded a brighter beacon. The Little Red Lighthouse had been erected on Sandy Hook, New Jersey in 1880, where it used a 1,000 pound fog signal and flashing red light to guide ships through the night. It became obsolete and was dismantled in 1917. In 1921, the U.S. Coast Guard reconstructed this lighthouse on Jeffrey’s Hook in an attempt to improve navigational aids on the Hudson River. Run by a part-time keeper and furnished with a battery-powered lamp and a fog bell, the lighthouse, then known as Jeffrey’s Hook Lighthouse, was an important guide to river travelers for ten years. The George Washington Bridge opened in 1931, and the brighter lights of the bridge again made the lighthouse obsolete. In 1948, the Coast Guard decommissioned the lighthouse, and its lamp was extinguished.

The Little Red Lighthouse under the George Washington BridgeThe Coast Guard planned to auction off the lighthouse, but an outpouring of support for the beacon helped save it. The outcry from the public was prompted by the children’s book, The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge, written by Hildegarde Swift and Lynd Ward in 1942. In the popular book, the Little Red Lighthouse is happy and content until a great bridge is built over it. In the end, the lighthouse learns that it still has an important job to do and that there is still a place in the world for an old lighthouse. The classic tale captured the imaginations of children and adults, many of whom wrote letters and sent money to help save the icon from the auction block.

On July 23, 1951, the Coast Guard gave the property to Parks, and on May 29, 1979, the Little Red Lighthouse was added to the National Register of Historic Places. It did not receive much attention over the years, until City Comptroller Harrison J. Goldin worked with Parks Commissioner Henry J. Stern to find funding for its restoration. In 1986, Parks hosted a party in honor of the lighthouse’s 65th anniversary and to celebrate a $209,000 renovation to the lighthouse that included reconstruction of the concrete foundation and the installation of new steel doors. In the year 2000, the lighthouse received a fresh coat of red paint that is true to its original, historic color, along with new interior lighting and electric lines. Today, the Little Red Lighthouse remains a stalwart symbol of the area’s heritage, lighting the way into the city’s past.

(Reproduction of a Parks Department historical sign. Reprinted with permission of the City of New York/Parks & Recreation.)

Comments

Thank you for the pictures of the Little Red Lighthous. Since we live very far away and can't come see it, we were able to see it on this website. We love the book about the Lighthouse and were excited to actually see it standing next to the "great gray bridge". Sincerely, Jacob and Emily
I've known about the Little Red Lighthouse for as long as I can remember. When I was three (in 1983), the story was read to me by a friend on an audio cassette. I didn't see the book, itself, until I was six, or seven. When I was eight, I got my parents to take me (and the family) to see the lighthouse. Once we got there, I felt like I was in heaven. [From that year, I became the world's first self-proclaimed bridge freak; when you're next to the Lighthouse, it's hard to miss the Great Gray Bridge.] In Dec. of '99, I returned there with my best friend, and I felt just as drawn to the lighthouse as I did as a kid. I'm glad to know that "beside the towering gray bridge, the lighthouse still bravely stands. And, though it knows now that it is little, it is still very, very proud." - Hildegarde H. Swift
I knew the Little Red Lighthouse from having listened to my kindergarten teacher read the book, in 1954, in Washington, DC. I thought it was myth...nice story, but still...until I grew up and moved to 161st between Ft Washington and Riverside in 1969. And there it was. We -- friends and I -- took many walks down to the Lighthouse, especially when people came in from out of town: "see, it's real." I'm glad to see the Lighthouse is looking better, fresher, and cleaner than the early '70's. Thank you, all.
I remember going to the Lighthouse with my big sister and her friends in the 60's, We would have a picnic there. I live on wadsworth ave. I felt like I was in the country when I was there.
Being a native Manhattanite I well remember hearing the story in kindergarden in the 1950's. I had heard that this lighthouse actually existed. But it was only a few years ago that I made a point to find it. I did -- and got to go inside. To me this is NYC's version of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. I am now trying to find an audio version of the story.
Like to know if anyone knows for whom Jeffreys Hook--aka Jeffery's Hook, Jeffries Point, &c--is named. Earliest reference to it I can find is around Revolutionary times. Any information welcome.

Post a comment