Interesting Facts - Lady Liberty has pushed her torch high into the New York City skyline since 1886, but at one time, the grand statue did more than just inspire Americans — it was also a lighthouse. The same year French sculptor Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi oversaw completion of his copper creation (formally named “Liberty Enlightening the World”), President Grover Cleveland approved a plan for the statue to be lit as a lighthouse. Engineers believed the Statue of Liberty’s torch, at 305 feet above sea level, could act as a navigational tool for ships approaching the New York Harbor, and set to work installing nine electric lamps within the torch, plus more along Lady Liberty’s feet and in the statue’s interior.
At 7:35 p.m. on November 1, 1886, engineers flipped on the power switch,
washing the Statue of Liberty in light for the first time. However, the
lights stayed on for just one week due to a lack of funding, and it
took two weeks of darkness before the U.S. Lighthouse Board could secure
an emergency budget.
Even once the lights were turned back on, some questioned the statue’s
efficacy as a lighthouse: Newspapers reported that while the lights were
initially planned to reach 100 miles or more out at sea, in reality the
torch was visible just 24 miles
from the harbor. By the early 20th century, the lighthouse was
considered “useless” for boat navigation, and on March 1, 1902, the U.S.
War Department, with approval from President Theodore Roosevelt,
extinguished the light permanently.
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