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From the distant cliffs there ran out, on either side, brown reefs, which made the inrushing water dance and foam, and the entrance to the Bay narrow and dangerous: on one side, there projected the portion of a wreck which had lain there as long as Laura had been in the world. They neared the tall, granite lighthouse at the point, with the flagstaff at its side where incoming steamers were signalled and as soon as they had rounded this corner they were in view of the Heads themselves. Then the boat stood to sea again and sailed past high, grass-grown cliffs, from which a few old cannons, pointing their noses at you, watched over the safety of the Bay-in the event, say, of the Japanese or the Russians entering the Heads past the pretty township, and the beflagged bathing-enclosures on the beach below. Henry Handel Richardson's book The Getting of Wisdom describes a ferry trip that bypasses the lighthouse in the late 1800s. Today the lighthouse is unmanned and automated, and is serviced by the Port of Melbourne Corporation. It is supposed that the first public telephone service in Victoria was installed here.

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The light was converted to gas in 1890, and then to electricity in 1924. This entrance was used via a rope ladder for the first ten years until a ground-level door was cut.įort Queenscliff was built around the lighthouse during the Australian Gold Rush after concerns that ships carrying gold might be susceptible to attack from privateers. Strangely, although Shortland's Bluff on which it is built is 20m or more above sea level, it was designed as a wave-washed lighthouse, with curved walls to deflect shock from waves, and with an entrance 5m above the base which is still visible. The lighthouse was certainly designed in Scotland. The third version, according to current tour guides, is that the entire lighthouse was cut in Scotland, transported, and assembled on-site by numbers. The fact that the stone was shipped may have led to the former theory's conception. In another version, the stone was quarried in Melbourne and shipped to Queenscliff. One version states that it came from Scotland as a ships ballast. There are several conflicting accounts of where the basalt for the building came from. The black lighthouse is one of four in Queenscliff that are used as a leading line to guide ships through the notoriously dangerous mouth of Port Phillip Bay. Depending on the tower's bearing it emits either a fixed light or an occulting signal with an interval of 15 seconds.

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The lightsource is located 40 metres above sea level ( focal plane). Together with the nearby white Queenscliff Low Light, it was built in 1862 to replace the former sandstone lighthouse of 1843 on the same site which was underpowered and deteriorating. It is one of three black lighthouses in the world, and the only one in the Southern Hemisphere. The Queenscliff High Light, also variously known as the Black Lighthouse, Fort Queenscliff Lighthouse or Shortland Bluff Light, stands in the grounds of Fort Queenscliff in Queenscliff, Victoria, Australia. Unpainted stone tower and green lantern and balconyĮither F W or Oc.













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