Mull of Kintyre

United Kingdom

Established in 1788, this lighthouse was one of the first to be erected by the Commissioners. The building operation was supervised by Thomas Smith, who was appointed Engineer to the Northern Lighthouse Board in 1787. Smith was assisted by Robert Stevenson. The lighthouse was built in 22 months and the light was first exhibited on the night of 1 November 1788.

Extract from D Alan Stevenson’s book “The World’s Lighthouses Before 1820”
MULL OF CANTYRE 1788
“This lighthouse was erected on a precipitous cliff 240 feet above the sea and inaccessible from it, but the rocky and desolate interior of Cantyre peninsula made the lighthouse site scarcely more accessible by land. Materials and stores had to be landed by boat 6 miles away and taken on horseback over the mountain with 1 cwt as the limited load. A single journey from landing-place to lighthouse represented one day’s work. After two working seasons, the light was shown in November 1788”.

D Alan Stevenson is the great-grandson of Robert Stevenson, mentioned above, and his father’s cousin was Robert Louis Stevenson, the author.
In 1782 an almost uninterrupted succession of storms, such as had not happened within the memory of man, struck the British coasts. Many fishermen could not put to sea, and in one “dark tempestuous night” two herring buses were wrecked in rounding the Kintyre peninsula, and many lives were lost.
George Shield or Shiells, “a very careful mason”, was paid 4s 3d for his own work and for overseeing two other employed on building in Kintyre.

Mull of Kintyre was a difficult site to build on, inaccessible by sea and as yet without any road over the rough moorland. The building, set 240 feet above the sea near the rocks known as “The Merchants of Three Pedlars”, was nearly ready by November, but to avoid risk to the lantern and apparatus during the winter, operations were held over until the following April.

In 1817 the lighthouse keeper was granted an extra £5.00 a year in order to provide for the keeping of a horse which was necessary to carry the stores 7 miles from the storehouse to the lighthouse.

Mull of Kintyre was rebuilt between 1821 and 1830 in a more permanent form, keeping with the Commissioners’ National Establishment Policy. It was equipped with a fog signal in 1876, sounded by steam or compressed air. The “Signal”, an iron paddle steamer built in 1883, had the misfortune to run on the Mull of Kintyre in dense fog in 1895 while on the way from McArthur’s Head to Sanda. The boats were at once launched and all on board, including one of the Commissioners, Sheriff William Ivory, were saved with most of their effects. Attempts to salvage the ship proved fruitless and she sank the next day. An official enquiry held that the ships lead should have been used to verify her position before altering course to round the Mull, but the Captain was not held in default and the whole question of the “periodicity” of fog signals was opened up, and it was suggested that a four minute interval between blasts was too long.

Many changes have taken place since 1788. In 1906 the light was altered from a fixed to a flashing light, and the power increased from 8,000 to 281,000 candlepower.
In 1976 the light was changed to electric and the candlepower increased to 1,575,000, by using a 3½ kilowatt electric filament lamp light source with catadioptric lens driven by duplicate electric motors.

The former keeper's cottages are now run as holiday cottages.

Manufacture Date 1906
Lighthouse Construction 1906
Country United Kingdom
Commissioning Body Northern Lighthouse Board
Lens Order 1st order
Lens Type Revolving
Status publish
Light Character FL W(2) 20s
Lighthouse Markings White tower 12m high atop 90m cliff
Lighthouse Parts None known
Management Body Ports Authority Norther Lighthouse Board
Preserver None Known
Coastal Erosion Vulnerability
Condition Observations Active and maintained - appears well looked after in phots.
Open Status (Site) Open
Open Status (Tower) Closed
Coordinates 55.3104262847,-5.8032863478
Other This shore lighthouse guards the E side of the N Channel, the northern entrance to the Irish (Celtic) Sea. In practice, it is often obscured by fog, and is situated too far NW to guard the entrance to the Clyde. It was built by Thomas Smith and lit in 1787 or 1788, as one of the initial programme of four lighthouses built by the Commissioners of Northern Lights; the others were Kinnaird Head, Eilean Glas, Scalpay, and the original light on Dennis Head, North Ronaldsay, Orkney. The original light was rebuilt 'in a more permanent form' between 1821 and 1830, in keeping with the Commissioners' 'national establishment' policy. This station was an early receipient (c. 1876) of a fog signal. The light was altered from fixed to group flashing in 1906, the power being increased from 8,000 to 281,000cp at the same time. It was electrified (and further increased to 1,515,000cp) in 1976. Information from RCAHMS (RJCM), 28 April 2006. Mull of Kintyre lighthouse was originally established in 1788 and the circular tower of harled rubble masonry which forms the nucleus of the present complex of buildings probably dates from this period. The house on the NE dates from 1857 and that on the SE from 1883. An early reflecting mechanism from the lighthouse is preserved in Campbeltown Museum. RCAHMS 1971. (Location cited as NR 587 084 and name as Mull of Kintyre Lighthouse). Built 1786-8 for the Trustees for Northern Lighthouses by engineer Thomas Smith. A short circular tower with triangular-paned top lantern and single-storey flat-roofed keepers' houses. The tower has a neat iron railing round its corbelled walkway and is probably original. J R Hume 1977. This shore lighthouse guards the E side of the N Channel, the northern entrance to the Irish (Celtic) Sea. In practice, it is often obscured by fog, and is situated too far NW to guard the entrance to the Clyde. It was built by Thomas Smith and lit in 1787 or 1788, as one of the initial programme of four lighthouses built by the Commissioners of Northern Lights; the others were Kinnaird Head, Eilean Glas, Scalpay, and the original light on Dennis Head, North Ronaldsay, Orkney. The original light was rebuilt 'in a more permanent form' between 1821 and 1830, in keeping with the Commissioners' 'national establishment' policy. This station was an early receipient (c. 1876) of a fog signal. The light was altered from fixed to group flashing in 1906, the power being increased from 8,000 to 281,000cp at the same time. It was electrified (and further increased to 1,515,000cp) in 1976. ARLHS SCO-145; Admiralty A4272; NGA 4244.

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