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Faro de Punta Tuna, Punta Tuna, Emajagua, Maunabo Municipio, PR

description

Summary

Significance: The Punta Tuna Lighthouse was constructed as a third order lighthouse that showed a white light with a group of two flashes. It served as the most eastern primary light that terminated the Island's southern light belt, and, and the same time, was the southern light that formed the Island's eastern light belt. This was formed by another primary light, Cabo San Juan, and three minor lights (Puerto Ferro, Punta Mulas, and Isla Culebrita). The structure, built around the tower, was the dwelling for one first class and a third class keeper. The main entrance of the brick and stone building, 27.7 x 12.4 x 5.5 mts., faces east. The interior responds into a vestibule, 6.2 x 4.65 mts., where the entrance to the tower is found. (A small hall at the entrance was built afterwards, perhaps in the 1950s.) At both sides of the vestibule there were two corridors: one led to the storeroom that connected with the oil room behind the tower; another led into the engineer's room. The vestibule also connected both keepers' quarters, which were identical: one 4.65 x 4.65 mts. living room; two 3.6 x 4.65 mts. bedrooms; one small (3.2 x 1.9 mts.) storeroom; one kitchen-dining area (3.6 x 3 mts.); and one bathroom (1.5 x 3.6 mts.).

Survey number: HAER PR-9

Building/structure dates: 1893 Initial Construction

Building/structure dates: 1927 Subsequent Work

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Tags

lighthouses stone buildings brick buildings navigation transportation maritime emajagua faro punta tuna punta tuna maunabo municipio maunabo municipio bernard barbier central lighthouse commission historic american engineering record luis morales kevin murphy benjamin nistal moret us coast guard us department of commerce photo ultra high resolution high resolution puerto rico library of congress architectural diagrams
date_range

Date

1969 - 1980
person

Contributors

Historic American Engineering Record, creator
U.S. Department of Commerce
U.S. Coast Guard
Central Lighthouse Commission
Barbier, Bernard, & Cie
Murphy, Kevin, transmitter
Morales, Luis, photographer
Nistal-Moret, Benjamin, historian
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html

label_outline Explore Emajagua, Punta Tuna, Maunabo Municipio

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A couple of fish sitting on top of a table, possibly related to: Aboard a trap fishing boat, pulling the net into the boat. The trap, which is nothing but a gigantic net, is pulled into the boat on one side and thrown overboard on the other until finally a small pocket is made where fish mill around by the thousands. Sometimes several big tuna, locally called horse mackerel, must be gaffed and brought aboard. This is a struggle because tuna weigh between 300 and 800 pounds. The rest of the fish, whiting, mackerel, and squid are dipped aboard with a hand net. Provincetown, Massachusetts

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Aboard a trap fishing boat, pulling the net into the boat. The trap, which is nothing but a gigantic net, is pulled into the boat on one side and thrown overboard on the other until finally a small pocket is made where fish mill around by the thousands. Sometimes several big tuna, locally called horse mackerel, must be gaffed and brought aboard. This is a struggle because tuna weigh between 300 and 800 pounds. The rest of the fish, whiting, mackerel, and squid are dipped aboard with a hand net. Provincetown, Massachusetts

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Canned tuna coming from sterlizing compartment. It will next be cooked for an hour. Columbia River Packing Association, Astoria, Oregon

Topics

lighthouses stone buildings brick buildings navigation transportation maritime emajagua faro punta tuna punta tuna maunabo municipio maunabo municipio bernard barbier central lighthouse commission historic american engineering record luis morales kevin murphy benjamin nistal moret us coast guard us department of commerce photo ultra high resolution high resolution puerto rico library of congress architectural diagrams