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Chronology of Aids to Navigation
Page 18 of 32
Lighthouse Service to the noncontiguous territory of Puerto Rico and adjacent American waters. (Weiss, p. 18).
1900	The tall-type can and nun buoys were introduced during this year for use in important positions, "the buoys being designed to stand much higher out of the water and thus furnish a mark easier to pick up, as well as much better resisting displacement by running ice." (Putnam, p. 218).
1900	(1 May) The Lighthouse Board took charge of the Puerto Rico lighthouses. (Putnam, p. 168).
1901	Radio communication was experimentally established on the Nantucket Lightship. (Putnam, p. 207).
1902	(1 March) The first regular light stations in Alaska were established at Southeast Five Finger Island and at Sentinel Island, both on the main Inside passage between Wrangell Strait and Skagway. (Putnam, pp. 146-147).
1902	A beacon equipped with a generator for producing acetylene gas from calcium carbide was placed on the Mobile Channel, thus being the first United States use of acetylene gas for lighthouse purposes. (Putnam, p. 189).
1903	(14 February) An Act of Congress (31 Stat. L., 826, 827) that created the Department of Commerce and Labor provided for the transfer of the Lighthouse Sen/ice from the Treasury Department to the newly created one, thus allowing the Secretary of Commerce and Labor to succeed to the authority vested in the Secretary of the Treasury under the existing legislation. (Weiss, p. 18).
1903 (18 June) Alaska’s first coastal lighthouse, Scotch Cap Lighthouse, located near the west end of Unimak Island on the Pacific side of Unimak Pass, the main passage through the Aleutian Islands into the Bering Sea, was lit. (Holland, p. 192).
1903 (1 July) The Lighthouse Board, along with other activities having to do with navigation, was transferred from the Treasury Department to the Department of Commerce and Labor. (Putnam, p. 46).
1903 (28 December) An Executive Order extended the jurisdiction of the Lighthouse Service to the non-contiguous territory of the Hawaiian Islands. (Weiss, p. 18).
1903 (29 December) An Executive Order extended the jurisdiction of the Lighthouse Service to Guantanamo, Cuba. (Weiss, p. 18).
1903	Compressed acetylene dissolved in acetone was first used at Jones Rocks Beacon, Connecticut, and South Hook Beacon, Sandy Hook, New Jersey. (Putnam, p. 189).
1904	(8 December) An Executive Order extended the jurisdiction of the Lighthouse Service to the noncontiguous territory of the Midway Islands. (Weiss, p. 18).
1904	The U. S. Lighthouse Service conducted tests of an acetylene gas buoy, in which the gas was generated in the buoy body by the action of water on calcium carbide. (Putnam, p. 220).
http://www.uscg.mil/hq/g-cp/history/h_USLHSchron.html
5/17/2005


Lighthouses Chronology-of-Aids-to-Navigation-(18)
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