THE STORY OF THE CALCASIEU RIVER LIGHT HOUSE
© By W. T. Block
(click here for W. T. Block web page)

Was the Calcasieu River of Southwest Louisiana an
orphaned stepchild of the Federal Government; the writer thinks so? The
Calcasieu light house was not completed until 20 years after the Sabine light
house. In 1898 the port of Port Arthur was loading 3,000-ton freighters with
cargoes of flour, rice and lumber, whereas the port of Lake Charles did not
receive "deep water" until 1926, and then only via a devious route
through the Intercoastal Canal and port of Sabine Pass. From 1890 until 1926
the Union Sulphur Company, located a few miles west of Lake Charles, shipped
daily train loads of its product to Sabine Pass for transshipment overseas.
Both the St. Louis, Watkins and Gulf and the Kansas
City Southern railroads had original plans to build to Cameron, but such plans
did not materialize due to the treacherous marshes. When all Calcasieu
construction on the lower river, that is, jetties, dredging and rerouting the
river with a 26-foot depth, was completed, the first deepsea, 5,000-ton
tanker finally entered the river through its mouth in 1941, the same year that
World War II began. And during that last phase of river construction, the
Calcasieu light house had to be torn down in 1939.
Efforts to erect the Calcasieu River light house
began in 1854, and the Light House Board recommended that $6,000 be
appropriated for it. In 1855 a U. S. Navy survey claimed that a light house at
that point was unneeded, although construction of the Sabine light house began
a year later. In 1860 funds for the Calcasieu River beacon were appropriated,
but before negotiations for land were completed, the Civil War began, and all
efforts were suspended.
On May 20, 1874 the New Orleans customs collector reported that
the light's construction could no longer be postponed. In 1875-1876 the Lake
Charles Echo reported that naval Commander Schoonmaker and W. L. Campbell had boarded
the steamer Romeo en route to Cameron to examine prospective sites for the light
house. Since negotiations for land on the east side broke down, a site on the
west side of the river, already owned by the government, was chosen on Lot 32,
Township 15 South, on Range 10
West.
By 1876 the Light House Service had decided that a
brick or stone structure was no longer suitable for the gulf marshes, and a
light house tower, made of boiler plate iron, had already been prefabricated at
a locomotive works and was in storage in New Orleans. Construction began about
Sept. 1876, and the first beam from its lamp was pointed seaward on Dec. 9,
1876.
Despite its iron exterior, all interior walls and
flooring were lined with wood to displace the summertime heat. The building was
elevated about 14 feet above the ground, and the first floor had only a fuel
room, storage room, fresh water tanks and a living room. A bedroom was located
on the second floor, and the third floor contained supplies and oil for the
lamp. An iron spiral staircase connected each floor. By 1925 the beam extruded
490 candle power of light intensity, and was visible for 13 miles at sea.
Only 3 lightkeepers ever served at the Calcasieu
light. C. F. Crossman served from 1876 until about 1910, at which time he was
transferred to Sabine Pass. The second keeper was William Hill, assisted by his
brother Philip, who remained until 1929.
And the third light keeper was E. A. Malone, who remained until the light house
was torn down in 1939. Mrs. Grace Reeves of Nederland spent some of her childhood years,
living there with her mother and her uncles named Hill.
The survey for the river rerouting discovered that
the old light house had to be dismantled, and today its former location is in
the middle of the river. Because the structure was 75 years old, the light
house could not be saved and rebuilt elsewhere. And in 1941 the first Calcasieu
deepsea shipping (ie: of 1,000 tons or more) entered and exited the river for
the first time at Calcasieu Pass.
