Coastal warning display tower
A coastal warning display tower, sometimes known as a storm warning tower, was a type of signal station in the form of skeletal towers designed to provide hurricane warnings. The towers were developed in 1898 on the orders of President William McKinley.
A single red pennant was shown from the top of the tower as a small craft warning; for a gale warning, two such pennants were used. Two square flags, red with a black square at center, signified an approaching hurricane. Three lights, two red and one white, carried the signal at night. Red over white signified a gale, while two reds constituted a storm warning. All three lights together warned of a hurricane.
The system of towers is obsolete today, and few survive.
Remaining towers
- Manteo, North Carolina, operated by the North Carolina Maritime Museum
- Portsmouth, New Hampshire
- Providence, Rhode Island
- New Haven, Connecticut
- Southport, North Carolina
- Hammond, Oregon
- Oswego, New York, at Fort Ontario State Historic Site
- Washington, North Carolina, operated by the City of Washington
See also
External links
- Rowlett, Russ. "Coastal Warning Display Towers". The Lighthouse Directory. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
- National Weather Service entry
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