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Check out the Foundation's catalog of fundraising
items.
Read about
the latest addition!
Harbor Door Replacement Project Mementoes.
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Posted May 18, 2008
Delaware Breakwater East End Lighthouse fared well
during the nor'easter of May 11-12.
Sitting on the less exposed inner breakwater, East End
lighthouse was undamaged. Not even a new broken window.
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Posted 6 May 2008 Check
out photos
from the Army Corps' Survey Work at HoR Breakwater Wall
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Posted May 18, 2008
Volunteers Saddened by May 11-12 Nor'easter Damage
at Harbor of Refuge

Volunteers expected to find storm damage at Harbor of Refuge after
Delaware's violent nor'easter on May 11 and 12. But they weren't
prepared for what they saw early Saturday morning.
Everything that had been accomplished on May 3 -- and more -- was
wiped out. Last year's new deck -- which had just been reinstalled
after spending the winter safely inside the lighthouse -- had been
ripped from the iron girders and washed out to sea. All of the
sturdy wooden foundation laid on the girders was gone. Planks were
torn from the upper deck. Safety railings were missing.
Steps were nowhere to be found.
Beneath one end of the upper deck where several large breakwater
stones had supported the iron frame, there was only a gaping void.
Erosion of the breakwater from under the south side of the lighthouse
didn't appear to be much worse. But the black hole of missing
stones under the north side had grown.
And as the launch approached the lighthouse in choppy seas at high
tide, workers could see that the ocean has finally cut a crooked route
through the top row of capstones on the breakwater wall.
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Seats
Going Fast
!
Date
Set for
Sunset Cruise
Mark
your calendars now -- that ever popular Lighthouse Sunset Cruise has been
scheduled for Sunday, June 22, from 6 to 8 p.m.
This
year, thanks to Captain Ted's latest acquisition, the Foundation will have
three boats available for the popular annual excursion around the lighthouses and
along the Sussex shore.
But
one whole boat has already been reserved, so don't wait to claim your
seats. Book now.
Tickets
will be $30 for non-members and $25 for Foundation members.
Reservations are required and must be guaranteed with a credit card.
Call 302-644-7046.
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The section where breakwater stones have been washed out from
under the lighthouse collar on the north side of the structure is
growing at a frightening pace.
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Supporting stones are now totally gone from under a two-foot
section of the iron frame for the upper deck.
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Deeply discouraged, but not defeated, nine volunteers set to work.
In the short time available, emergency repairs had to be made and the
lighthouse had to be readied once again for the tour season that begins
May 31.
Fortunately, the Foundation had ordered a spare section of the
composite decking last year. Insurance against just such an
occasion as this. And now that the spare is in use, another will
be ordered.
Plans had called for all of Saturday's volunteer efforts to be focused
on paint removal in the Watch Room and the Gallery Level. Instead,
the strongest half of the crew had to be diverted to hard labor on the
outside of the light. Fortunately all of them -- John Gordon, Mark
Lizzi, Red Moulinier and Jerry Perrin -- were old hands at building
docks and repairing decks.
Inside, three members from Maryland -- Paula and Lauren Liebrecht and
Sandra Sableski -- along with Ruth Africa and Judith Roales took on
other tasks, including some paint removal.
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Volunteers braved choppy seas and cold ocean spray to make
emergency repairs that allowed for the installation of yet another
landing deck on the lower dock.
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Ready again. It was, volunteers recollected, the eighth time
the lower dock has been replaced.
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