Visit This Victorian Lighthouse in Southern California for Free

Lighthouses can capture people’s imaginations like few other buildings do.
Visit This Victorian Lighthouse in Southern California for Free
The Point Fermin Lighthouse was built in 1874 and was the first navigational light used in the Los Angeles harbor. Mrsanpedro/Dreamstime/TNS
Tom Margenau
Updated:
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By Marla Jo Fisher From The Orange County Register

ANAHEIM, Calif.—Lighthouses can capture people’s imaginations like few other buildings do, perhaps because they bring to mind images of lonely lightkeepers, rocky cliffs, crashing waves, and lamps piercing the darkness during a storm.

And that may be why it’s surprising that so few people know about the Point Fermin Lighthouse, on an especially picturesque point in San Pedro, near Los Angeles Harbor.

This Victorian landmark has been visible from the sea below for 150 years, although its lamp hasn’t been lit since the end of World War II.

And the city of Los Angeles, which owns the lighthouse and surrounding scenic park, offers tours to visitors, showing how the lighthouse worked and generations of families lived there while they took care of the light.

Even better, the tours are free. You can make an advance reservation, or show up and hope they have room for you. The building is small and the stairs are tight, so they only accept a limited number of guests at a time.

The lighthouse is furnished to show visitors what it would have looked like during its heyday, although none of the furniture is original to the site. Lighthouse keepers were expected to bring their own furniture, and took it with them when they left.

Construction began after prominent businessman Phineas Banning persuaded the government to build a navigational aid to help sailors find the growing Los Angeles harbor. On Dec. 15, 1874, its oil lantern with a Fresnel lens was lit for the first time.

The building, with two floors of living space and the lantern tower, was designed by Paul J. Pelz, who between 1873 and 1874 built six lighthouses of the same design, including one in San Francisco. The Victorian structure had porches and trim, called the Stick style, less ornate than the more familiar Queen Anne. It was built mostly of redwood, with some fir and mahogany.

The people who ran the lighthouse were federal employees called lighthouse keepers. They even had spiffy blue uniforms with brass buttons that the men were required to wear, but the women were not. There is an example of the uniforms on-site that today’s visitors can try on.

Lighthouse keepers lived in the building with their families, and it required two keepers to run it, over two shifts per day. The first lighthouse keepers were women.

Mary and Ella Smith were sisters and came from a lighthouse family. They lived on the then-isolated point overlooking the Pacific Ocean for eight years.There were differing accounts of why they left. One version says they grew tired of living so far from town. It was 14 miles round-trip to Wilmington in a horse and buggy—an all-day excursion. The other version is that one sister got married and the other was driven out by the man who replaced her, who hectored officials about having a female there until she finally left.

Altogether, three families lived in the house and kept the light going, including the Austin family of eight children. The house had no running water until 1910, and it used a cistern system to collect rare rainwater.

After 1925, the city of Los Angeles ran the lighthouse until 1941. On Dec. 7, 1941, the lighthouse went dark along with the rest of the coast, to avoid drawing Japanese aircraft fire. The light was never lit again.

The military took over the building for military operations, as a signal and lookout tower for ships coming into the harbor. The lens and lantern room atop the tower were removed. It was turned back over to the city of Los Angeles after the war, and was occupied by city staff.

Happily, the building was restored to its former glory for its 100th anniversary in 1974, and it’s been open to the public since 2003. The interior is open only during public tours, conducted by docents.

At this writing, tours were conducted six days per week, at 1 p.m., 2 p.m., and 3 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Reservations are not required. The building is closed on Mondays, holidays and for special events. It’s located in Point Fermin Park in San Pedro. The park has picnic tables and beautiful ocean views.

There are two steep flights of stairs to get up to the tower, however people with limited mobility can see the ground floor if they can manage a short flight up to the porch. There are public restrooms at the site.

If You Go

Point Fermin Lighthouse Historic Site and Museum

807 Paseo Del Mar, San Pedro, California

For more information, call 310-241-0684 or visit pointferminlighthouse.org.
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Tom Margenau
Tom Margenau
Author
Tom Margenau worked for 32 years in a variety of positions for the Social Security Administration before retiring in 2005. He has served as the director of SSA’s public information office, the chief editor of more than 100 SSA publications, a deputy press officer and spokesman, and a speechwriter for the commissioner of Social Security. For 12 years, he also wrote Social Security columns for local newspapers, and recently published the book “Social Security: Simple and Smart.” If you have a Social Security question, contact him at [email protected]