Milwaukee's Daily Magazine Monday, Dec. 7, 2009
Today
Hi: 36
Lo: 23
Tue
Hi: 34
Lo: 31
Wed
Hi: 36
Lo: 12
Section Sponsor
Article Tools
Print this Article
Make text larger
Related Twitter Posts

  • bayerslakepark:
    Is your auto in need of some TLC or detailing? Divo Detailing in Bayers Lake Park - link

  • lovings:
    @AshleyDeVyne Stow Lake (GG park) boat rental (great fun!), or a horseback ride link , Chinatown & North Beach..

  • MrPointyis5by5:
    It's times like these I wish I was back in Luray walking around Lake Arrowhead or driving through Shenandoah Park.

  • bayerslakepark:
    Need your car or truck repaired? Check out Wonder Auto Centre in Bayers Lake Park - link

  • googleandblog:
    @BrentDPayne u should go to Park City or nearby Salt Lake City


Follow us on Twitter ...
In Travel & Visitors Guide
Restored beacon recalls city's maritime history
North Point Lighthouse connects us to our maritime history.  
By Megan Schmidt, Special to OnMilwaukee.com
Published May 5, 2008 at 5:08 a.m.
Tags: travelweek, north point lighthouse, lake park, fredrick law olmsted


All aboard! It's Travel Week at OnMilwaukee.com as we bring you stories big and small from destinations near and far. When you post travel-related reader blogs -- from Monday, May 5 through Sunday, May 11 -- you're automatically in the running to win an all-inclusive trip to a Mexican resort courtesy of Apple Vacations. The OnMilwaukee.com editorial staff will pick the best travel blog of the week and the winner will jet off to sunny Mexico! Get writing!

Although its beam was once seen 23 miles out into Lake Michigan, the North Point Lighthouse has become something of a secret enveloped amid the trees of Lake Park.

"Even people born and raised here have no clue it's here," says Kathy Gingrass, a lighthouse volunteer.

Similarly, few seem to remember the city's maritime history. As one of Milwaukee's oldest structures, North Point was a beacon for generations of fisherman and shipping boats dating back Milwaukee's first industrial boom in the mid-1800s.

Nowadays, global positioning systems prevent ships being devoured by the jaws of Milwaukee's shoreline.

The lighthouse's globe was extinguished in 1994 by the Coast Guard, and the structure, along with the attached keeper's house, remained boarded-up until the nonprofit North Point Lighthouse Friends began rehabbing the tower.

In December 2007, the lighthouse opened to the public for tours. But only after a 10-year battle with area residents and the city.

"It was a struggling time," says Betty Moore, a lighthouse volunteer, who says some residents -- fearing increased traffic from visitors -- wanted the 1855 structure bulldozed rather than preserved.

The 74-ft. hexagonal, white tower rises in stark contrast against the trees in Frederick Law Olmsted-designed Lake Park.

"Progress is happening so fast that people aren't stopping to think about where their ancestors came from," said Ellen who, along with her husband Bernie, is a lighthouse volunteer. One of Bernie's own ancestors - a great-great uncle was one of the North Point Lighthouse keepers.

Michael Rotta maintained the North Point Lighthouse for years until his accidental death in 1953. A wooden platform Rotta stood on collapsed while painting the Breakwater Lighthouse, another Milwaukee beacon he managed.

Rotta was the only keeper who died in the line of duty, but another unique thread runs through the lighthouse's history.

Another interesting character in North Point history is Georgia Stebbins, the only woman -- and also the longest-serving -- keeper. Stebbins kept the globe lit for over 30 years. Stebbins was the daughter of a North Point Lighthouse keeper named D.K. Green.

There are pictures hanging inside the keeper's quarters documenting the lighthouse before the renovation. Its walls were crumbling, the linoleum was mangled, and the windows were sealed shut with plywood. It has come a long way.

While the City greenlighted the project, it offered no funding. In 2002 a $1.23 million grant from the Department of Transportation helped return the tower and its keeper's quarters to its 19th century glory. But more is needed.

The quarters inhabited by Stebbins, Rotta and their fellow keepers now houses empty glass display cases, which will house artifacts for a Great Lakes maritime museum. Dwindling funds have stalled that part of the project.

While the lighthouse no longer shines over Lake Michigan to save lives, it continues to remind us of an era when waterways connected Milwaukee to the world.



More Information ...
Lake Park
3233 E. Kenwood Blvd.
Milwaukee, WI 53211
(414) 962-8809

Related links:

1 comment about this article.
Post a comment / write a review.

Recent Talkbacks ...

Posted by Milly on May 5, 2008 at 9:31 a.m. (report)

A friend once told me that the same key opens many / most / all of the lighthouses in the northern states and only the lighthouse caretakers have these special keys. I have always wondered if this was true. Her parents took care of a lighthouse in another state for many years, so I guess she should know, but it still sounds like a myth. I hope it's not. I like the thought of it.

Rate this:
  • Average rating: 0.0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5





Reader Poll
When visiting Milwaukee, what do you want to see first?
A game at Miller Park.
A brewery tour.
The Harley Museum.
The Art Museum.
Somewhere else.

Results after 2549 votes.

OnMilwaukee.com is part of the In Click Network. Other In Click sites include: 30RockReport.com | Behind The Scenes at OnMilwaukee.com | BetterRecipes.org | Bimmer Digest | Brain Brawn & Body | BrewCityBeats.com | Brewcitybigscreen.com | britneysnation.com | BritPop Rocks | Brooklynbanter.com | CactusLeagueReport.com | Caffeinateddigest.com | Culinary Piedmont | Cycling Chainring | Daily Lost Update | Daily Milwaukee News | Daily Spa | DannyGokeyMilwaukee.com | Dogs Blogs | EarthFueled.com | Edible Wisconsin | FanaticPhotog.com | Gadget Deals and Steals | GolfLinksWisconsin.com | H1N1 Alerts | H1N1 Blog | H1N1 Prevention | H1N1 Reporter | H1N1 Tracker | HogEnthusiast.com | Informed Runner | iPhone Daily Report | Man United Nation | Milwaukee Brewers Nation | Milwaukee Bucks Blog | Milwaukee Dad | Minnesota Wild Nation | MomMilwaukee.com | My Super Stocks | MyGayMilwaukee.com | MyHangoverHelper | News on Draught | NY Mets Nation | OnAtlantaGA.com | OnAustinTX.com | OnBaltimoreMD.com | OnBirminghamAL.com | OnBostonMass.com | OnBuffaloNY.com | OnCharlotteNC.com | OnCincinnati.com | OnClevelandOH.com | OnColumbusOH.com | OnDallas.com | OnDCmetro.com | OnDenverCO.com | OnDetroitMI.com | OnDoorCounty.org | OnFortLauderdale.com | OnGreenBay.com | OnHartford.com | OnIndianapolisIN.com | OnKansasCityMO.com | OnLakeCountry.com | OnLosAngelesCA.com | OnLouisvilleKY.com | OnMadison.com | OnMemphisTN.com | OnMiamiFLA.com | OnMilwaukee.com Cars | OnMilwaukee.com Metro Headlines | OnMilwaukee.com's Bartender Olympics | OnNashvilleTN.com | OnNewOrleansLA.com | OnNYCny.com | OnOrlandoFL.com | OnPalmSprings.com | OnPhiladelphia.com | OnPhoenixAZ.com | OnPittsburgh.com | OnPortlandOR.com | OnProvidence.com | OnRichmondVA.com | OnSacramento.com | OnSaltLakeCity.com | OnSanAntonioTX.com | OnSanDiegoCA.com | OnSanFran.com | OnSanJose.com | OnSeattleWA.com | OnSinCity.com | OnStLouis.com | OnStPetersburg.com | OnTampaBay.com | OnTucsonAZ.com | OnTwinCities.com | OnWichita.com | OnWindyCity.com | Packers Posts | Porsche 911 Fans | PriusFans.com | Roller Derby Network | SnuggieFans.com | SummerfestRocks.com | Swine Flu China | Swine Flu Reporter | The 24 Reporter | The Barack Obama Fan Club | The Brilliant Manager | The Comic Book Reporter | The In Click | The Office Fan Blog | TheHDTVReporter.com | TheNetbookBlog.com | TheNewParentBlog.com | Trueguitarheroes.com | Vintage Mets | VW Busses | WaukeshaWeekly.com | Weekly Media News | Wisconsincustomhomenews.com | WisWomen.com | Woodworker Digest