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Jupiter Lighthouse Chapter, NSDAR
Jupiter/Tequesta, Florida


 

   

Welcome to the Jupiter Lighthouse Chapter. The chapter was organized by Mary Lee Kenny on October 11, 1985, in the Jupiter/Tequesta area on the east coast of Florida. We are located about 15 miles north of Palm Beach, where the Loxahatchee meets the Atlantic. A little bit of heaven guarded by a picturesque lighthouse.

Qualifications can be obtained from the
NSDAR Membership site. Potential members are welcome and we would love to receive Email from you. 

The chapter name was adopted from the historic landmark beacon, which stands beside the Loxahatchee River near where it flows through Jupiter Inlet into the Atlantic Ocean. This light, activated on July 10, 1860, was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.  One of the most famous lighthouses in Florida, its long and exciting history makes its name appropriate for our chapter.

Jupiter was considered the end of the Indian River, where travel by water stopped unless a vessel was large enough to to go out on the ocean. The lighthouse was built at the confluence of the Loxahatchee River, Atlantic Ocean and Indian River, nowhere near the fresh water Lake Worth.

On February 26, 1967, the National Society Daughters of the American Colonists placed an historic marker on the lighthouse grounds, which reads:

Jupiter Lighthouse

Jupiter Lighthouse

 

Designed by George G. Meade, later Federal commander at Gettysburg. First lighted July 10, 1860. Dark during the War Between the States and its mechanism hidden by southern sympathizers. Re-lighted June 28, 1866, it has not missed a night in over one hundred years. Keepers: Thomas Twiner, Joseph F. Papy, Wm. B. Davis, James A. Armour, Joseph A. Wells, Thomas Knight, Charles F. Seabrook. Operated by the United States Coast Guard since 1939.

 

1891 - Indians on Celestial DockIn 1891, Seminole Indians Cypress Tiger, Jimmy Gopher, and Billy Stuart, allowed William Henry Jackson, of the Detroit Publishing Company, to photograph them standing on the dock of the Jupiter & Lake Worth Railroad, better known as the "Celestial Railroad" for it's stops at Jupiter, Venus, Mars, and Juno. This railroad was used to transport passengers from Jupiter to Lake Worth eight miles south, where they could continue their travel by water. Jupiter Lighthouse is seen across the river with the Assistant Lighthouse Keeper's quarters to the left and Head Keeper Captain James Armour's new quarters to the right of the lighthouse. The Celestial Railroad was built from Jupiter overland to Lake Worth, 8 miles south, so people could continue their travel by water. The Lake Worth area was much further south than Jupiter. (Photo  C ourtesy  of Detroit Publishing Company)

     

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For chapter information contact: Jupiter Lighthouse
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Revised: July 7, 2007

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