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Highland Light
(a.k.a. Cape Cod Light)

The following was
written by Henry David Thoreau in 1865:
"THIS
LIGHT-HOUSE, known to mariners
as the Cape Cod or Highland Light,
is one of our "primary sea-coast lights," and is usually the first seen by
those approaching the entrance of Massachusetts Bay from Europe."
"It was said in 1794
that more vessels were cast away on the east shore of
Truro than anywhere in Barnstable County. Notwithstanding that this
light-house has
since been erected, after almost every storm we read of one or more vessels
wrecked here, and sometimes more than a dozen wrecks
are visible from this point at one time."
"Truro was settled in
the year 1700 as Dangerfield. This was a very
appropriate name, for I afterward read on a monument in the
graveyard, near Pamet River, the following inscription: —
Sacred
to the memory of
57 citizens of Truro,
who were lost in seven
vessels, which
foundered at sea in
the memorable gale
of Oct. 3d, 1841"
During the summer of
1996, the lighthouse was moved back from the eroding cliffs
in an effort to save it from falling into the sea. The
move itself was an elaborate production where the tower was
lifted onto a wheeled platform that rested on a
pre-constructed railway. The tower was then pushed,
ever so slowly, down the rails to the new site. To
keep the old brick tower from crumbling, it was encased in a
"girdle" of strong cable and heavy planks during the
move.

View from the top of Highland
Light

For more photos and
information about museum and lighthouse tours,
visit:
http://trurohistorical.org/
The National Park
Service (Cape Cod National Seashore)
has interesting information about the Highland area at:
http://www.nps.gov/archive/caco/places/thehighlands.html
Another interesting page
about the history of the Highland Light
can be found at:
http://lighthouse.cc/highland/history.html
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