Administrative Record for the Relocation of the Cape Hatteras Light Station, PC.5003
Abstract
Because of the threat of shoreline erosion, the Cape Hatteras Light Station, which consists of seven historic structures, was successfully relocated in 1999. The lighthouse was moved 2,900 feet from the spot on which it had stood since 1870. The entire light station was safely relocated to a new site where the historic buildings and cisterns were placed in relationship to each other exactly as they had been at the original site. The Administrative Record for the Relocation of Cape Hatteras Light Station, 1999, contains documents relating to a lawsuit concerning the relocation of the lighthouse. The materials in this collection are reproductions of documents originally dated July 1967-3 February 1999.
Descriptive Summary
- Title
- Administrative Record for the Relocation of the Cape Hatteras Light Station
- Call Number
- PC.5003
- Creator
- United States. National Park Service
- Date
- 1999
- Extent
- 1.000 cubic feet
- Language
- English
- Repository
- Outer Banks History Center
Restrictions on Access & Use
Access Restrictions
This collection is available for research.
Use Restrictions
Copyright is retained by the authors of these materials, or their descendants, as
stipulated by the United States copyright law (Title 17 US Code). Individual researchers
are responsible for using these materials in conformance with copyright law as well
as any donor restrictions accompanying these materials.
Preferred Citation
PC.5003, Administrative Record for the Relocation of Cape Hatteras Light Station,
1999, Outer Banks History Center, Manteo, NC, U.S.A.
Collection Overview
This collection consists of reproductions of 317 documents related to a lawsuit concerning
the relocation of Cape Hatteras Lighthouse arranged chronologically (the original
documents are dated July 1967-3 February 1999). An index in the first folder describes
the contents of each folder. These documents consist of environemental impact reports,
alternatives to moving, cost estimates, opinions of the opposing Save the Lighthouse
and Move the Lighthouse committees, archeological reviews, correspondence, and engineering
memoranda.
Arrangement Note
Chronological.
Biographical/Historical
In 1980, the National Park Service began planning, under the National Environmental Policy Act, for long-term protection. A three-year process that included public meetings yielded several alternatives. Relocation was considered but quickly discounted as impractical. The option finally selected was a concrete and steel seawall revetment that would have protected the lighthouse in place but would eventually have created an island as the coastline receded to the southwest. As moving technology advanced during the decade and additional information became available about relocation versus the approved seawall, the National Park Service examined the alternative that allowed it to accommodate natural processes while still preserving the historic structures of the light station.
In 1987, the NPS requested the assistance of the National Academy of Sciences, a group of scientists and engineers who advise the federal government on technical matters. The Academy's 1988 report, Saving Cape Hatteras Lighthouse from the Sea: Options and Policy Implications, considered ten options but recommended relocation as the most cost-effective method of protection. The National Park Service also considered this the best overall solution in that it would preserve the structures and accommodate the natural shoreline processes.
However, many people feared destruction of the brick lighthouse, the tallest in the United States. From 1988 to 1995, the relocation option was debated and discussed, with no funding requests made at the Congressional level or concerted fund-raising campaigns undertaken in the private sector. In 1996, North Carolina State University independently reviewed the National Academy of Sciences' report and then issued its own report, Saving the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse from the Sea, in January 1997. It not only endorsed the National Academy of Sciences' findings, but also recommended that "the National Park Service proceed as soon as possible with its present plans to obtain the financial resources necessary to preserve the lighthouse by moving it." NPS managers then initiated a concerted effort to begin the planning and funding process to move the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. Funding was finally appropriated by Congress beginning in fiscal year 1998, and the lighthouse was successfully relocated in 1999.
Contents of the Collection
Subject Headings
Acquisitions Information
Donated by Steve Harrison on behalf of the National Park Service, Cape Hatteras Group, May, 1999.