Where in Maine?

dee1301wim.jpg

This classic lighthouse and keeper’s house sits at the northernmost end of an archipelago whose biggest islands host the state’s leading lobstering port, working quarries that yield a distinctive mauve-flecked granite (it’s been used to build some national landmarks, including President John F. Kennedy’s tomb), and a diverse artistic and cultural community. This particular island is quite small — just one-and-a-half acres. Its lighthouse, first illuminated on January 1, 1855, was built to guide lumber ships through the waterway that separates the archipelago from the mainland. Today that passage is a renowned cruising lane for recreational sailors. The lighthouse was decommissioned in 1934, and an automated acetylene-powered light on a nearby ledge now aids navigation. The island and buildings are privately owned, but they are easily admired from the opposite shore.

If you can identify this snow-covered island and lighthouse, send us a note at P.O. Box 679, Camden, ME 04843; whip off an email to editorial@downeast.com; or post a comment below. We’ll feature our favorite letter in an upcoming issue — and send the winner a Down East wall calendar.

Photographed by Laurence Parent

Click here to login and submit a guess about "Where in Maine" this is. After you enter your comment, you will be able to review everyone else's guesses.

There are 13 guesses so far.

Click here to guess and to review everyone else's guesses.