
Welcome to the Puget Sound Lighthouses #3: Point No Point cache
From the northern tip of the Kitsap Peninsula, a low sandspit extends east for over a quarter of a mile into the waters near the junction of Admiralty Inlet and Puget Sound. In 1841, Charles Wilkes of the U.S. Exploring Expedition approached the spit thinking it was a substantial point. On finding that it was much smaller than he had expected, Wilkes designated the spit Point No Point. Previously, Indians had given the point a more descriptive name - Hahd-skus, meaning long nose. The Point No Point Treaty was signed on the spit in 1855 by Territorial Gov. Isaac Stevens and leaders of Chimacum, Skokomish and S'Klallam tribes, ending the Indian wars.
During the late 1850s and early 1860s, lighthouses were established along Washington's west coast and the Strait of San Juan de Fuca. However, there were still no lights in Puget Sound, the destination of many of the vessels entering the strait. In 1872, the following report accompanied a request for a lighthouse at Point No Point.
The rapidly increasing importance of the commerce of Puget Sound, which will be still augmented by the Northern Pacific Railroad, requires the construction of such aids to navigation as will more effectually open these waters to foreign as well as home trade.
The funds were granted, but Francis James, the owner of the point, was reluctant to sell the property. The Lighthouse Board might have expected a struggle over the property, as James had demonstrated his fighting nature while briefly serving as a keeper at Cape Flattery. There, a dispute with a fellow keeper had escalated into a gunfight. In April of 1879, James finally agreed to sell forty acres on the point for $1,000, and work quickly started on the lighthouse.
By the end of the year, the tower was close to completion, but the lens and glass panes for the lantern room had not arrived. The Lighthouse Service was determined to have the light exhibited in 1879, so John Maggs, the first keeper who also had a dental practice in Seattle, was ordered to hang a common kerosene lantern from the dome of the lantern room on New Years Eve. A fifth-order Fresnel lens arrived on January 10, and the glass planes followed on February 1. Shortly thereafter, the lighthouse was fully functional.
Mrs. Maggs also arrived at the station in February, and given her delicate condition a cow was ordered to supply milk for the expected baby. The bovine arrived by schooner, was lowered over the vessel's side using a sling, and then swam ashore. The first baby born at the station in July of 1880 was a girl.
Maggs encountered difficulties with one an assistant keeper named Manning. One of many run-ins between the two keepers was recorded by Maggs in his logbook: "This a.m. Assistant Manning ran bell between 12 and 1 o'clock when there was a good horizon three miles off with not a particle of halo around the light and when I told him about it, that there was no need of running bell he said that I was a 'damned liar.' " Enraged at the accusations, which included keeping the light in a sloppy manner, Manning armed himself with a pistol and, accompanied by another man, took control of the tower. Inspector Reiter soon arrived to investigate the situation, and Manning and his family were required to pack up their belongings and leave with the inspector. Maggs recorded his feelings in his log on that long-awaited day when Maggs Departed. "Myself and family all feel great relief that the Mannings are all gone for we have suffered untold annoyances from the first day that they arrived here until today they left from here."
A few years after the establishment of the station, settlers started to occupy the high land northwest of the lighthouse. One of the first settlers was Hans Zachariasen, for whom Hansville is named. The lighthouse was tightly connected to the small community. From 1893 to 1914, the wife of one of the keepers served as the postmistress. Later, another keeper's wife ran a store in the town, and subsequently operated a weather reporting station out of the lighthouse.
In 1900, the fog bell was replaced by a Daboll trumpet housed in a newly constructed fog signal building. The light source was upgraded to a fourth-order Fresnel lens in 1915, which is still in use in the tower today. The new lens was struck by lightening in 1931, cracking one of the prisms.
The station was automated in 1977, but the keepers' dwelling still served as a home for Coast Guard personnel for several years. Kitsap County expressed interest in acquiring the lighthouse in 1992, but it wasn't until 1998 that the Coast Guard declared the property as surplus, and a long-term lease on the property was granted to the county. In a forward-looking move, the county has since purchased roughly 35 acres adjacent to the lighthouse, providing one-and-a-half miles of publicly accessible beach with views of Mount Rainier, Mount Baker, and Whidbey Island.
On June 16, 2006, the Fresnel lens stopped its years of countless rotations, having been replaced by a modern, plastic beacon mounted by the Coast Guard on the railing outside the lantern room. The U.S. Lighthouse Society relocated from a high-rise in San Francisco's financial-district to one side of the keepers' duplex in April of 2008. The other half of the duplex is available to the public as a vacation rental. The Lighthouse Society has an extensive research library and plans to open a mini-museum in their front room for tourists.
Image and text courtesy jholly
The Cache
This is one of six caches hidden to complete the Puget Sound Lighthouses series.You can find one or all of them. Most of the way to the cache is on logging roads or dirt paths. The last 20-100 feet are off trail. There are some moderate elevation changes, up to 400 feet. The forest floor can be mushy and soft. There is no serious bush whacking needed. Expect poor GPS reception under the tree cover, the caches are not cleverly hidden but are camo painted and not visible from the path.
The way to the cache does not require heavy bushwhacking. You might need to walk through some knee high low brush. If you are going to do heavy bushwhacking, perhaps going a bit farther down the trail will reveal an easy way in.
A paper map of the trails can be found [ here. ]
County Parks are open during daylight hours only, unless otherwise noted.
This cache has been placed with permision of Kitsap County Parks tel: 1.360.337.5350
Please leave the park better than you found it. Report problems to the number above.