Livingstone Memorial Lighthouse - Detroit, MI
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member bobfrapples8
N 42° 20.822 W 082° 57.260
17T E 339026 N 4690158
The William Livingstone Memorial Lighthouse is located at the northeast end of Belle Isle in Detroit, Michigan.
Waymark Code: WM16W83
Location: Michigan, United States
Date Posted: 10/16/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ScroogieII
Views: 0

33. The LIVINGSTONE MEMORIAL LIGHTHOUSE, 1,800 feet from Lakeside Drive, on the reclaimed land comprising the eastern tip of the island, is a solid shaft of Georgian marble designed by Albert Kahn, Detroit architect. Probably the world’s only marble lighthouse, it was dedicated in 1930 in memory of the late William Livingstone, prominent resident and, for nearly a quarter of a century, president of the Lake Carriers’ Association, whose members, along with other citizens, erected the $100,000 monument. The simple, dignified, 58-foot shaft tapers gradually to its bronze lantern cap; at the base is a heavy bronze door and bronze portrait of Livingstone in high relief, modeled by Professor Géza Màroti. Maintained by the United States Lighthouse Service, it contains an incandescent lamp of 8,600 candlepower, an occulted type that flashes every 10 seconds a white beam visible for 15 miles.
Along this end of the island, where the Strand becomes Lakeside Drive, both mainland shores are clearly visible. Boats can be seen far out on Lake St. Clair, which narrows to the Detroit Rivers a short distance above the island. During navigation season, Great Lakes passenger boats and freighters pass on an average of one every 20 minutes, day and night; all but pleasure craft keep to the main channel, which lies off the southern shore, midway between Belle Isle and the Canadian banks. -Michigan: A Guide to the Wolverine State 1941


The lighthouse is located a short hike from the outer driving circuit of Belle Isle. It is not a long walk and the terrain is friendly. It takes you past the site of a former Nike missile range which has long been cleared.

"Belle Isle’s Livingstone Memorial Lighthouse was named after William Livingstone of Detroit. Born in 1844, Livingstone was president of the Dime Bank, owner of the Detroit Evening Journal, and long-time president of the Lake Carriers Association. He was also responsible for several important navigational improvements on the Great Lakes, including the creation of a deep-water channel in the lower Detroit River which became known as the Livingstone Channel. Following his death in 1925, friends and colleagues across the city rallied to build an appropriate monument in Livingstone’s memory.

Designed by renowned Detroit architect Albert Kahn, the Livingstone Memorial Lighthouse was located at the northern head of Belle Isle, facing Lake St. Clair. The ornamentation of the monument was designed in 1930 by Hungarian sculptor Geza Maroti in the Art Deco style—a classical fluted pillar but with additional modern opulence. The 58-foot-tall lighthouse was sculpted out of Georgia marble – the only such structure in North America.

Its bronze and glass lens, originally from the older Belle Isle Lighthouse that was demolished in 1941 to make room for the Coast Guard station, generates an 8600-candlepower beacon visible for up to fifteen miles. In 1980, thieves broke into the lighthouse and stole two of the four lamps. Responsively, the City of Detroit erected a fence around the lighthouse to prevent further vandalism, a project that cost about $100,000.

The Livingstone Memorial Lighthouse fittingly serves to guide ships along the Detroit River, connecting the works of Livingstone during his life to his enduring memory after his death. The lighthouse also represents a time in American lighthouse history when automated, remote operated lighthouses were becoming popular and manually operated houses were being abandoned. Today, the monument is still in operation at the northern end of Bell Isle and is shining tribute to one of the most influential men in Detroit shipping history."-Detroit Historical Society
Book: Michigan

Page Number(s) of Excerpt: 251

Year Originally Published: 1941

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