Heceta Head Light is perched 205 feet above the Pacific Ocean on Oregon"s central coast. The headland is named for Spanish Basque explorer Don Bruno de Heceta, who led a secret expedition in 1775 to bolster Spain"s claim to the Pacific Coast of North America. Having sailed from Mexico, by the time the voyage reached these shores, the crew was ravaged by scurvy and Heceta made the call to turn back—but not before he became the first to map and record a written description of the mouth of the Columbia River as well as this rocky 1,000-foot-high headland that would eventually bear his name. By the 19th century, seafarers making their way up and down the coast made the call for a lighthouse to guide their way. Construction of the 56-foot-tall lighthouse was complicated by the steep bluffs and remote location, but the first light beam pierced through the darkness on March 30, 1894.
Heceta Head Light, Florence, Oregon
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Native American Heritage Month
-
Thorrablot: The Icelandic midwinter festival
-
Bản Giốc–Detian Falls, Vietnam
-
Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada
-
Celebrating 200 years of statehood
-
Gentoo penguins in Antarctica
-
Thick-billed raven, Simien Mountains, Ethiopia
-
Blackbird in Essex, England
-
Space is for everyone
-
Old Town in Prague, Czech Republic
-
Why’s it called a spelling ‘bee,’ anyhow?
-
That bill s just not going to fit
-
Oud-West, Amsterdam, Netherlands
-
A city, a cliff, a canyon…and cheese
-
1934 Labor Day parade, Gastonia, North Carolina
-
Sundance Film Festival opens in Park City
-
Celebrate International Women’s Day
-
Happy Welsh New Year!
-
Poinsettia Day
-
World Migratory Bird Day
-
Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest, Hungary
-
Bathing in the light of Pride
-
Everest s shadow on the Himalayas
-
Prague, Czech Republic
-
Eurasian red squirrel in Northumberland, England
-
World Teachers Day
-
A lofty lighthouse and a little ocean spray
-
Cheese! We ll go somewhere where there s cheese!
-
Hello, spring!
-
Skyscraper Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

