Bonnet Island Lighthouse at Hells Gate
Macquarie Harbour, West Coast Tasmania, Australia.
Featured in All About Lighthouses

The narrow 120 metre entrance to the huge Macquarie Harbour was discovered in 1815. Within a year, timber cutters moved in. Navigating the narrow entrance and its sandbar was an essential hazard in getting the timber to Hobart.
A signal station was erected near Cape Sorell in 1822 to indicate conditions entering the harbour. It was manned by convicts from the newly established penal settlement at Sarah Island.
The conditions were so bad at the new Sarah Island that the convicts named the entrance to the harbour Hells Gate. Other records indicate the name was used due to the enormous rush of the tides through the entrance to the harbour which can create very dangerous conditions.
In 1891, a light was exhibited from two white six sided wooden towers, one on the western side of Entrance Island, and the other on Bonnet Island. Also, a breakwater was constructed at Hells Gate to check the sandbar, and in 1899 a light was constructed a Cape Sorell.
The Strahan Marine Board purchased a dredge in 1909 and continued to improve the entrance so that many large vessels could enter.
The Entrance Light was powered by gas until 1977, when solar panels and batteries took over.
The weatherboard cladding was renewed in 1989.
Canon PowerShot A650 IS
Shutter Speed: 1/250sec
Aperture: F4.0
ISO: 80
hells gate, macquarie harbour, nautical, bonnet island, lighthouse, tasmania, blossom, marilyn harris, australia
Comments
Very quaint in scale. Charming entry way. Terrific history too Blossom~
WOW!!! GORGEOUS!!!
How did I miss this ? I love it !
I love lighthouses. This one is so pretty sitting out there on the little island. Excellent work, blossom. xo
I just read the history. Wow, Hell’s Gate!! A very interesting place with a colorful past. xo
yup nice one!
Very beautiful shot:)
very nice Blossom
Great capture Marilyn and brilliant narrative too.
Love lighthouses .this is a beauty