— Postcard from the coast —
Cornwall · Estd 1881
Greetings from

Cape Tregarne
Lighthouse

reopening to the public after a two-year restoration

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Open · 21 June 2027

Tickets through the Heritage Trust from the start of May.

The lighthouse, briefly— a history in six paragraphs —

The Cape Tregarne light was lit on the evening of the third of December in eighteen eighty-one. The keepers' cottages were finished a year later. For ninety-six years the light burned every night, save for two stretches during wartime when the lamp was covered and the keeper's wife sent up a lantern instead. The light was electrified in nineteen fifty-three; in nineteen seventy-seven Trinity House transferred the lighthouse to the Heritage Trust and it became a museum.

"On a fair night the beam can be seen from St Mary's; on a fouler night it is heard, in the gulls' answer, before it is seen."— K. Pellew, keeper's record, 12 November 1922

The current restoration began in the spring of twenty twenty-five, after a winter storm exposed weakness in the south façade. We have replaced the lantern's glass with hand-blown panes from Wiltshire, restored the brass clockwork (which still drives a mechanical fog signal once a season), and reopened the keepers' parlour to the public for the first time since seventy-two.

What you will find inside

The tower

Height34 m
Steps116
Lantern1881, restored
LensFirst-order Fresnel

The cottage

Parlour1882, period
Kitchenopen hearth
Tea roomweekends only
Shopmaps, postcards

Tickets & admission

Tickets go on sale on the morning of May the first, through the Heritage Trust booking office. Members of the Trust may book a week in advance.

Adult

£12tower + cottage

Child

£5under twelve

Family

£28two adults + three