The preceding Bodie Island lighthouses actually stood south of
Oregon Inlet on
Pea Island in an area that is now under water due to the southward migration of the inlet. The first was built in 1847 and then abandoned in 1859 due to a poor foundation. The second, built in 1859, was destroyed in 1861 by retreating
Confederate troops who feared it would be used as a
Union observation post during the
Civil War. The third and current lighthouse, with its original first order
Fresnel lens, was completed in 1872. This lighthouse was built further North and further inland on a 15-acre site. In 1932, the Bodie Island Lighthouse became automated (and the light was upgraded to an electric lamp by using oil-fueled
electrical generators), and by 1953 it had been transferred into the care of the National Park Service. It remained staffed until 1940, when the lighthouse was fully automated. In 1953, the generators were disconnected and power was supplied from the commercial
electric grid. While some people (including North Carolinians not from the
Outer Banks) pronounce the name with a long "o" sound, it is traditionally pronounced as
body. Folklore would have you believe it is due to the number of dead sailors washed ashore from wrecked ships along this portion of the
East Coast, which has long been known as the "
Graveyard of the Atlantic" but that is not true. The name is actually derived from the original name of the area, which was "Bodie's Island" after the Body family who once owned the land that was a separate
barrier island prior to 1811 when Roanoke
inlet that separated it from the
Currituck Banks to the north closed. Local gift shops sell maps of the shipwrecks on the ocean floor. Many ships have been sunk due to storms,
shoals, and
German U-boats during
World War I and
World War II. This lighthouse appears in the background of the 1963–1964
Federal Duck Stamp. After years of raising funds and postponement, work to restore the cast iron and other parts in need of work began on the lighthouse in August 2009. As of March 2010, the outside scaffolding was 100% complete while interior scaffolding was 50% completed. The restoration was stopped in spring 2011 after significant new structural integrity issues were found in many of the main support beams under the balcony. The additional repairs needed were too costly to finish in the original restoration project. In August 2011,
Hurricane Irene blew out some of the newly restored lantern room glass and tore away a protective shroud covering the lantern room. Flooding caused buckling of the floors in the Bodie Island Light Station Double Keepers Quarters. Additional funding was obtained to continue the restoration, which was restarted in 2012 and completed in March 2013. There was a re-lighting ceremony on April 18, 2013, and the lighthouse was opened for the general public to climb the following day for a fee. == Timeline ==