When the first Egmont Key Light was built in 1848, it was the only
lighthouse on the
Gulf coast of
Florida between
Key West and
St. Marks. In September 1848 a
hurricane covered the island with six feet of water and damaged the new lighthouse. The keeper and his family rode out the storm in a small boat tied to a tree. When the keeper saw the damage to the lighthouse, he rowed off to
Tampa and never returned. Another hurricane a few weeks later caused more damage, and
beach erosion threatened to topple the tower. A hurricane in 1852 again threatened to topple the tower by undermining it. In 1857 work was begun rebuilding the tower. It apparently was moved inland at that time. The reconstruction was completed in 1858, and the lighthouse was placed back in service with a new third order
Fresnel lens. The lens was removed by Confederates during the
Civil War to frustrate the
Union Navy efforts to blockade
Tampa Bay but was restored after the war. In 1944 the lantern was removed from the lighthouse tower and replaced with an
aerobeacon. The
Coast Guard continued to man the lighthouse until 1990, when it became one of the last lighthouses in the United States to be automated. Beach erosion has again threatened the lighthouse, and sand was pumped into the beach in front of the tower in 2000. In 2001 the Coast Guard announced plans to deactivate the light, but as of July, 2016 has not done so. The Coast Guard has declared the lighthouse surplus property, and turned it over to the
General Services Administration to be sold. ==The key==