Not far from the Bald Head lighthouse and just above Southport stands this little
harbor light called Prices Creek lighthouse. It was one of seven such lights along
the twenty-five mile stretch up the Cape Fear River from Oak Island to Wilmington and were
built to help vessels navigate the bends in the river channel. Now dark and abandoned it
was never re-lit after the Civil War after it was used as a Confederate signal station.
The Confederates destroyed all the other river lights when they began to loose control
over the river.
The small twenty-foot tall lighthouse is seventeen feet in diameter at the base with
three foot thick walls at the bottom graduating to two feet at the top. The lantern room
is gone now but originally it was fitted with eight lamps and eight fourteen inch
reflectors when it was built in 1849. These were the Lewis Lamps that were in general use
at the time and were not very effective. All the bricks for the Prices Creek lighthouse and the keepers
house were thought to be brought over from England. Years later when the house was
demolished many of the bricks were gathered up and used in the construction of a home in
Southport.
Living with bare essentials back when the Prices Creek lighthouse was built was a normality and
life was difficult at best. Diseases such as yellow fever effected many people and
although there was not a huge epidemic here like there was at St. Joseph Sound in Florida
where the entire population died because of the disease1849, there were cases of yellow fever
in the area around Prices Creek lighthouse, Southport and the Bald Head Island area. In
the late 1800s as shifting sands along the bank were washed away, residents
sometimes found open coffins with skeletons in them from yellow fever victims as they
walked along the shore.
All it took was one sailor to come into town that had it and within a short time
the whole town could be wiped out. If you were one of the unfortunate souls to contract
the disease, here is what would have happened to you. Three to six days after you were
exposed to it, the disease would have finished incubating, and symptoms would manifest
suddenly. It would start with a headache, backache, and fever. Then you would begin to
have nausea and vomiting. Your temperature would return to normal for a few days, but then
it would rise again. Your skin would turn yellow from an accumulation of yellow bile
pigments in your body. Then you would begin to bleed from the nose and to vomit blood (It
was called "black vomit."). Your kidneys, liver, and heart would begin to fail,
and you would die between the fourth and eighth day after your symptoms began. If by some
miracle you survived (and some people did elsewhere), your convalescence would be quick.
The jaundice would persist, but you would be immune to yellow fever for the rest of your
life.
Now as busy travelers and businessmen take the ferry past this last surviving harbor
light on the river, those difficult times are all but forgotten except for a few
photographs and notes in history books. The lighthouse sits alone on the river as the only
reminder, dwarfed in the background by a large chemical plant owned by the Archer Daniels
Midland Corporation thats produces citric acid used in many food products including soft
drinks and primarily used to make things tart. In front of the lighthouse a massive pier
further diminishes the already small lighthouse where large ships dock to offload raw
materials. When I was there new wooden stairs and window casements had been built but
other than that it was quite over grown. The lighthouse is on private property and it
unlikely that you would gain access to it by any roads on company property. Viewing it
from the river is your best bet.
The ferry boat landing at Southport, not the ferry that runs to Bald Head Island, but
the one that runs to Fort Fisher is a good place to see the lighthouse. Fort Fisher is
where there was once another lighthouse called the Federal Point lighthouse but nothing
remains of it now. If you have your own boat there is a public boat ramp at Southport but
a hard current on the river up by the lighthouse will warrant some caution if youre
using a small boat. Of course two other lighthouses are nearby that you can get
close to and they are Oak Island lighthouse just to the south and Bald Head lighthouse,
often called Cape Fear lighthouse, within sight of Prices Creek.
Roger Bansemer©