Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 10.djvu/133

 THIRTY—SECOND CONGRESS. Sess. I. Ch. 112. 1852. 118 For rebuilding the light-house and keeper’s house on Boon Island, twenty-five thousand dollars. For a beacon on Steel’s Ledge, in Penobscot Bay, one thousand dollars. For a light-house at the easterly end of the thoroughfare between North Haven and Vinalhaven, or on Heron Neck, as the Department shall determine, five thousand dollars. For beacons, buoys, and spindles at points on the Kennebec River, tive thousand dollars. For Jones’s fog—bell, to be placed near the light-house at Petit Menan, two thousand five hundred dollars. For buoys to be placed on Old Maris Ledge, at the entrance of Penobscot Bay, five hundred dollars. For the erection of beacons on a reef of ledges at the entrance of Camden Harbor, one near Negro Island, and one near North—east Point, and for placing buoys on other ledges in said harbor, one thousand dollars. For the erection of beacons or spindles and placing of buoys on the ledges at the entrance of Naraguagus Harbor, one thousand dollars. For the erection of a harbor-light on a point of land lying west of the entrance of Buek’s Harbor, in Brooksville, three thousand five hundred Past P· 243- dollars. For the erection of beacons, buoys, and spindles between Owlshead and Whitehead light—houses, and through Muscle Ridge Channel, four thousand dollars. For the erection of four buoys at Goldsborough, at the following places: one on the south-east point of Calf Island; one on the western point of the Middle Ground, off Stone Island; one on Halt¥Tide Ledge, and one on a sunken rock at the entrance of Flanders Bay, two hundred dollars. For repairing or reconstructing the stone beacon on Buck Ledge, Penobscot River, five hundred dollars. New }Iampshirc.—For a beacon on Wiley’s Ledge and a spar-buoy New Hampshire_ on Half-Way Rock, in the harbor of Portsmouth, eight hundred dollars. Massachusetts. —For a light-boat near Sueconesset Shoal, north chan- iqassachusms, nel Vineyard Sound, twelve thousand dollars. For three buoys in Holmes’ Hole Harbor, three hundred dollars. For the erection of a beacon and the repair of beacons and for buoys in the harbor of Newburyport, two thousand dollars. For a beacon on Fawn Bar, near Deer Island, in Boston Harbor, in 1851,ch. 37. addition to the former appropriation, one thousand dollars. For two iron spindles on the north-east ledge of the Graves and on 1351,ch, 37, Harding’s Ledge, in Boston Harbor, in addition to the former appropri- pcs, ,,_ Sw ation, six thousand dollars. For a light-boat near Killpond Bar, or a light-house in the vicinity of it, as on examination may be thought most expedient, twelve thousand dollars. For a spar-buoy on Bibb Rock, near Welltleet Harbor, seventy-five dollars. For a buoy-boat on Great Rip, five hundred dollars. For a buoy-boat on Sand Shoal near north end of Bass Rip, five hundred dollars. The aboye buoys to be located under the direction of the Superintendent of Coast Survey. For a iirst class light-vessel to be moored on or near the New South Shoal of Nantucket, under the direction of the Superintendent of the Coast Survey, to he built under the direction of a competent naval architect, and fitted with a life-boat, duplicate moorings, and a fog-bell, the illuminating apparatus to be of large size parabolic reffectors and Argand lamps, to produce a light properly distinguished, which shall be von. x. Pon. -— 15