Site Navigation:
Searchable Databases
Articles Archive
Pacific Nautical Heritage...
- Gallery of Light and Buoy Images
- Gallery of Mariners
- Gallery of Ship Images
- Gallery of Ship Wrecks
- Gallery of Monuments and Statues
- Gallery of Nautical Images
- Gallery of Freshwater Images
- Gallery of New Books
Canadian Naval Topics…
- Nautical History Videos
- UNTD
- British Columbia Heritage
- Arctic and Northern Nautical Heritage
- Western Canada Boat and Ship Builders
- Gallery of Arctic Images
- Reflections on Nautical Heritage
- British Columbia Heritage
Site Search:
Looking for more? Search for Articles on the Nauticapedia Site.
Quatsino Light
by Captain Alec Provan and John MacFarlane 2016
Quatsino Island Light (Photo from the Captain Alec Provan collection.)
Quatsino (List of Lights 68 G5178) is a White cylindrical tower located on the North side of the entrance of Quatsino Sound on the SE end of Kains Island. Flash 0.1 s; eclipse 4.9 s. Visible from 224° through W., N. and E. to 104°. In operation 24 hours. Year round. Chart:3686 Edn 03/11(P11-004).
Keepers: Nels C. Nelson (1907–1915); James H. Sadler (1915–1919); Robert S. Nosler (1919–1919); R. Allan (1919–1919); James Quin (1919–1922); Alfred Dickenson (1922–1925); Sydney Warren (1925–1929)
Quatsino Light (Photo from the Captain Alec Provan collection.)
Kains Island was named for Thomas Kains (1850–1901) who served as the Surveyor General of British Columbia.
References: Donald Graham ((1985) Keepers of the Light; Andrew Scott (2009) The Encyclopedia of Raincoast Place Names; Peter Johnson and John Walls (2015) To The Lighthouse;
To quote from this article please cite:
Provan, Captain Alec and John MacFarlane (2016) Kains Island Light. Nauticapedia.ca 2016. http://nauticapedia.ca/Gallery/Light_KainsIsland.php
Site News: August 18, 2024
The vessel database has been updated and is now holding 93,618 vessel histories (with 15,919 images and 13,842 records of ship wrecks and marine disasters). The mariner and naval biography database has also been updated and now contains 58,620 entries (with 4,020 images).
In 2023 the Nauticapedia celebrated the 50th Anniversary of it’s original inception in 1973 (initially it was on 3" x 5" file cards). It has developed, expanded, digitized and enlarged in those ensuing years to what it is now online. If it was printed out it would fill more than 300,000 pages!
My special thanks to our volunteer IT adviser, John Eyre, who (since 2021) has modernized, simplified and improved the update process for the databases into semi–automated processes. His participation has been vital to keeping the Nauticapedia available to our netizens.
Also my special thanks to my volunteer content accuracy checker, John Spivey of Irvine CA USA, who has proofread thousands of Nauticapedia vessel histories and provided input to improve more than 11,000 entries. His attention to detail has been a huge unexpected bonus in improving and updating the vessel detail content.