-Ki-
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- Feb 12, 2009
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Here is a Swift map i found a couple years back, drawn by Joe Nickell, a historian and Swift buff...
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Swift was talking about standing on a overlook and looking west, from there he seen a hole in the cliff and could see the sky beyond....2Shoes said:"Lighthouse" Was that used for rock formations or anything other than regular lighthouses?
Diffrent names, same meaning......"lighthouse, needle-eye, and sometimes called window". These are not arches....swiftsearcher said:Ki, some of the older copied Swift Journals refer to the "Lighthouse Rock" as the "Needle's Eye" rock and, you are correct, it is West of the Rich Mine and the Buffalo and Table Top rocks (and the sinking creeks). There is one in my area that fits this EXACTLY, and is a rock jutting up high on a clift that looks EXACTLY like a needle with a hole near the top (hence, Needle's Eye Rock). I have several pics of it. The only bad thing is that the leaves were still on the trees when I took them, but you can still make out the rock nicely.
rhoodphoto said:Ki,
Do you think your lighthouse (pictured above) is the same one I posted? Looks a lot alike I think.