HUDSON, N.Y. — The race is on to keep a 150-year-old lighthouse from crumbling into the Hudson River.
Wooden pilings beneath Hudson-Athens Lighthouse are deteriorating, and the structure, built in the middle of the river when steamboats still plied the water, is beginning to shift. Cracks are apparent on the brick building and its granite foundation.
While there are other endangered lighthouses around the nation, the peril to this one 100 miles 161 (kilometers) north of New York City is so dire the National Trust for Historic Preservation placed Hudson-Athens on its 2024 list of the country's 11 most endangered historic places. Advocates say that if action isn't taken soon, yet another historic lighthouse could be lost in the coming years.
"All four corners will begin to come down, and then you'll have a pile of rock in the middle. And ultimately it will topple into the river," Van Calhoun of the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse Preservation Society said during a recent visit.
The society is trying to quickly raise money to place a submerged steel curtain around the lighthouse, an ambitious preservation project that could cost as much as $10 million. Their goal is to save a prominent symbol of the river's centuries-long history as a busy waterway. While the Hudson River was once home to more than a dozen lighthouses, only seven still stand.
Elsewhere, there's a similar story of lost history.
Across the United States, there were around 1,500 lighthouses at the beginning of the 20th century. Only about 800 of them remain, said U.S. Lighthouse Society executive director Jeff Gales. He said many of the structures deteriorated after they were automated, a process that became more common by the 1940s.
''Lighthouses were built to have human beings taking care of them,'' Gales said. ''And when you seal them up and take the human factor out, that's when they really start falling into disrepair.''