The Scharhörnbake was the most important daymark on the German North Sea coast for several centuries. First erected in 1661 by the City of Hamburg on the sandbank Scharhörn and south side of the Elbe estuary, it was rebuilt over centuries and taken down finally in 1979. Equipped with a room, it also functioned as a refuge beacon for shipwreck survivors from 1840 to 1965.[1][2][3] The only remaining element today is the boulder stone foundation near Nigehörn.

Scharhörnbake 1898
Scharhörnbake as an illustration on a 1721 map

With a height of 29.10 meters (95'6"), it was the highest daymark from 1898 until 23 December 1914 on the North Sea coast.

Often destroyed by storms, it was also taken down in wartime to make navigation harder for enemy ships.

Function

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Bearing (red) from the Rothe Ton via the Scharhörnbake to the Great Tower Neuwerk (1721)
 
View from the Rothe Ton with the Scharhörnbake (1) in front of the Great Tower Neuwerk (4) (1831)
 
The Scharhörn Baak (1) as part of the various navigational aids around and on Neuwerk (1831)

The main function of the daymark was to aid navigation for ships around the feared Scharhörn Reef into the Elbe coming from the North Sea. Many ships wrecked at this dangerous passage. As Hamburg depended most on this, it maintained sea marks around the reefs and the routes via the Südergatt und Nordergatt starting 1440. Coming from the sea the first and most important on starboard was the Rothe Ton. The bearing to the Great Tower Neuwerk via the Scharhörnbake was essential to spot is beacon (see red line).

Further bearings using the Great Tower Neuwerk were:

  • the Nordbake to obscure the Blüse Neuwerk and later the (small) Lighthouse Neuwerk to spot the Scharton (before the Vogelsand, blue line) and
  • the Werkbalger Bake to spot the Butterton (after the Vogelsand, green Linie).

Considering the cost and effort to build and maintain the Scharhörnbake as the highest daymark and the Great Tower Neuwerk as the oldest "sea tower" underlines the importance of the Elbe estuary to the city and state of Hamburg.

The room for refugees was added around 1840. The emergency provisions were routinely refreshed. As the sandbank Scharhön grew into an island by plantations, this function was made obsolete by the first shacks starting 1929.

Appearance

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Form and position varied with each reconstruction. At first, it was a wooden structure combining a pyramid and a square. It was not until the mid 19th century that it appeared in its striking form consisting of two diamonds above each other.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Soetbeer, Adolf (1840). Ueber Hamburgs Handel (in German). Hoffmann und Campe. p. 305.[1] at Google Books
  2. ^ Horst Tschentscher (1966). "Rezension von Lang, A. W.: Entwicklung, Aufbau und Verwaltung des Seezeichenwesens an der deutschen Nordseeküste bis zur Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts : Bonn, Der Bundesminister für Verkehr, 1965" (in German). Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  3. ^ Manfred Temme: Vogelfreistätte Scharhörn, Verein Jordsand, 1967
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"Scharhörn Bake". baken-net.de (in German). Retrieved 17 April 2017.

53°57′24″N 8°24′36″E / 53.95667°N 8.41000°E / 53.95667; 8.41000