Built in the 1800s by some of America’s foremost architects and engineers, lighthouse construction posed major challenges due to the rocky, wave-swept ledges and shifting sands. Stretching from Marshall Point in the south to Fort Point some 22 miles north of Camden, over 20 lighthouses can be visited. Penobscot Bay is Maine's largest coastal waterway. The Penobscot area includes more lighthouses than any other. Click on a lighthouse name or icon for more information on that lighthouse. Penobscot Bay Area To view posts on the following Penobscot Bay Lighthouses, click on the photo caption: Fort Point Lighthouse: Grindle Point Lighthouse: Curtis Island Lighthouse: Indian Island Lighthouse: Rockland Breakwater Lighthouse: Rockland Harbor Southwest Lighthouse: Owl's Head Lighthouse: Brown's Head Lighthouse : Goose Rocks Lighthouse: Saddleback Ledge Lighthouse: … It is a white tower with a black lantern. The lighthouse is a surprisingly short 30-foot cylindrical tower constructed of granite and brick. Penobscot Lighthouse Regional Map Copyright 2001-2008 Lighthousefriends.com Send us an e-maile-mail Lighthouses are art, history and culture, each unique in its design, and each with its own tale to tell of heroic rescues, romantic legends, shipwrecks, and ghosts. Owls Head Light (+44° 5' 33.00", -69° 2' 39.00") is located in Western Penobscot Bay, at the southern side of the entrance to Rockland Harbor. Tour Description: Cruise aboard a stable and comfortable jet-powered catamaran through Penobscot Bay from Bar Harbor to Bucksport during the peak of Fall Foliage. Approximately 30 miles long by 30 miles wide, it contains the major islands of Vinalhaven, North Haven, Islesboro, Deer Isle, and Isle au Haut. Along the way pass through Eggomoggin Reach and under the Deer Isle Bridge, visit Castine harbor, view …