The King’s Appartment
Floor in black and white marble. Each side of the door is a chimney : the one on the right was used by the
keepers until 1789, the one on the left is a dummy. On the walls are consoles bearing the busts of Augustin
Fresnel, inventor of the stepped lamp; Beautemps-Baupré, father of modern meteorology; Léonce Reynaud and Léon
Bourdelles, two of the Directors of the Lighthouse and Beacon Services. In this room, as in those that follow,
a circular hole, or oculus, enabled the keepers, from 1790, to raise to the top of the tower by means of a
hoist the combustible materials needed for lighting the lanterns: wood, charcoal, peat, tar, whale blubber,
oil, paraffin. A glass showcase which was previously in the storeroom displays different lamps used since
the electrification of the lighthouse, as well as the lamp of last resort, fuelled by paraffin, and called
Aladdin’s Lamp.
Opposite the entrance, on both sides of the access to the terrace, two wooden pieces of furniture contained
the paraffin when the lighthouse was furnished with a paraffin vapour lamp, just before electrification in
1948.
Noteworthy, in the security access to the terrace, are two doors surmounted by heads carved in stone. These
heads were both restored at the same time during the 50s; although the one on the left is in perfect condition
that on the right is very eroded. The wind which filtered through the loose-fitting door always turned in the
same direction because of the Coriolis force, and caused this erosion.