Home Page
Home Page Profiles Subscribe Join Our Membership or Edit your data! Lighthouse Calendar Online Store Lighthouse Digest Online Lighthouse Forums Lighthouse Explorer Database Visit Us in Wells Maine!
Free Catalog Get a Free Copy of Lighthouse Digest!

  
Help?

FAQ's  E-News

Review Your Cart

Great Lakes Lighthouse Courses On the Web

01/26/04 7:45 PM


Search!

Advertising
Support Our Advertisers

New at the Depot

Home
Free Catalog
Subscriptions
Contributors
Lighthouse Database
Doomsday List
Links
Archives
How to Advertise

Harbour Lights
Jewelry
Books
Furnishings
Videos
Prints
Lefton
Clothing
Puzzles/Games
More
full list...

1-800-758-1444

Home>Digest>Archives>04/00

Great Lakes Lighthouse Courses On the Web

   


You can see an enlarged version of this picture by clicking here.
>> Click to enlarge << 15Kb
Frederick Stonehouse

For the first time ever, two instructional courses on Great Lakes lighthouses will be offered on the World Wide Web. Maritime historian and author Frederick Stonehouse, adjunct faculty at Northern Michigan University, Marquette, Michigan, will be the instructor for both courses. "No matter where you are in the world, if you can access the Internet, you will be able to take these courses," Stonehouse said. "While we expect to reach traditional students looking to fill in their programs with an exciting academic elective, we know there are others that would jump at the chance to study the lights."

HS-295, Great Lakes Lighthouses, (2 credits) will be offered through the Northern Michigan University Continuing Education Department at "www.nmu.edu/ce/independent" Click on "web-based," then scroll down to "HS-295." Tuition for the credit course is $270. All course requirements will be completed via the Internet, eliminating the need to visit the campus or submit material by mail. Credit students can enroll starting with the summer semester.

Lighthouses of the Great Lakes, a non-credit version of the HS-295 course, will be offered through "www.learninglighthouses.com" for a tuition of $150.

Stonehouse explained the difference between the two courses. "The credit course will adhere rigidly to high academic standards consistent with the university environment. The non-credit one will focus on the legion of lighthouse enthusiasts who just want to learn more about lighthouses on the Great Lakes."

Both courses will help the student understand the role and development of Great Lakes lighthouses. They emphasize the details of their construction, lighting apparatus, the daily routine of keepers, general organization and management, and significant Great Lakes lights. Students will acquire a thorough understanding of how these lighthouses actually operated and a general knowledge of U.S. lighthouses.

Northern Michigan University and Learninglighthouses.com are leading the way into the new millennium by using the World Wide Web to help students understand this important part of Great Lakes history.

For more information you can contact Frederick Stonehouse at: Stone@bresnanlink.net or 906-226-6014

MEET THE TEACHER: Frederick Stonehouse holds a Master of Arts degree in History from Northern Michigan University, Marquette, Michigan and has authored sixteen books on Great Lakes maritime history, including the regional best sellers of Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald and Great Lakes Lighthouse Tales. His book, Wreck Ashore, the U.S. Life Saving Service on the Great Lakes, won a national publishing award and is the predominant work on the subject. Another book, Haunted Lakes, Great Lakes Maritime Ghost Stories, Superstitions and Sea Serpents, has opened an entirely new genre in Great Lakes study. He is also a contributor to an Encyclopedia of American Literature of the Sea and the Great Lakes.

He has been a consultant for both the U.S. National Park Service and Parks Canada and has been an "on-air" expert for National Geographic, Discovery and History Channels, as well as many regional media productions.

Fred has taught Great Lakes maritime history at Northern Michigan University and is an active consultant for numerous Great Lakes oriented projects and programs.

His articles have been published in Skin Diver, Great Lakes Cruiser, Wreck and Rescue and Lake Superior magazines as well as other publications. He is a member of the National Board of Directors of the U.S. Life-Saving Service Heritage Association and President of the Board of the Marquette Maritime Museum.

This story appeared in the April 2000 edition of Lighthouse Digest Magazine. For subscription information about the print edition, click here.

All contents copyright © 1995 - 2004 by Lighthouse Digest®, Inc. No story, photograph, or any other item on this website may be reprinted or reproduced without the express permission of Lighthouse Digest. For contact information, click here.

Keepers Picks

Build your own lighthouse watch!

Mount Greylock War Memorial Replica Mount Greylock War Memorial Replica

Shore Thing V-Neck Pullover Shore Thing V-Neck Pullover

Hatteras Knot Scroll Hatteras Knot Scroll

Contact Us  About Us  Returns Policies  Email Policy  Privacy  Press  Copyright   FAQ's Awards

We support the efforts of The American Lighthouse Foundation. You can too!