
Channel Island map, showing location of Casquets
'Les Casquets' or The 'Casquets', () are a group of
rocks 13
km northwest of
Alderney and are part of an underwater
sandstone ridge. Other parts which emerge above the water are the islets of
Burhou and
Ortac. Little vegetation grows on them. The "t" is pronounced in English, with the stress on the second syllable (''cass-KETS'').
Origin of name
Theories as to the origin of the name include:
★ derivation from the
French 'cascade', which alludes to the
tidal surges which flow around them;
★ derivation from 'casque', referring to the helmet-like shape of the rocks;
★ derivation from 'cas' (broken) and 'quet' (rock).
A map (''Leyland map'') dated from around 1640 gives a Latin name ''Casus Rupes'' (broken rocks), which would seem to confirm the third theory above.
[1], but which may be a
folk etymology.
History
Wrecks
There have been numerous
wrecks on the
islets, the most famous include
HMS ''Victory'', wrecked in
1744 and
SS ''Stella'' in
1899. The ''
Ievoli Sun'' sank there in 2000.
A recent example is the ''Kleine Familie'' in
2006 [1], and is being investigated by
BEAmer, the French marine accident authority.
Casquets Lighthouses

The Casquets from the air, showing the lighthouse on the centre island
The first
lighthouses started operation on
30 October 1724, and were three towers lit by
coal fires called St Peter, St Thomas and the Dungeon. Three
stone towers were built to give the lights a distinctive appearance which would not be confused with lighthouses in nearby
France.
They were built by Thomas Le Cocq, owner of the rocks, under licence from
Trinity House and who was paid a halfpenny per ton of
ship when vessels passed the rocks and in turn he paid Trinity House 50 pounds per year for the right to run the lighthouses. The lighthouses reverted back to Trinity House in 1785.
They were converted to oil lamps with metal reflectors which were first used on
25 November 1790; and upgraded again with apparatus to rotate a beam of light in 1818. This had a
clockwork mechanism which was wound up every hour and a half and gave one flash every 15 seconds.
The lighthouses were badly damaged and the
lanterns smashed in a severe
storm on
31 October 1823. The towers were raised by a further 30 feet (10 m) in 1854, and equipped with 184 kilo
candela lamps which gave three slow flashes every half minute. In 1877 the North West Tower was raised again and the lights in the other two towers discontinued.
British commandos of the
Small Scale Raiding Force made two raids during the
Second World War on the lighthouse, following the
German occupation of the Channel Islands in 1940. The first raid, Operation Dryad, took place on
2-
3 September 1942 and the seven keepers were taken back to
England as
prisoners of war.
Conversion to electric light took place in 1954, with the installation of a 2,830 kilocandela lamp. The lamp is unusual in that it rotates counter-clockwise. At the same time, the other two towers were reduced in height.
The current light in the 23 metre North West Tower is 37 metres above mean sea level and flashes five times every 30 seconds and with flashes 3.7 seconds apart. It can be seen for around 24 nautical miles (44 km) in clear weather. The East Tower contains the
foghorn, which produces two blasts every 60 seconds and this has a nominal range of three nautical miles (6 km). The South West Tower is topped with a
helipad and there is another helipad on a flat section of the rock. The rocks are also marked using
racon with a
Morse letter T on
radar displays. The lighthouse complex was automated in
1990 and is monitored and controlled from the Trinity House Operations Control Centre in
Harwich.
The Casquets in literature
Swinburne's ''Les Casquets''
A.C. Swinburne's poem, ''Les Casquets'' is based on the Houguez family who actually lived on the island for 18 years. The Houguez were originally from Alderney, and the poem describes their life on Les Casquets. The daughter falls in love with a carpenter from Alderney, but moving to his island, finds life there too busy. She finds the "small bright streets of serene
St Anne" and "the sight of the works of men" too much, and returns to Les Casquets.
Victor Hugo's ''L'Homme qui Rit''
Victor Hugo, who lived on
Guernsey, and who wrote much about the Channel Islands says in his novel, ''
The Laughing Man'' (''L'Homme qui Rit''):
:"To be wrecked on the Casquets is to be cut into ribbons; to strike on the
Ortac is to be crushed into powder... On a straight frontage, such of that of the Ortac, neither the wave nor the cannon ball can ricochet... if the wave carries the vessel on the rock she breaks on it, and is lost..."
References
1. ''Alderney Place Names'', Royston Raymond, 1999 Alderney ISBN 0-9537127-0-2
★
SS ''Stella'' Website
★
Trinity House website
★
The Lighthouses of Alderney
★
Alderney society and museum - Geology
★ ''Channel Islets'' - Victor Coysh
External links
★
Thumbnails of pictures of the Casquets