Gallery
Berry Head Lighthouse
Position 50 24.0 N 03 28.9 W

Torbay and Brixham Roads have long been sheltered anchorages, surrounded as they are by high hills and cliffs. Fortifications were erected on the headland in 1793 against threatened invasion by French armies and strengthened with limestone in 1803, when gun batteries were added to protect the anchorages. They were dismantled by 1820 and returned to civilian use, but the ramparts remain, overgrown with ivy.
At the end of Berry Head, beyond the coastguard station, is the lighthouse, which forms part of the chain of south coast beacons. The lighthouse, which was built in 1906, was converted to unwatched acetylene operation in 1921 and modernised and converted to mains electricity in 1994. It came to be known as the smallest, highest and deepest light in the British Isles - the tower is diminutive, requiring no further elevation than that given by the headland itself, and the optic was originally turned by the action of a weight falling down a 45m deep shaft, now made redundant by a small motor.
Specifications
| Established | 1906 |
| Height Of Tower | 5 Metres |
| Height Of Light Above Mean High Water | 58 Metres |
| Automated | 1921 |
| Electrified | 1994 |
| Optic | 500MM, 3rd Order Rotating Optic |
| Lamp | 60 Watt |
| Character | White Group Flashing Twice Every 15 Seconds |
| Intensity | 9,000 Candela |
| Range Of Light | 14 nautical miles |

