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Rose Island (Rhode Island)

Geography of Newport, Rhode IslandIslands of Narragansett BayIslands of Newport County, Rhode IslandIslands of Rhode IslandRhode Island geography stubs
Aerial view of the 1870 Rose Island Light
Aerial view of the 1870 Rose Island Light

Rose Island is an 18.5-acre (7.5 ha) island in Narragansett Bay off Newport, Rhode Island, United States. It is allegedly named "Rose Island" because at low tide the island appears to be shaped like a rose. The Island is only accessible by boat. The island and its lighthouse are run by the private, non-profit Rose Island Lighthouse Foundation.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Rose Island (Rhode Island) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Rose Island (Rhode Island)
Newport Bridge, Newport

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.496363888889 ° E -71.341138888889 °
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Address

Rose Island Lighthouse

Newport Bridge
02840 Newport
Rhode Island, United States
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Aerial view of the 1870 Rose Island Light
Aerial view of the 1870 Rose Island Light
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Nearby Places

Luce Hall
Luce Hall

Luce Hall was the first purpose-built building for the U.S. Naval War College, founded at Newport, Rhode Island, in 1884. It is located at Building 1, Luce Avenue, Naval Station Newport. The building is named after Rear Admiral Stephen Luce. In a Flemish style inspired by the town hall and guild halls on the Grote Markt in Antwerp, Belgium, local Newport architects George C. Mason & Son designed the building for the Navy with gables facing Narragansett Bay. It was completed on 22 May 1892 at the cost of $82,875, with the remainder of the $100,000 Congressional appropriation being spent on heating and equipment. The building was originally designed to have four sets of officers' quarters, one in each corner of the building, with the College classrooms, library, and administration located in the center section. This usage remained until 1914, when the entire building was opened for official uses. The building was the main administrative building for the Naval War College from 1892, when Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan was President of the Naval War College for his second time, until 1974 during the presidency of Vice Admiral Stansfield Turner, when the president's office was moved to newly constructed Conolly Hall. The building was designated part of a National Historic Landmark District, along with the building that is now the Naval War College Museum (which housed the college's first facilities but was built in 1819 to house Newport's poor), in 1964. It was separately listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.