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The new design of the site coincides with the publication of my book, Lighthouses: The race to illuminate the world, co-authored by Peter Williams and published by New Holland in October 2008. This book was three years in the making and we hope it will appeal to a broad readership, beyond just lighthouse enthusiasts. You can find out more about it in the Lighthouse Book section.

The section on the Chance Family was originally written for the epilogue of the book but I removed it when it began to deviate from the main theme of lighthouses. I have always been fascinated by the Chance family history. Parts of it have been written up over the years, on both sides of the Atlantic, but a full account is yet to appear.

The most comprehensive came from the pen of my great great uncle, James Frederick Chance, who wrote the history of the firm of Chance Brothers and an account of the lighthouse work of his father, Sir James Chance, Bt. My grandfather, Sir Hugh Chance, wrote a somewhat tedious update to the firm’s history, from 1919 to the 1970s, but Pilkington’s (who acquired Chance Brothers in 1945) declined to publish it and he died before a publisher could be found. The transfer of the business archives from St Helens to Smethwick is perhaps the catalyst for a serious historian to write a comprehensive history.

The Chance family (or the branch that I belong to) traces its roots to the English Midlands, and especially the county of Worcestershire. The best website for a general history of the family is the Revolutionary Players site, found here.

Jan Symes, the author of the section on the Chance family, has done a great piece of research and the site is very well illustrated.

My parents, Sir Jeremy and Lady Chance, have spent much of the past few years working with the librarians at the Sandwell Library in Smethwick to document the family archives which they donated to the library in 2002...read more


Lighthouses attempts to fill the gap in lighthouse history concerning the development of illumination technology during the 19th and early 20th centuries. The main characters are James Chance, who started the lighthouse department at the firm founded by his uncle Lucas Chance in 1822; and Sir David Brewster, a radical Scottish optical scientist whose entreaties to the British establishment to take the lighthouse question seriously from the 1820s were largely ignored until a Royal Commission on...read more
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