The river that bears explorer Henry Hudson's name looked like a good bet for discovering a "Northwest Passage" from the Atlantic to the Pacific, but alas, that was not to be.  What happened instead was that the river became the link to the heartland of America when the Erie Canal was completed in 1825 connecting the Hudson River with the Niagara River and the Great Lakes.  Starting with the Stony Point lighthouse, a disorganized system of lights was slowly replaced by as many as 14 lighthouses as river traffic boomed.
With the advent of GPS and other modern navigation aids, the lighthouses became less important and often neglected.  Preservation groups rallied and managed to preserve, even reconstruct completely, some of these picturesque relics of a different time.
These seven lighthouses are all active - and automated!  The keepers are no longer resident, and many preservation groups provide tours.  I took some artistic license and did not include the stupid-looking solar panel frameworks that detract from the beauty of each lighthouse.
The author of these scenery objects actually stood in the light housing of The Little Red Lighthouse many years ago - with his 6-month-old daughter strapped to his back. Little did he know he'd be modeling it later on.  Have you read "The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge" to your kids?
The bundle is really 8 drag-and-drop-installable packages.  You can pick and choose which ones to drag into your Community Folder.  The POI package is available too, but I hate those things! It's much more fun to fly up the river and "discover" them.