James Beeching
James Beeching (1788 - 7 June 1858) was an English boat builder who invented a "self-righting lifeboat" and designed a type of fishing boat which became characteristic of the port of Great Yarmouth in the 19th century. He also built ships for the smuggling trade.[2]
Life and work
Beeching was born at Bexhill in Sussex (now East Sussex), in 1788, to a family who had connections with the smuggling trade, and served an apprenticeship in nearby Hastings as a boat builder. In 1809, he married Martha Thwaites (1789–1831), daughter of shipowner Thomas Thwaites - they went on to have nine children. Beeching and a partner ran a shipbuilding yard in Hastings for several years until it went bust in 1816 and was purchased by Thomas Thwaites. He then went over to Flushing in the Netherlands, and built many craft, including several involved in the English smuggling trade such as the famous smuggling cutter known as "Big Jane", launched in 1819.[3] On leaving Flushing he settled at Great Yarmouth in Norfolk where he introduced a design of fishing-vessel that became characteristic of that port until the advent of steam power.[2][4]
In the first half of the 19th century, the overall condition of Britain's lifeboats was found, by the admiralty, to be very unsatisfactory. In 1848, of the 100 boats available, only 55 were found to be in good repair, and many of these were compromised by being of too heavy construction; 21 boats were found to be unfit for use. Lifeboat design was not standardised and the boats available, though an improvement on ordinary vessels, were still all too vulnerable to the inrush of water on heavy seas which could lead to capsizing and loss of life amongst crews.[5]
Hence, in 1851, attempts were made, under the auspices of Albert the Prince Consort, to revive the activity of the National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck, the affairs of which had fallen to such a low ebb.[2] A competition was initiated by the Admiralty for a new, improved lifeboat which would meet criteria of: (a) being self-righting, (b) being of lighter construction than before and easier to launch and transport, (c) able to free itself of water faster (i.e. self-draining) and (d) lower cost.[6]
The Duke of Northumberland, president of the Institution, offered to fund a prize of £100 for the best scale model of a new lifeboat, and another £100 towards the cost of building it. Out of 280 models sent in from all parts of the world (a selection of which were displayed at the famous Crystal Palace exhibition of 1851), Beeching's "self-righting" design[7] was awarded the prize. With a few slight modifications made by James Peake, who was a master shipwright at Woolwich Dockyard and one of the competition judges, this design became the standard model for the new fleet of lifeboats acquired by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.[2][8] It was known as the Beeching-Peake SR (self-righting) lifeboat.[9]
So confident was Beeching of the merits of his design, that he built a boat on the same model before the prize was awarded, and this was subsequently purchased by the trustees of Ramsgate Harbour in December 1851. "The Northumberland",[5][10] as it was called, was 36 feet long and had 12 oars; she became the first self-righting lifeboat and was said to have been "one of the most frequently used and useful lifeboats in the United Kingdom",[11] saving the lives of several hundred people on the Goodwin Sands.[2]
James Beeching died on 7 June 1858, aged 70.[2] The firm, "Beeching Brothers" (founded 1795) continued to build ships in Great Yarmouth for several decades after his death well into the 20th century, eventually including steam-powered vessels.[12]
Legacy
Beeching's self-righting lifeboat, together with other changes instituted by the RNLI, greatly improved Britain's lifeboat service in the latter half of the 19th century. The number of boats was increased from 96 in 1850 to 242 in 1874, and their improved reliability contributed to the saving of countless lives of both mariners and lifeboatmen.[6]
See also
- Cromer Lifeboat Benjamin Bond Cabbell II ON 12, built by James Beeching & Brothers and launched in 1884.
- Henry Greathead (1757–1818), lifeboat builder.
- Lionel Lukin (1742–1834), inventor of the lifeboat.
- William Wouldhave (1751–1821), produced the first self-righting design.
- Higgins boat - who also built for both navy and for smugglers.
References
- ↑ Folkard, Henry Coleman. The sailing boat: a description of English and foreign boats (Longmans, Green & Co., 1870) pp. 113-130.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Chichester, Henry Manners (1885). "Beeching, James". In Stephen, Leslie. Dictionary of National Biography 04. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 123–4.
- ↑ The history of the first lifeboats at Hastings (Hastings & St. Leonard's observer, 4 April 2008).
- ↑ Beeching family tree.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Gilmore, John. Storm warriors: or, Life-boat work on the Goodwin Sands p. 32 ff.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Lewis, Richard. History of the Life-Boat, and Its Work (MacMillan & Co., 1874) pp. 27-38.
- ↑ Self-righting lifeboat, 1861.
- ↑ A new organisation formed from old "National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck".
- ↑ Bierens, J. J. L. M. Handbook on drowning: prevention, rescue treatment (Birkhäuser, 2005) pp. 7-8.
- ↑ Northumberland model lifeboat (The Mechanics Magazine Museum, volume 55, 6 Sep 1851).
- ↑ The Lifeboat, Journal of the National Life-boat Institution, volume 5 (1865) p. 153.
- ↑ {Who%3F}+%3D+{Beeching+Bros}+%29&submitButton=Show+hits Record of the Norfolk Museums and Arachaeology service for Beeching Bros.
Further reading
- Committee appointed to examine the life-boat models submitted to compete for the premium offered by the Duke of Northumberland. Report to which is added, a list of the existing life-boat stations etc. (1851).
- Nicolson, F. E. Lifeboats, Journal of the Royal United Service Institution, Volume 6, Issues 21-24 (Mitchell, 1863) pp. 30–59.
External links
- Covent Garden II (Caister Lifeboat built by Beeching in 1883).
- The Boys/Godsend (Caister Lifeboat built by Beeching in 1867).