Skegness Lifeboat Station
Skegness Lifeboat Station | ||
RNLI Lifeboat Station | ||
Skegness Lifeboat Station | ||
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Country | England | |
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County | Lincolnshire | |
District | East Lindsey | |
Town | Skegness | |
Location | Tower Esplanade, Skegness, Lincolnshire, PE25 3HH | |
- coordinates | 53°58′30.12″N 0°20′48.24″E / 53.9750333°N 0.3467333°E | |
Founded | 1830 taken over by RNLI in 1864 | |
Date | Current boathouse 1990 | |
Owner | Royal National Lifeboat Institution | |
1892 | | |
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Skegness Lifeboat Station is an RNLI operated lifeboat station located in the town of Skegness in the English county of Lincolnshire.[1] The station is located on the south-east coast north of the Wash and south of the Humber estuary. This is an area of the British coastline which is characterised by many shoals and constantly changing sandbanks, many of which lie between the town and the East Dudgeon Lightship.[2] The current station was built in1990[3] and was the first in the British Isles built especially to house a Mersey-class lifeboat. The boathouse also accommodates an Inshore Lifeboat and a souvenir shop. There are currently two lifeboats stationed at Skegness (2013). They are the Inshore D-class Lifeboat Peterborough Beer Festival IV and the Mersey-class AWB Lincolnshire Poacher (ON 1166).[4]
History
The first lifeboat service in Skegness was organized by the Lincolnshire Coast Shipwreck Association who placed a lifeboat at the Gibraltar Point coastguard station. In 1859 the lifeboat and boathouse was moved from Gibraltar Point to a position in Skegness, among sand dunes to a location now called Lifeboat Avenue.
1864
The station was taken under the control of the RNLI in 1864 who had a new boathouse constructed. The location of this first RNLI station was in Lifeboat Avenue close to the original station. It is now a privately owned dwelling.
1892
The RNLI built yet another new boathouse in 1892. this was located on Skegness South Parade to the south of the clock tower. This boathouse had an access doors for the lifeboat at either end of the building. There was also a watch room constructed on the first floor. This station was still in use until 1990 when it was sold to a private buyer.
1964
The RNLI placed an inshore lifeboat at Skegness in May 1964. The ILB was kept in a small house close to the main beach until it was moved in 1990 to the new lifeboat station on the Tower Esplanade.
1990
In 1990 it was decided that the cover for this area of the Lincolnshire coast would be greatly improved with the placing of a Mersey-class all-weather lifeboat on Skegness. To accommodate the new lifeboat a new purpose made station was constructed for the Mersey-class lifeboat on the Tower Esplanade. The inshore lifeboat was also placed within the same building as well as improved crew and equipment facilities. The building also included a souvenir shop to help with branch fund raising
Notable recues and awards
1854, Atlanta
Samual Moody[5][6] had been on the Skegness lifeboat as crew and as Coxswain for a considerable time. Back in 1851 he was sent a recommendation from the Lincoln County Association for having personally assisted in the saving of 53 lives over a period of 21 years. On the 18 October 1854[6] Coxswain Moody and his crew launched there lifeboat out to the stricken vessel Atlanta out of Shields. The brig had been driven on to the shore in a north-north-easterly gale three miles north of Skegness. The Skegness lifeboat had to be drawn up to the beach from the town by six horses before her launch.[6] Aboard the vessel was the captain, his wife and child and eight more members of its crew.[7] In pitch black and in heavy seas coxswain Moody took the private lifeboat out to the vessel and rescued all aboard. For his part in the rescue, Moody was awarded a Silver Medal.[6]
1875, the barge Star
On the 5 December 1875[8] [8] the lifeboat Herbert Ingram (first) had to be pulled two miles along the beach to rescue the Colchester barge Star which had been on passage from Hull to Poole when it was driven aground at Winthorne Gap in a fresh easterly gale. At 6 am in the morning the lifeboat was launched through heavy breaking surf into a headwind and took twenty minutes to reach the casualty.[8] Two crew men were immediately taken off the stricken vessel, but the master fell into the water between the two boats. Samual Moody and George Chesnutt, at great risk to themselves immediately went into the water with a line and held on to the master whilst the lifeboat was rowed to shore. For their bravery in this rescue both Moody and Chesnutt were awarded RNLI silver medals.[8]
1965, the Sea Gem
On the 28 December 1965[3] the Oakley-class lifeboat Charles Fred Grantham (ON 977) was launched to assist in the search following the sinking the previous day, of an Oil rig called Sea Gem 47 miles north-west of the Norfolk town of Cromer. Also involved in the search were the Wells-next-the-Sea Oakley-class lifeboat Ernest Tom Neatherercoat (ON 982), the relief Sheringham Oakley-class lifeboat James and Catherine Macfarlane (ON 989), Cromer lifeboat Henry Blogg (ON 840) and the Humber Watson-class lifeboat City of Bradford III (ON 911).[9] All the lifeboats were involved in this extensive search for survivors in heavy seas and a gale force wind. On board the Sea Gem when she sank were thirty two crew.[9] Nineteen of the crew were taken aboard the steamship Baltrova and five were known to have perished.[9] Eight other of her crew were missing. The Skegness boat was out for 14 hours[3] during the search and with little shelter and freezing conditions the crew carried out the search. The eight missing men were never recovered. For the lifeboats part in this long and arduous search the RNLI sent the station a letter of appreciation for there determination and high standard of seamanship during the service.
Station lifeboats
All weather lifeboats[10]
Dates in service | Class | ON | Name | Photo |
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1825 to 1864 | Plenty, 8 oars | Unnamed lifeboats of the Lincolnshire
Coast Shipwreck Association |
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1864 to 1874 | Self-righter, 8 oars | Herbert Ingram (first) | ||
1874 to 1888 | Self-righter, 10 oars | Herbert Ingram (second) | ||
1888 to 1906 | Self-righter, 12 oars | ON 203 | Ann, John and Mary | |
1906 to 1932 | Liverpool-class, 12 oars | ON 554 | Samuel Lewis | |
1932 to 1953 | Liverpool-class, motor | ON-760 | Anne Allen | |
1953 to 1964 | Liverpool-class, motor | ON 833 | The Cuttle | |
1964 to 1990 | Oakley-class, motor | ON 977 | Charles Fred Grantham | |
1990 to date (2013) | Mersey-class | ON 1166 | Lincolnshire Poacher | |
Inshore lifeboats[10]
Dates in service | Class | ON | Name | Photo |
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1964 | D/IB1-class | D 15 | Unnamed | |
1965 to 1972 | D/IB1-class | D 58 | Unnamed | |
1973 to 1987 | D/IB1-class | D 212 | Unnamed | |
1987 to 1994 | D/IB1-class | D 326 | Michel Phillipe Wolvers | |
1994 to 2002 | D/IB1-class | D 460 | Leicester Fox | |
2002 to 2009 | D/IB1-class | D 573 | Leicester Fox II | |
2009 to 2010 | D/IB1-class | D 538 | Tom Broom | |
2010 to date (2013) | D/IB1-class | D 739 | Peterborough Beer Festival IV | |
New Lifeboat
The station at Skegness will be given a new lifeboat which is expect on station in 2016. This will replace the current Mersey-class lifeboat Lincolnshire Poacher who by then will be reaching the end of her expected operational life.[11] The new lifeboat will be a Shannon-class lifeboat and will cost £1.5 million. Funding for the new lifeboat will come partly form a donation made by Mr Joel Grunnill who passed away 2011. Joe Grunnill was a volunteer who put in 45 years work helping the RNLI. The new lifeboat will be named after him and his cousin April who was also a keen volunteer.
Neighbouring stations
Lincolnshire | Mablethorpe Lifeboat Station |
North Sea | ||
Lincolnshire | North Sea | |||
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Lincolnshire | Lincolnshire | Hunstanton Lifeboat Station |
References
- ↑ OS Explorer map: Skegness, Alford & Spilsby: (1:25 000): ISBN 0 319 23822 6
- ↑ Skegness Lifeboats – An illustrated History. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Landmark Publishing Ltd. Year Published:2008. ISBN 9781843064243
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 For Those In Peril – The Lifeboat Service of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, Station by Station. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher: Silver Link Publishing Ltd, First Issue 1999. Work:Part 1, East Coast of England – Berwick to Hastings, Page 42, Skegness. ISBN 1 85794 129 2
- ↑ "Skegness Lifeboat Station". RNLI station web-site. RNLI. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
- ↑ "Skegness People - Samual Moody - lifeboat coxswain". Photograph of Samual Moody. Skegness Magazine. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Lifeboat Gallantry – RNLI Medals and how they were won. Author:Cox, barry. Publisher:Spink & Son Ltd and the RNLI. Work: Page 109, MOODY, Samuel. ISBN 0 907605 89 3
- ↑ "Skegness Magazine". Skegness First Lifeboat Rescues – 1833 to 1860 – List of rescues including the Atalanta and the 11 lives saved. Skegness Magazine. Retrieved 25 October 2013.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Lifeboat Gallantry – RNLI Medals and how they were won. Author:Cox, barry. Publisher:Spink & Son Ltd and the RNLI. Work: Page 160, MOODY, Samuel. CHESNUTT, George. ISBN 0 907605 89 3
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Lifeboats of the Humber – Two centuries of gallantry. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Amberley Publishing, first edition 2010. Work: Chapter 8, The last Watson Lifeboat, page72. ISBN 978 1 84868 875 9
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 "RNLI Skegness Lifeboats and Lifeguards". List of the stations lifeboats. Copyright © 1998-2014 Skegness RNLI Lifeboat Station. All Rights Reserved. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
- ↑ "New Lifeboat For Skegness". ITV news report about a new lifeboat for Skegness. © Copyright ITV plc 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2013.