Plymouth Lifeboat Station
Plymouth Lifeboat Station | |
---|---|
Former names | Millbay Customs Office |
General information | |
Type | Lifeboat station |
Address | Custom House Lane |
Town or city | Plymouth, Devon |
Country | England |
Coordinates | 50°21′47″N 4°09′01″W / 50.36301°N 4.15038°W |
Current tenants | Royal National Lifeboat Institution |
Completed | 1850 (as customs office) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | George Wightwick |
Designations | Grade II |
Website | |
www |
Plymouth Lifeboat Station is the base for
History
Plymouth was one of the towns that received one of the Lloyds North Country-class lifeboats in the first decade of the nineteenth century, but it never saw service. In 1825 a new lifeboat was provided by the new National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck (renamed the Royal National Lifeboat Institution in 1854), but this too saw no use.[1]
A new lifeboat station was established in Plymouth in 1862 with a lifeboat house on the West Wharf of the outer basin of
An Inshore Rescue Boat (IRB) was first stationed at Plymouth in May 1967. For the first year. this was a D-class inflatable lifeboat. Larger A-class ILBs were then provided, 18-foot (5.5 m) Hatch and McLachlan lifeboats. The McLachlan class boat was withdrawn in 1983.
In 2004, an Inshore boat was again put on station at Plymouth, the 7.5-metre (25 ft) Atlantic 75 Millennium Forester (B-775).[4].
The current Inshore boat is the
Service awards
A number of rescues carried out by the station's lifeboats have been recognised by letters, certificates and medals from the RNLI management, including three that resulted in a total of four bronze medals.
- Coxswain Walter Crowther was awarded a medal after the Robert and Marcella Beck was called out on 13 January 1942 (during the Sunderland flying boat of the Royal Australian Air Force which had been blown onto rocks in a storm. The lifeboat crew managed to get a rope across to the flying boat and towed her and her crew to safety.[6]
- Another medal was awarded to Coxswain John Dare "for his courage, determination and excellent seamanship" on 16 January 1974. A Danish coaster, the Merc Enterprise had capsized 26 miles (42 km) south of Rame Head. The lifeboat Thomas Forehead and Mary Rowse fought through hurricane-force winds to reach the casualty. A helicopter managed to winch seven people out of the water while the lifeboat searched for other survivors but failed to find any.[7]
- The third bronze medal rescue involved the Thomas Forehead and Mary Rowse II on 15 February 1978. The Elly Gerda ran aground near Looe in a Force 8 storm. The lifeboat managed to rescue two of the trawler's crew but the heavy seas then washed the trawler off the rocks. The lifeboat escorted it back into harbour and then returned to Plymouth, where it had left its berth nearly 14 hours earlier. The RNLI awarded medals to both the Coxswain, Patrick Marshall, and the Mechanic, Cyril Alcock, "for their courage, determination and seamanship".[8]
Station Honours
The following are awards made at Plymouth[9][10]
- James Craggs, Boatman, H.M. Coastguard - 1825
- John Miller, Boatman, H.M. Coastguard - 1825
- Richard Eddy, Pilot - 1825
- Lt. John Woolland Bake, RN, H.M. Coastguard - 1828
- Francis M. Strong, Second Master, H.M.S. Spartiate - 1833
- Thomas Huss, Master's Assistant, RN, H.M.S. Rover - 1833
- Augustus Charles May, Mate, RN, H.M.S. Rover - 1833
- Lt. Adrian Thomas Mann, RN, H.M. Coastguard- 1833
- Richard Eddy, Pilot - 1834 (Second-Service Silver Medal)
- Richard Eddy, Pilot - 1834 (Third-Service Silver Boat)
- Lt. Thomas Holloway Holman, RN, H.M. Coastguard - 1838
- James Samuel William Grandy, Mate, Revenue Cutter Harpy - 1839
- Andrew Gillespie, Gunner, Revenue Cutter Stork - 1839
- Lt. John Cornish, RN, H.M. Coastguard - 1843
- William Teel, Coxswain - 1884
- Walter Crowther, Coxswain - 1942
- John Dare, Coxswain - 1974
- Patrick John Marshall, Second Coxswain - 1978
- Cyril Alcock, Motor Mechanic - 1978
- Sean Marshall, Second Coxswain - 2002
- The Thanks of the Institution inscribed on Vellum
- Eight crew members - 1942
- John Dare, Coxswain - 1985
- Patrick Marshall, Coxswain - 1995
- David Milford, Coxswain - 2002
- David Milford, Coxswain - 2003
- Sean Marshall, Second Coxswain - 2003
Facilities
Since 1992 the all-weather lifeboat has been moored afloat in the Millbay Marina, which is on the eastern side of the outer basin. The inshore lifeboat is kept next to it in a floating cradle.[11]
Crew facilities and storage are in the old Customs Office on the quay close to the moorings. This is a Grade II Listed building which was erected in 1850 to the design of George Wightwick. It is built from granite, octagonal in plan and three storeys high. This gave the customs officers all-round views of the area.[12][13][14]
Area of operation
The RNLI aims to reach any casualty up to 50 miles (80 km) from its stations, and within two hours in good weather. To do this the
Plymouth lifeboats
Pulling and sailing lifeboats
'Pulling and sailing' lifeboats were equipped with oars but could use sails when conditions allowed.
At Plymouth | ON | Name | Built | Class | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1800s | – | – | ? | North Country | [1] |
1825–? | – | – | 1825 | Newbury | [1] |
1862–1873 | – | Prince Consort | 1862 | Peake | [6][Note 1] |
1873–1885 | – | Clemency | 1873 | Peake | [6] |
1885–1898 | 44 | Escape | 1885 | Peake | [6][17] |
1898–1922 | 412 | Eliza Avins | 1898 | Peake | [18] |
1922–1926 | 531 | Reserve No.6A | 1904 | Peake | [19][Note 2] |
Motor lifeboats
At Plymouth[5] | ON[a] | Op. No.[b] | Name | Built | Class | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1926–1943 | 696 | – | Robert and Marcella Beck | 1926 | Barnett | |
1943–1946 | – | Minister Anseels | [Note 3] | |||
1946–1947 | 671 | – | The Brothers | 1922 | Watson | |
1947–1952 | 696 | – | Robert and Marcella Beck | 1926 | Barnett | [Note 4] |
1952–1974 | 890 | – | Thomas Forehead and Margaret Rowse | 1952 | Barnett | [Note 5] |
1974–1987 | 1028 | 44-010 | Thomas Forehead and Margaret Rowse II | 1974 | Waveney | [Note 6] |
1988–2002 | 1136 | 52-40 | City of Plymouth | 1987 | Arun | [Note 7] |
2003– | 1264 | 17-35 | Sybil Mullen Glover | 2002 | Severn |
Inshore lifeboats 1967–1983
At Plymouth[5] | Op. No. | Name | Built | Class | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1967–1968 | D-130 | (no name) | 1967 | D-class (RFD PB16) | |
1968–1972 | A-1 (18-01) |
(no name) | 1966 | A-class (Hatch)
|
[Note 8] |
1972–1977 | A-509 | (no name) | 1972 | A-class (McLachlan)
|
|
1977–1979 | A-507 (18-007) |
(no name) | 1972 | A-class (McLachlan)
|
|
1979–1980 | A-506 (18-006) |
(no name) | 1972 | A-class (McLachlan)
|
|
1980–1983 | A-507 (18-007) |
(no name) | 1972 | A-class (McLachlan)
|
The inshore lifeboat was withdrawn from Plymouth in 1983.
Inshore lifeboats from 2004
At Plymouth[5] | Op. No. | Name | Built | Class | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004–2005 | B-775 | Millennium Forester | 2001 | B-class (Atlantic 75)
|
|
2005 | B-700 | Susan Peacock | 1993 | B-class (Atlantic 75)
|
[Note 9] |
2005–2006 | B-769 | Coventry and Warwickshire | 2001 | B-class (Atlantic 75)
|
[Note 10] |
2006–2018 | B-775 | Millennium Forester | 2001 | B-class (Atlantic 75)
|
|
2016–2020 | A-31 | Unnamed | – | Arancia-class | |
2018– | B-908 | Annabel E Jones | 2018 | B-class (Atlantic 85)
|
Notes
- ^ Prince Consort was withdrawn following damage incurred while rescuing 12 people from two vessels in a gale on 8 December 1872.
- ^ Reserve No.6A was previously Brothers Freeman at Littlehampton before being transferred to Plymouth.
- ^ Robert and Marcella Beck was requisitioned by the Admiralty and stationed in Iceland during World War II. Its place was taken by the Minister Anseele, a Belgian lifeboat, found derelict in the English Channel early in the war, repaired and loaned by the Belgian Government to the British lifeboat fleet.
- ^ Robert and Marcella Beck returned to station in 1947 but was sold in 1952. It was reported in use as a pleasure boat at Hamburg in 2008 carrying the names Blasbeg/Idle Hours
- ^ Thomas Forehead and Margaret Rowse served in the RNLI relief fleet until 1981. It was sold two years later and was reported in 2009 as being at Larne having been converted to a pleasure boat and renamed Ornsay.
- ^ Thomas Forehead and Margaret Rowse II was stationed at Fowey until 1996 and then spent some time in the relief fleet before being withdrawn from service in 1997. In 1999 it was sold to the New Zealand Coastguard and was stationed at New Plymouth where it is named Westgate Rescue.
- ^ City of Plymouth was in the relief fleet until 2004. The following year it was sold for further service as a lifeboat at Skagaströnd in Iceland where it is named Hunabjorg.
- ^ A-class were originally numbered 18-XXX in the ALB series, but the Hatch and McLachlan lifeboats were later renumbered in the ILB series.
- ^ Susan Peacock was the first Atlantic 75 lifeboat, a total of 97 being built between 1993 and 2003. Between 2006–2009, it was part of the RNLI training fleet.
- ^ Coventry and Warwickshire was built as the Weston-super-Mare Lifeboat and returned to that station until 2018.
See also
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-906294-72-7.
- ISBN 0-86114-806-1.
- ^ Leach (2009). Devon's Lifeboat Heritage. pp. 31–34.
- ^ Leach (2009). Devon's Lifeboat Heritage. p. 35.
- ^ a b c d Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2024). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2024. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 4–132.
- ^ a b c d Leach (2009). Devon's Lifeboat Heritage. p. 31.
- ^ Leach (2009). Devon's Lifeboat Heritage. p. 33.
- ^ Leach (2009). Devon's Lifeboat Heritage. p. 34.
- ^ "Plymouth's station history". RNLI. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
- ISBN 0 907605 89 3.
- ^ a b Denton, Tony (2010). Handbook 2010. Shrewsbury: Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. p. 68.
- ^ Historic England. "Former dock police station and custom office at South East entrance to Millbay Docks (1113301)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
- ISBN 0-906294-30-4.
- ^ "Station History". Plymouth Lifeboat Station. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
- ISBN 978-0-7509-4858-6.
- ^ "Atlantic 75 and 85 (B Class)". RNLI. Retrieved 2 December 2010.
- ^ Denton (2010). Handbook 2010. p. 2.
- ^ Denton (2010). Handbook 2010. pp. 10–11.
- ^ Denton (2010). Handbook 2010. pp. 14–15.