Mayday! Mayday!: The History of Sea Rescue Around Britain’s Coastal Waters
By Karen Farrington and Nick Constable
()
About this ebook
Lifeboats occupy a particular place in people’s hearts as unpaid volunteers regularly take to their boats often in extremely adverse conditions to rescue others from the sea.
The stories that go with lifeboats and their crews are those of courage, sacrifice, community and our coastline. No matter if one is on holiday by the coast, or living inland, we are always aware of the work these brave crews do, and also aware of the tremendous affection the RNLI has throughout the whole of the British Isles. An island race appreciates those who risk their lives continually to help those endangered at sea.
May-Day! May-Day! showcases the work, over many years, that the RNLI crews have undertaken, using the technology and training of their time to go out into dangerous waters to rescue people. It contains a great deal of useful/technical information to give the reader all the background information to the science of saving lives at sea.
The RNLI is close to the hearts of the British public, who want to know more about their work today, but also historically how they have evolved. With archive material, first-person interviews of station commanders, rescuers, etc. plus scientific illustrations and maps, this book will be the first to bring together the history and technology, people and crews, triumphs and disasters of the RNLI together in one book.
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Mayday! Mayday! - Karen Farrington
NORTH-EAST
TYNE
missingThe very word ‘lifeboat’ is imbued with notions of integrity and nobility of purpose. Strange then that, in the beginning in the north-east, there was an unseemly squabble about just who should take the plaudits for its inception.
Essex man Lionel Lukin (1742–1834) is certainly in with a shout for being the originator of the first lifeboat. He designed what he called an ‘unimmergible’ boat – that is, one that wouldn’t sink. Basing his design on a Norwegian boat, he integrated a cork gunwale, watertight buoyancy chambers and a double-skinned keel to create the first designated lifeboat. (Various other workaday boats without modifications were being used to save survivors from offshore shipwrecks at the time.)
In November 1785 Lukin patented his design and was encouraged by the vocal support of the Prince of Wales, later King George IV. To see how his invention performed at sea, he gave it to a pilot at Ramsgate, hoping the experienced seaman would conduct meaningful trials. Alas for him, the craft was never seen again. According to his obituary in The Gentleman’s Magazine, Lukin later discovered that ‘the boat had frequently crossed the channel at times when no other could venture out and it was surmised that, having been detected in illicit traffic, it had been confiscated and destroyed abroad’.
So Lukin built another boat, which he called Witch on account of her capacity to sail safely in stormy weather. Once again the boat was ‘unsinkable’, and it was this unusual concept that caused some excitement at the time. Among those who noted its possibilities was Dr John Sharp, who lived and worked at Bamburgh Castle. There he ran a school and a pharmacy, and offered medical care to a poor and needy population. And his concern for his fellow man extended to seafarers on the notoriously dangerous coast off Bamburgh. He established a rudimentary coastguard service with a horse-mounted beach patrol that looked for vessels in distress on stormy nights. He ensured that a gun was fired from the castle in foggy weather to alert ships’ captains to the proximity of land and also kept sturdy chains at the castle for hauling disabled shipping to the shore, ‘to be lent gratis to any person who has occasion for them, within 40 or 50 miles along the coast, on giving proper security for their return’.
Trent class lifeboat George & Mary Webb with Whitby behind.
At Sharp’s request Lukin provided a lifeboat for Bamburgh, an adaptation of a simple Northumberland coble which was presumably instrumental in saving numerous souls. Its builder was in no doubt about the importance of the vessel. When he died in 1834, Lukin’s gravestone bore the following inscription: ‘This Lionel Lukin was the first who built a Lifeboat and was the original inventor of that principle of safety by which many lives and much property have been preserved from shipwreck.’
Lukin’s self-penned epitaph is loaded with considerable bile, initially directed at William Wouldhave (1751–1821), a parish clerk from South Shields, who was likewise credited with innovating lifeboat design.
Wouldhave came to prominence in 1789 – four years after the advent of the unimmergible – in a competition organised by concerned businessmen who had witnessed a major tragedy in the mouth of the Tyne that same year. A vessel, the Adventurer from nearby Newcastle-upon-Tyne, ran into difficulties just 300 yards from the shore. Growing crowds watched in horror as crew members who had retreated to the rigging to avoid punishing waves fell one by one to their deaths. Although the onlookers were horrified by the unfolding tragedy, nobody was prepared to put to sea to attempt a rescue. Indeed, to have done so in conventional open boats would almost certainly have been a death sentence.
William Wouldhave was one of many entrants bidding for the two guineas prize money. According to Wouldhave, he was inspired by watching a woman draw water from a well using a wooden dish shaped something like an orange segment. The scoop often swivelled on its fixings but never stayed upside down. He forged a model of his self-righting design in copper, lining the inside with cork. The design was commended for its quality but, to Wouldhave’s fury, he was offered only half the prize money after nominally coming second. Ultimately he turned the money down. Pointedly, Wouldhave’s tombstone was engraved with the following accolade: ‘Inventor of that invaluable blessing to mankind. The Life-boat.’
A painting of Henry Greathead’s boat, The Original.
Meanwhile, to compound the confusion, Henry Greathead (1757–1818) came on the scene. Like Wouldhave, he also entered the lifeboat competition. His suggested design was considered ‘useless’ by the judging panel, but he was a South Shields shipwright, which lent him considerable advantage in the eyes of the competition organisers. They assembled what was considered to be the best aspects of all the entries, chiefly rooted in the plans submitted by Wouldhave, and gave the spec to Greathead to construct.
The result – ironically known as The Original – combined aspects of both Lukin’s and Wouldhave’s blueprints. Lukin was in no doubt that it was to all intents and purposes his work, and now his ire was directed at Greathead. The Original was, Lukin insisted, ‘to all the essential principles of safety precisely according to my Patent and differed from it in no considerable respect except the curved keel which contributes nothing to the general principles of safety but renders it unfit for a sailing boat’.
Despite a flurry of letters at the beginning of the 19th century focusing on the competing claims of lifeboat designers, it is now Greathead, something of an also-ran at the time, who is generally remembered as the creator of the lifeboat, and this assertion was duly recorded on his headstone too.
It must have caused both Lukin and Wouldhave some discomfort to watch as Greathead was awarded hundreds of pounds by public bodies in gratitude for his work. For his part, Greathead was an accomplished public relations campaigner. The National Maritime Museum has two lifeboat models, made by Greathead and furnished with brass plaques to say so, which were presented to interested bodies. The inscriptions unequivocally declare that Greathead is the designer of the lifeboat. Soon he was richly rewarded by Parliament, Trinity House and Lloyd’s of London. He was even presented with a gold medal by the Society of Arts and, more surprisingly, a diamond ring by the Emperor of Russia.
After 1790 Greathead was not only networking but also building boats, and more than 30 went into service around the coast. There was no RNLI in existence at the time and even regional organisations were a rarity. Lifeboat services operated on a parochial level with crews drawn from those of local fishing boats. These independent groups either bought or were given lifeboats built along the same lines as The Original. Without wishing to detract from the purity of purpose among the many, there were certainly a few whose main interest lay in salvage rights to wrecked vessels.
Detractors of The Original thought her cumbersome, and they had a point. At 30 feet long, 10 feet wide and with a draft of 3 feet, she was propelled by ten oars and had no rudder, being steered by a sweep oar, so she wasn’t easy to sail. If water swept in over the boat sides it had to be bailed out by hand. The main problem lay in the fact that the lifeboats were needed for rescues close to shore. Only the wrecks that were spotted could be helped. For ships that got into difficulties further from the coast, especially at night, there was little hope. Eventually it was The Original’s immense weight, which made beach launches so arduous, that hastened its demise.
For this was an era before slipways. Even harbours were few and far between around the coast. Most lifeboat launches took place on beaches, both shingle and sandy. Even with a wheeled carriage to bear the weight of the lifeboat, a launch still required the combined strength of men, women and children from the locality. Sometimes, especially in rural areas, horses were employed to haul the lifeboat into the shallows.
When seas were mountainous it made sense to move the boat overland to the nearest point to the wreck, rather than exhaust its crew by rowing there. Once again a carriage, horses and the pushing power of local people came to the fore. No one knew better than those in seaside communities the weight and bulk of The Original.
Astonishingly there is still one Original class boat in existence. Zetland was built in 1802 and dispatched to Redcar, Yorkshire, on 7 October that year. Adding insult to injury as far as Lukin and Wouldhave were concerned, an account of Zetland’s welcome reveals just how Greathead was now nationally revered. ‘In the evening the fishermen were regaled with ale to drink success to the boat and the health of the builder.’
Within two months Zetland was at sea after two brigs foundered, notching up the first 15 of more than 500 ‘lives saved’.
At the time Redcar was a tiny place with barely sufficient population to man a lifeboat. But the villagers had pledged that there would never be a shortage of hands, and able men and growing boys turned out in vile conditions, proving as good as their word. When a stricken vessel was spotted a young boy went around the few streets of the village banging a drum to ‘Come along, brave boys, come along’.
Initially the lifeboat was managed by a local committee, but their role was soon taken over by the Tees Bay Lifeboat Society. The Tyne being a hub of industry at the time, ships were charged for using it, and lifeboats for both sides of the river were financed out of the fees. Scores of ships became casualties in the face of a fierce North Sea storm.
Built in 1802 and with 78 years of service to her name, Zetland is the only Original class boat still in