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The cliffside village of Runswick Bay. The village ran its own lifeboat from 1866, until it was moved to the RNLI station at Staithes in 1978. The boathouse still remains, and has run its own volunteer rescue boat service since 1982. [4] In the late 1880s, Runswick Bay was the site of an art colony. [5]
Port Mulgrave is a derelict former ironstone exporting port on the North Yorkshire coast midway between Staithes and Runswick Bay in the civil parish of Hinderwell.Rows of domestic properties and individual houses exist on the top of the cliff.
Staithes and Runswick; Whitby; Withernsea [48] The station at Humber is located on Spurn Point and is the only RNLI station in Britain that is manned full-time. [49] Runswick Bay has its own rescue boat which was started in 1982. It was initiated after the RNLI lifeboat was moved up the coast to Staithes.
Saltburn-by-the-Sea, commonly referred to as Saltburn, is a seaside town in the civil parish of Saltburn, Marske and New Marske, in the Redcar and Cleveland district, in North Yorkshire, England, 12 miles (19 km) south-east of Hartlepool and 5 miles (8 km) south-east of Redcar. It lies within the historic boundaries of the North Riding of ...
Eastonways was an independent bus and coach operator providing regular bus services in and around Thanet, Kent. [14] The company's services, either fully or partly funded by Kent County Council, operated regularly in Margate, Westgate, Broadstairs, St Peters, Ramsgate and surrounding villages: Birchington, Acol, Manston, Minster & Monkton.
Saltburn is a railway station on the Tees Valley Line, which runs between Bishop Auckland and Saltburn via Darlington. The station, situated 12 miles 57 chains (20.5 km) east of Middlesbrough, serves the seaside town of Saltburn-by-the-Sea, North Yorkshire, England. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by Northern Trains.
In 1858, at the request of the Tees Bay Lifeboat Society, the management of their three stations, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Saltburn, was transferred to the RNLI following visits by the RNLI Inspector of Lifeboats, Capt. John Ward. A new boathouse was constructed in 1860, across the road from the Ship Inn, just to the east of Saltburn, costing ...
It was opened on 3 December 1883, and served the villages of Hinderwell and Runswick Bay. [1] Like most stations on the line between Loftus and Whitby West Cliff, it was built with a passing loop. However, the northbound side was not furnished with a platform until 1908. [2] The station closed to all traffic on 5 May 1958. [3]