Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Independent lifeboat services in Britain and Ireland began to be established around the coasts towards the end of the 18th century in response to the loss of life at sea. More recently, independent services have been set up in response to the increasing popularity of coastal and river sport and leisure activities.
Rescue water craft 2001 1 Fast craft used by lifeguard units. X Inflatable rescue boat Unmotored boat normally carried on board Tyne-class lifeboats but is an option on the Mersey and Shannon. XP: Inflatable rescue boat 9.2 m (30 ft) 61 kg 10 or 25 2 2 A small powered boat which is normally carried on board the Trent-class lifeboats. Y
Mundesley Volunteer Lifeboat Bacton: Bacton, Norfolk: 1857–1882 Palling: Palling, Norfolk: 1852–1930 No evidence of Old Lifeboat Station. Independent lifeboat operated since 1972 by Sea Palling Independent Rescue [7] Winterton: Winterton, Norfolk: 1823–1925 Just the building foundations remain Caister: Caister, Norfolk: 1845–1969
The RNLI Memorial at Poole. Many lives have been lost by lifeboat crews going to the aid of people and vessels in distress at sea and around the coasts of Britain and Ireland (UK, Ireland, Channel Islands and the Isle of Man), mainly but not exclusively in the service of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI).
A lifeboat crew has rescued a man who spent three hours in the waters of the Humber estuary. Humber Rescue were called out at 02:37 GMT on Thursday and carried out a search alongside other ...
However, all the lifeboat crew and the crew of the Reperio were saved. [15] Another rescue occurred in October 1919, when the Cap Palos, a five-masted schooner was stranded in the bay, and the lifeboat went out four times to rescue the crew. The heavy swell later washed the ship ashore, and she spent a year on the beach at Robin Hood's Bay ...
Memorial in Douglas, Isle of Man to the lifeboat rescue of the sailors from the St George in 1830. The institution's committee set itself three objectives: [3] To award medals and/or cash to those involved in rescuing people from shipwrecks. To provide Captain Manby's line-throwing mortars to all coastguard and lifeboat stations.
An all-weather lifeboat station with a slipway for launching. Inshore lifeboat station, which uses a carriage to launch lifeboats. Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) stations are the bases for the RNLI's fleet of search and rescue lifeboats that cover the coastal waters around the entire British Isles, as well as major inland waterways.