Cardigan Lifeboat Station | |
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General information | |
Type | RNLI Lifeboat Station |
Location | Cardigan, Ceredigion, Wales |
Country | Wales, UK |
Coordinates | 52°06′17″N4°41′58″W / 52.10472°N 4.69944°W |
Opened | 1849 |
Owner | Royal National Lifeboat Institution] |
Cardigan Lifeboat Station, at Poppit Sands, North Pembrokeshire, near Cardigan, Ceredigion, Wales, is a Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) lifeboat station opened in 1849. The station closed in 1932 but reopened in 1971 as an inshore lifeboat station. [1]
The present station operates both a D-class lifeboat and a B-class Atlantic 75 lifeboat.
The original Cardigan lifeboat station was built in 1849 (on the south side of the River Teifi estuary below Penrhyn Castle) [2] after the loss of the crew from the brig Agnes Lee. This station was taken over by the RNLI the following year. [3] In 1876 a replacement boathouse with slipway was built, the remains of which can be seen down the estuary at Black Rocks. In 1880, a small breakwater was built to protect the boathouse and launching site. The boathouse was abandoned in 1932, and the all-weather lifeboat was withdrawn, leaving the nearest stations at Fishguard and New Quay. The subsequent popularity of this area, with increased leisure incidents and accidents, led to the decision to construct a new station on the present site; this opened in 1971. [4]
In 1987 a new boathouse, built for the new C-class lifeboat, was officially opened. Then in 1998 a new double boathouse was completed for a B-class and D-class lifeboats, for the Talus MB-4H [5] launching vehicle, and it also provided improved crew facilities. Consequently, the station today houses two inshore lifeboats, which operate from the beach. [2]
The lifeboat crew have training sessions twice a week – on Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings; visitors to the station are welcomed at these times. The station also houses an RNLI shop, open throughout the year, volunteers permitting.
Associated with the lifeboat station is a coastguard lookout post, part of the Maritime and Coastguard Agency Emergency Response, located on the other side of the estuary, on the cliff top at Gwbert. [6] [7]
In December 2011 a crew at the station – comprising Gemma Griffiths, Sarah Griffiths and Louise Francis - made history by being the first all-female volunteer lifeboat crew to respond to a callout in Wales. [8]
ON [lower-alpha 1] | Name | In service | Class | |
---|---|---|---|---|
– | Unknown | 1849–1850 | 27ft Pulling | |
– | Unnamed | 1850–1864 | 27ft Whale Boat | [9] |
– | John Stuart | 1864–1883 | 32ft Self-Righting (P&S) | [9] |
177 | Lizzie and Charles Leigh Clare | 1883–1905 | 34ft Self-righting (P&S) | [10] |
547 | Elizabeth Austin | 1905–1932 | Liverpool-class (P&S) | [10] (Station Closed, 1932) |
Op. No. [lower-alpha 2] | Name | In service [10] | Class | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
D-194 | Unnamed | 1971–1987 | D-class (RFD PB16) | |
C-518 | Unnamed | 1987–1997 | C-class | Holed and sunk October 1993 [11] (was repaired and returned to service) |
D-492 | Lawnflite | 1998 | D-class (EA16) | |
D-467 | Kathleen Scadden | 1998–1999 | D-class (EA16) | |
D-547 | Society of Societies | 1999–2009 | D-class (EA16) | |
D-709 | Elsie Ida Meade | 2009–2019 | D-class (IB1) | |
D-845 | John Darbyshire | 2019– | D-class (IB1) | |
Op. No. | Name | In service [10] | Class | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
B-752 | Tanni Grey | 1999–2013 | Atlantic 75-class | |
B-871 | Albatross | 2013– | Atlantic 85-class | [12] |
Five RNLI medals, three silver and two bronze, are among the various awards presented for service at Cardigan Lifeboat Station. [13] These include:
Note: The three 2014 awards were made for the same rescue [18]
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