Porthoustock Lifeboat Station | |
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General information | |
Status | Closed, converted to village hall |
Type | Lifeboat station |
Location | Porthoustock |
Country | England |
Coordinates | 50°03′22″N5°04′01″W / 50.0560°N 5.0670°W |
Opened | 1869 |
Closed | 1942 |
Owner | RNLI |
Porthoustock Lifeboat Station was the base for a Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) inshore lifeboat at Porthoustock near St Keverne in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It was in use from 1869 until 1942. Its most notable service was in saving 44 people from the SSMohegan which sank nearby on 14 October 1898.
Porthoustock is situated on the east side of the Lizard Peninsula. Ships coming round the Lizard and making for the natural harbour at Falmouth can get into difficulties on The Manacles rocks, off the coast south east of Porthoustock. The RNLI agreed to the requests of local residents and built a lifeboat station in the village. It opened on 28 September 1869 when a crowd estimated at 3,000 watched the new lifeboat being demonstrated. [1]
The station was closed in 1942 during World War II, the area being sufficiently covered by the motor lifeboats at Coverack and Falmouth. [2]
The SS Mohegan left London on 13 October 1898, bound for New York. It called at Gravesend to pick up passengers and was steaming safely down the English Channel on the afternoon of 14 October when it inexplicably set a course that took it towards the Manacles, somewhat north of the safe passage it needed around the Lizard.
James Hill, the coxswain of the Porthoustock lifeboat, saw the Mohegan's lights suddenly alter direction at about 7 o'clock. Realising that there was a ship in trouble, he set about gathering the lifeboat crew and they set off at 7:25 to search for it. They found two ship's boats. One had capsized but 3 people were saved from it, from the other the lifeboat they rescued 24 people. They returned to the shore at about 10 o'clock to land the survivors.
Another of the lifeboat's crew had taken a small boat out to the Manacles and was able to direct the lifeboat to the spot where the Mohegan had sunk. When it got there it was unable to get alongside because of large waves. The remaining people had climbed the masts and funnel. One of these was John Juddery, the ship's quartermaster, who swam across to the lifeboat and then back to the wreck with a rope. The lifeboat was then able to use this to safely get to a position where the people could be brought aboard.
The Falmouth, Cadgwith and The Lizard lifeboats all came to the Manacles to help but had difficulty finding the wreck as there were no lights showing its position. The steam tug that brought the Falmouth lifeboat rescued one person and a few others were saved by small boats that also came to help. When the Mohegan left Gravesend it had been carrying 97 crew and 60 other people; the Porthoustock lifeboat saved 44 and other boats brought 7 ashore but 106 drowned.
For his part in the rescue, including taking the lifeboat out twice, James Hill was awarded an RNLI Silver Medal. [3] [4] [2]
The lifeboat house is a slate-roofed stone building situated at the head of the beach. After closure by the RNLI it was adapted as the village hall. [2]
Five different lifeboats were stationed at Porthoustock, all of the 'pulling and sailing' type. These were equipped with oars but could use sails when conditions allowed.
At Porthoustock | ON | Name | Length | Class | Built | Comments |
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1869–1886 | – | Mary Ann Story | 33 ft (10 m) | Self-Righter | 1869 | [1] |
1886–1900 | 46 | Charlotte | 37 ft (11 m) | Self-Righter | 1886 | Later stationed at Angle and at St Davids. [5] [6] [7] |
1900–1922 | 451 | James Stevens No. 17 | 36 ft (11 m) | Liverpool | 1900 | [8] [9] |
1922–1931 | 468 | Queen Victoria | 35 ft (11 m) | Self-Righter | 1902 | First stationed at Bembridge. [9] |
1931–1942 | 627 | Kate Walker | 35 ft (11 m) | Self-Righter | 1911 | First stationed at Lytham. It was sold in 1946 and survived as a houseboat at Felixstowe Ferry until 2022. [10] |
Cadgwith is a village and fishing port in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is on the Lizard Peninsula between The Lizard and Coverack. It is in the civil parish of Grade Ruan.
Coverack is a coastal village and fishing port in Cornwall, UK. It lies in the parish of St Keverne, on the east side of the Lizard peninsula about nine miles (14 km) south of Falmouth.
Porthoustock is a hamlet near St Keverne in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, on the east coast of Lizard Peninsula. Aggregates are quarried nearby and Porthoustock beach is dominated by a large concrete stone silo that was once used to store stone ready to load ships but is now disused. Coastal trading ships of up to 82 metres can dock alongside the pier along the southern edge of the beach to be loaded with stone. Fishing boats operate from the pebble beach, with lobster and crab potting, net fishing and hand lines as the principal fishing methods. The South West Coast Path passes through Porthoustock.
The SS Mohegan was a steamer which sank off the coast of the Lizard Peninsula, Cornwall, on her second voyage. She hit The Manacles on 14 October 1898 with the loss of 106 out of 157 on board.
The Lizard Lifeboat Station refers to several Royal National Lifeboat Institution lifeboat stations located on the Lizard in Cornwall, United Kingdom. The first was established at the southernmost point of the peninsula in 1859. Since then successive stations have all been in operation at different locations on The Lizard. The current station is located at Kilcobben Cove 0.5 mi (0.80 km) east of the village of Lizard.
Falmouth Lifeboat Station is the base for Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) search and rescue operations at Falmouth, Cornwall in the United Kingdom. The first lifeboat was stationed in the town in 1867 and the present station was opened in 1993. It operates a Severn Class all-weather Lifeboat (ALB) and an Atlantic 85 inshore lifeboat (ILB).
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