The Lizard Lifeboat Station

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The Lizard Lifeboat Station
RNLI and 771 NAS Exercise MOD 45153583.jpg
Rose, the current Tamar-class lifeboat, launches from the RNLI lifeboat station at Kilcobben Cove, Cornwall on the Lizard.
Cornwall UK relief location map.jpg
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General information
Type RNLI Lifeboat Station
LocationKilcobben Cove, Cornwall
Country England
Coordinates 49°58′10″N5°11′14″W / 49.96950°N 5.18718°W / 49.96950; -5.18718
OpenedRNLI since 1859
Owner Flag of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.svg Royal National Lifeboat Institution

The Lizard Lifeboat Station refers to several Royal National Lifeboat Institution lifeboat stations located on the Lizard in Cornwall, United Kingdom. [1] 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. [2]

Contents

The lifeboat stations have all covered the westerly approaches to the English Channel; with up to 400 ships-a-day, it is one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world. The lifeboat service has saved many lives over the past 150 years. [1] [3]

History

Polpeor Cove (1859–1961)

First station

The RNLI established its first lifeboat at the southern tip of The Lizard in 1859. The station, which cost £120 to build, was located atop the cliffs above Polpeor Cove about 0.6 mi (0.97 km) south of the village of Lizard. [1] It was inaugurated after the 740-ton steamer, Czar , foundered on the Vrogue Rock, [4] off Bass Point on 22 January 1859. The government transport ship was taking ammunition and uniforms to Malta. Fishing crews from Cadgwith and Church Cove saved some of the crew but the captain and his family drowned. Following the tragedy, a Mrs Agar of Lanhydrock donated money to buy the first Lizard Lifeboat (Anna Maria). [5]

However the location of the first lifeboat station on the cliff above Polpeor Cove was not ideal as it made launches a long and precarious operation in rough sea and weather. On 2 January 1866 the lifeboat broke up after it was launched on exercise during a storm. It was pushed on to rocks causing the death of its Coxswain Peter Mitchell and crew members Richard Harris and Nicholas Stevens. [1] As a tribute to the loss, the RNLI gave £130 to the local lifeboat fund. [1] (Location: 49°57′32.53″N5°12′22.77″W / 49.9590361°N 5.2063250°W / 49.9590361; -5.2063250 (The first Polpeor Lifeboat station) )

Second station

The second station was built in 1885 at Polpeor Cove. Old Lifeboat slip, Lizard Point.jpg
The second station was built in 1885 at Polpeor Cove.

In 1885 a larger station was built above the high-water mark lower down in Polpeor Cove to house a larger lifeboat. [1] The existing smaller craft, Anna Maria (III), was relocated to a new station at Church Cove, just east of Lizard village. (Location: 49°57′33.51″N5°12′24.53″W / 49.9593083°N 5.2068139°W / 49.9593083; -5.2068139 (The second Polpeor Lifeboat station) )

Third station

The third and final Polpeor Cove lifeboat station was built in 1914. Lizard old Lifeboat House.jpg
The third and final Polpeor Cove lifeboat station was built in 1914.

The final lifeboat station within Polpeor Cove was completed in 1914. The large concrete building had an integrated slipway which meant the lifeboat was able to launch directly into the sea. However this could prove hazardous in rough conditions because of the number of rocks in the cove. The exposed position of the station also meant it required a great deal of expense to maintain its general upkeep.

In order to relaunch the lifeboat, a recovery system was used to haul it back into the boat house. First ropes were places around a natural rock pillar in the sea in order to turn the stern of the boat towards land. A giant wheel – at the rear of the station – was then used to winch the boat back up the slipway.

The result of these difficulties meant the RNLI was forced to spend money repairing the station and the lifeboats from time to time. By 1958, with the need to employ larger and faster lifeboats due to the growth in maritime commerce, the RNLI decided to close Polpeor Cove because of its operating limitations. The RNLI eventually chose Kilcobben Cove as it new location for The Lizard Lifeboat station because it was sufficiently protected to allow safe launches in all conditions. Polpeor Cove closed in 1961. (Location: 49°57′33.56″N5°12′25.57″W / 49.9593222°N 5.2071028°W / 49.9593222; -5.2071028 (The third Polpeor Lifeboat station) )

Cadgwith (1867–1963)

In 1867 the RNLI placed a second lifeboat at the fishing village of Cadgwith on the east side of the Lizard. This service ran until 1963, when it was finally closed. The station was then integrated with the service at The Lizard's Kilcobben Cove. [1] (Location: 49°59′14.25″N5°10′46.56″W / 49.9872917°N 5.1796000°W / 49.9872917; -5.1796000 (Cadgwith Lifeboat station) )

Church Cove (1885–1899)

The former Church Cove Lifeboat Station in 2006. Old RNLI boathouse at Church Cove - geograph.org.uk - 229733.jpg
The former Church Cove Lifeboat Station in 2006.

Church Cove station, which was built at a cost of £300, opened in 1885. It housed the Anna Maria (III) lifeboat from the first station at Polpeor Cove until 1887, when she was replaced with the larger 34ft 2in John and Sarah (ON 47). Church Cove station, which was 0.4 mi (0.64 km) from the village of Landewednack was used in conjunction with the Polpeor Cove station for 14 years until it was closed and sold off in 1899. [1] (Location: 49°58′16.49″N5°11′18.62″W / 49.9712472°N 5.1885056°W / 49.9712472; -5.1885056 (Church Cove Lifeboat station) )

Kilcobben Cove (1961– )

First station

The first The Lizard RNLI lifeboat station at Kilcobben Cove, Cornwall in 2006. Lizard RNLI lifeboat station, Kilcobben Cove - geograph.org.uk - 229727.jpg
The first The Lizard RNLI lifeboat station at Kilcobben Cove, Cornwall in 2006.

The RNLI decided that a new station on The Lizard would be built at Kilcobben Cove 1.25 mi (2.01 km) east of The Lizard lighthouse. Construction was a major civil engineering project because the station and its slipway were built on a cliff just above the waterline. The station, which cost £90,000, was opened on 7 July, 1961 by the Duke of Edinburgh, who also named the new Barnett-class lifeboat Duke of Cornwall (ON 952). Due to the steepness of the cliff, a funicular railway carries the lifeboat crew down to the boathouse.

The lifeboat station was originally called The Lizard-Cadgwith Lifeboat Station because it recognised the merging of the two former services based at Polpeor Cove and Cadgwith. This name was officially changed in 1987 to The Lizard Lifeboat Station. In 1988 the station and the slipway required adaptation with the arrival of a Tyne-class lifeboat called David Robinson (ON 1145).

Second station

In 2010 the original station was demolished because it could not accommodate the latest Tamar-class lifeboats. During the rebuilding the lifeboat was kept moored afloat off Cadgwith. On 5 May 2012, the new station was officially opened by Admiral the Lord Boyce, chairman of the RNLI. On the same day, the station's new Tamar-class boat, which had replaced David Robinson the year before, was named 16-20 Rose (ON 1300) in a ceremony by the-then Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall, Lady Mary Holborow.

Lizard lifeboats

'ON' is the RNLI's sequential Official Number used from 1884. 'Op. No.' is the operational number shown on the boat.

1859 to 1960

At station [6] StationONNameClassComments
1859–1866Lizard-PolpeorAnna Maria Peake 30 ft (9.1 m) boat [7]
1866–1873Lizard-PolpeorAnna Maria (II) Standard Self–righter 30 ft (9.1 m) boat [7]
1867–1887CadgwithWestern Commercial Traveller
later John Armstrong
Standard Self–righter33 ft (10 m) boat [7]
1873–1885Lizard-PolpeorAnna Maria (III)Standard Self–righter30 ft (9.1 m) boat [7]
1885–1887Church CoveAnna Maria (III)Standard Self–righter30 ft (9.1 m) boat [7]
1885–1903Lizard-Polpeor48Edmund and FannyStandard Self–righter34 ft 1 in (10.39 m) boat
1887–1898Cadgwith105Joseph ArmstrongStandard Self–righter37 ft 2 in (11.33 m) boat
1887–1899Church Cove47John and SarahStandard Self–righter34 ft 2 in (10.41 m) boat
1898–1932Cadgwith416Minnie MoonStandard Self–righter39 ft (12 m) boat
1903–1918Lizard-Polpeor509Admiral Sir George BackSelf–righter35 ft (11 m) boat
1918–1919Lizard-Polpeor628Sir Fitzroy ClaytonSelf–righter38 ft (12 m) motor lifeboat
1920–1934Lizard-Polpeor657Frederick H. PilleySelf–righter38 ft (12 m) motor lifeboat
1932–1940Cadgwith664Herbert SturmyStandard Self–righter37 ft 6 in (11.43 m) boat
1934–1961Lizard-Polpeor769Duke of York Watson 41 ft (12 m) motor lifeboat
1941–1963Cadgwith826Guide of Dunkirk Self–righter 35 ft 6 in (10.82 m) motor lifeboat

From 1961

Originally known as The Lizard-Cadgwith Lifeboat Station but the name was changed in 1987 to The Lizard Lifeboat Station.

In service [6] ONOp. No.NameClassComments
1960–1984952 Duke of Cornwall (Civil Service No.32) Barnett
1984–198798948-02James and Catherine MacFarlane Oakley
1987–1988100848-005James and Mariska Joicey Solent
1988–2011114547-030David Robinson Tyne
2011–130016-20Rose Tamar

Station Honours

The following are awards made at the Lizard Lifeboat Stations [8]

Lizard (Polpeor)

Edwin Matthews, Coxswain – 1888
Captain David G Ball, Master of the Gustav Bitter – 1893
William Edward Mitchell, Coxswain – 1907
Edwin Mitchell, Second Coxswain – 1907
George Anderson, crewman, Suevic – 1907
William Williams, crewman, Suevic – 1907
George E Mitchell, Coxswain – 1955


Cadgwith lifeboat station

Mr John Ridge – 1859
Rev N Vyvyan, Honorary Secretary – 1907
Edward Rutter, Coxswain – 1907


The Lizard lifeboat station (Formerly Lizard-Cadgwith)

Peter Mitchell, Coxswain/Mechanic – 1985
Philip Burgess, Coxswain – 2004
Philip Burgess, Coxswain – 1993
David Hill, Second Coxswain – 1993
Roger Legge, Mechanic – 1993
John Harris, Assistant Mechanic – 1993
Michael Legge, crew member – 1993
Louis Mitchell, crew member – 1993
Richard Woodmansey, crew member – 1993
Robert Francis, crew member – 1993
Coxswain and crew – 1979 (Fastnet Race)
Edward Nuzum, Lifeboat Operations Manager – 2021 [9] [10]

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 http://thelizardlifeboat.co.uk/index.htm The Lizard Lifeboat Website
  2. OS Explorer Map 103 – Falmouth & Helston. ISBN   978-0-319-24117-2.
  3. Chambers's Encyclopædia of Universal Knowledge. W & R Chambers Ltd. 1860. p. 62.
  4. "Vrogue Rock". www.mapcarta.com. Retrieved 10 June 2013.
  5. The Lizard in Landewednack. Lizard History Society.
  6. 1 2 Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2024). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2024. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 4–132.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2021). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2021 (2021 ed.). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 2–18.
  8. "The Lizard's Station history". RNLI. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  9. "The Lizard RNLI volunteer recognised in Queen's New Years' Honours". RNLI. 31 December 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
  10. "British Empire Medal (Civil Division)". The Gazette. Retrieved 7 February 2024.