Burnham-on-Sea Lifeboat Station explained

Burnham-on-Sea Lifeboat Station
Map Type:Somerset
Pushpin Relief:1
Location:Pier Street, TA8 1BT
Location Country:United Kingdom
Coordinates:51.2337°N -2.9973°W
Building Type:RNLI Lifeboat Station
Opened Date:First lifeboat 1836
Present station 2003
Owner: Royal National Lifeboat Institution

Burnham-on-Sea Lifeboat Station is the base for Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) search and rescue operations at Burnham-on-Sea, Somerset in England. A lifeboat was stationed in the town from 1836 until 1930. The present station was opened in 2003. It operates two inshore lifeboats (ILBs), a B-Class rigid-inflatable boat and an inflatable D-Class.

History

Burnham-on-Sea is on the Bristol Channel near the mouth of the River Parrett. Ships entering the river to Bridgwater have to negotiate sand banks and mudflats. The first lifeboat at Burnham-on-Sea was a gift by Sir Peregrine Acland to the Corporation of Bridgwater in 1836. This was replaced by a new boat in 1847.[1]

In 1866 the RNLI took over the service from the Bridgwater Harbour Trust. A new boat was provided and a new boat house built but this was replaced by a new building in 1874[1] next to the railway station. A siding was laid to the boat house and the boat on its carriage was hauled down the track by horses to the slipway. The station was closed in 1930 and has since had several uses including a scout hut and children's play centre.[2]

Lifeboats returned to the town in 1994 when the Burnham Area Rescue Boat (BARB) provided an inflatable inshore rescue boat and, from 2003, hovercraft that could operate on the local mudflats. BARB asked the RNLI to take over the provision of a sea-going inshore rescue boat, which it did when a new lifeboat station was built near the old 1874 boat house and brought into use on 23 December 2003.[1]

In 2014, two members of the crew received signed Letters of Appreciation from the Chief Executive of the RNLI for their part in the rescue of 3 teenagers caught in fast flowing water at the end of Burnham-on-Sea jetty the previous summer.

In 2016 Puffin (D-664) a D-class lifeboat, which had been in service for ten years, was replaced by a new craft named Burnham Reach (D-801) after a campaign raised the nearly £50,000 which was needed.[3]

Area of operation

The, which is launched using a Talus MB-4H[4] launch tractor aboard a Do-Do carriage,[5] can operate in Force 7 winds (Force 6 at night), has a top speed of 35kn and a range of 2½ hours at maximum speed.[6] Adjacent lifeboats are at Minehead Lifeboat Station to the west, and Weston-super-Mare Lifeboat Station to the north. If a larger all-weather lifeboat is needed in the area it can be summoned from .[7]

Burnham-on-Sea lifeboats

Pulling and sailing lifeboats (1836–1930)

'ON' is the Official Number used in RNLI records from 1884.

ONNameClassclass=unsortableComments
1866–1887CheltenhamStandard Self-righter boat.[8]
1887–1902138John Godfrey MorrisStandard Self-righter boat.
1902–1930498Philip BeachLiverpool

Inshore lifeboats (from 2003)

'Op. No.' is the Operational Number displayed on the boat.

NameClassModelclass=unsortableComments
2003–2004B-700Susan PeacockBThe first of 97 'Atlantic 75' lifeboats built between 1993 and 2003.
2003–2004D-424City of ChesterDEA16Originally stationed at .
2004–2005D-495Elsie Frances IIDEA16Originally stationed at .
2004–2018B-795Staines WhitfieldB
2005–2006D-552Global MarineDEA16Originally stationed at .
2006–2016D-664PuffinDIB1[9]
2016–D-801Burnham ReachDIB1
2019–B-914Doris Day and BrianB

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Burnham-on-Sea History . RNLI . 2010-11-19 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081007042948/http://www.rnli.org.uk/rnli_near_you/southwest/stations/BurnhamonSea/history . 7 October 2008.
  2. Book: Oakley, Mike. Somerset Railway Stations. Redcliffe Press. 2006. Bristol. 1-904537-54-5 . 32–33 .
  3. Web site: RNLI Somerset lifeboat launched with jug of cider. BBC. 9 April 2017.
  4. Web site: Talus MB-4H Tractor. Details of the MB-4H production. Clayton Engineering Ltd. 26 March 2014.
  5. Web site: A85 DO-DO Carriage – Clayton Engineering. Details of the Clayton DoDo launch carriage . Clayton Engineering Ltd. 26 March 2014.
  6. Web site: Atlantic 75 and 85 (B Class) . RNLI . 2010-12-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110101090740/http://www.rnli.org.uk/what_we_do/lifeboats/current_lifeboats/lifeboat_detail?articleid=44208# . 1 January 2011 . dead.
  7. Book: Denton, Tony . Handbook 2010 . 2010 . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society . Shrewsbury . 68 .
  8. Book: Leonard . Richie . Denton . Tony . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2021 . 2021 . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society . 2–18.
  9. Book: Leonard . Richie . Denton . Tony . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2024. 2024 . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society . 4–132.