Grace Darling | |
Birth Date: | 24 November 1815 |
Birth Place: | Bamburgh, England |
Death Place: | Bamburgh, England |
Resting Place: | St Aidan’s churchyard, Bamburgh |
Resting Place Coordinates: | 55.6438°N -37.58°W |
Nationality: | English |
Occupation: | Lighthouse keeper |
Parents: | William and Thomasin Darling |
Awards: | Silver Medal for Bravery by the Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck |
Grace Horsley Darling (24 November 1815 – 20 October 1842) was an English lighthouse keeper's daughter. Her participation in the rescue of survivors from the shipwrecked Forfarshire in 1838 brought her national fame. The paddlesteamer ran aground on the Farne Islands off the coast of Northumberland in northeast England; nine members of the crew were saved.[1]
Grace Darling was born on 24 November 1815 at her grandfather's house in Northumberland. She was the seventh of nine children (four brothers and four sisters) born to William and Thomasin Darling, and when only a few weeks old, she was taken to live on Brownsman Island, one of the Farne Islands, in a small cottage attached to the lighthouse. Her father ran the lighthouse (built in 1795) for Trinity House, and earned a salary of £70 per year with a bonus of £10 for satisfactory service. The accommodation was basic, and the lighthouse was not located in a good place to guide shipping to safety, so in 1826, the family moved to the newly constructed lighthouse on Longstone Island.[2]
Longstone Lighthouse had better accommodation, but the island itself was slightly less hospitable, so William would row back to Brownsman to gather vegetables from their former garden and to feed the animals. The family spent most of their time on the ground floor of the lighthouse, which consisted of a large room, heated by a wooden stove. The room was their living room, dining room, and kitchen in one, and had a spiral staircase leading to three bedrooms above and the light at the top of the tower.[3]
In the early hours of 7 September 1838, Darling, looking from an upstairs window, spotted the wreck and survivors of the Forfarshire on Big Harcar, a nearby low, rocky island. The Forfarshire had foundered on the rocks and broken in half; one of the halves had sunk during the night.
Darling and her father, William, determined that the weather was too rough for the lifeboat to put out from Seahouses (then North Sunderland), so they took a rowing boat (a 21abbr=onNaNabbr=on, four-man Northumberland coble) across to the survivors, taking a long route that kept to the lee side of the islands, a distance of nearly a mile (about 1miles). Darling kept the coble steady in the water, while her father helped four men and the lone surviving woman, Sarah Dawson, into the boat. Although she survived the sinking, Mrs. Dawson had lost her two young children (James, 7, and Matilda, 5) during the night.[4] William and three of the rescued men then rowed the boat back to the lighthouse. Darling then remained at the lighthouse while William and three of the rescued crew members rowed back and recovered four more survivors.
Meanwhile, the lifeboat had set out from Seahouses, but arrived at Big Harcar rock after Darling and her father had completed their rescue operation; all they found were the bodies of Mrs Dawson's children and of a clergyman. Returning to North Sunderland was too dangerous, so they rowed to the lighthouse to take shelter. Darling's brother, William Brooks Darling, was one of the seven fishermen in the lifeboat. The weather deteriorated to the extent that everyone was obliged to remain at the lighthouse for three days before returning to shore.
The Forfarshire had been carrying 62 people. The vessel broke in two almost immediately upon hitting the rocks. Those rescued by Darling and her father were from the bow section of the vessel, which had been held by the rocks for some time before sinking. All that remained at daybreak was the portside paddlebox casing. Nine other passengers and crew had managed to float off a lifeboat from the stern section before it, too, sank, and were picked up in the night by a passing Montrose sloop, and brought into South Shields that same night.[5]
As news of her role in the rescue reached the public, her combination of bravery and simple virtue set her out as exemplary, and led to an uneasy role as the nation's heroine. Grace and her father were awarded the Silver Medal for Bravery by the Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck, later named the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI).[6] Subscriptions and donations totaling over £700 (equivalent to about £ in) were raised for her, including £50 from Queen Victoria; more than a dozen portrait painters sailed to her island home to capture her likeness, and hundreds of gifts, letters, and even marriage proposals were delivered to her. Her unexpected wealth and fame were such that the Duke of Northumberland took on a role as her self-appointed guardian and founder of a trust, established to look after the donations offered to her. His personal gifts to her family were a timepiece and a silver teapot.[1]
In 1842, Darling fell ill with Tuberculosis while visiting the mainland. First she convalesced with her cousins, the MacFarlanes, in their house in Narrowgate, Alnwick. When Duchess of Northumberland heard of her situation, she arranged for Darling to be moved to better accommodation close to Alnwick Castle. The Duchess tended to her in person, as well as providing her with the services of the ducal family physician.
However, Darling's condition declined and she was conveyed to the place of her birth in Bamburgh, where she died, aged 26, of consumption in October 1842. She is buried in the churchyard of St Aidan's Church, Bamburgh. The Monument to Grace Darling was completed in 1842. It represents a sleeping effigy of her holding an oar, and lies to the north of her grave at the western edge of the churchyard so it would be visible to passing seafarers.[7] The original effigy, which was sculpted by Charles Raymond Smith son of James Smith,[8] was moved into the church in 1895 due to weathering.
Within the St Aidan's Church there is also a stained-glass window dedicated to the memory of Grace Darling.[1]
Darling's achievement was celebrated in her lifetime; she received a large financial reward in addition to the plaudits of the nation. A number of fictionalised depictions propagated the Grace Darling legend, such as Grace Darling, or the Maid of the Isles by Jerrold Vernon (1839), which gave birth to the legend of "the girl with windswept hair". Her deed was committed to verse by William Wordsworth in his poem "Grace Darling" (1843). In 1882 a four-act drama, Humanity, or a Passage in the Life of Grace Darling, premiered at the Theatre Royal, Leicester[9] and immediately transferred to the vast Standard Theatre in London's Shoreditch. The play by Leonard Rae and Hugh Marston included a realistic representation of the sea rescue.[10] A lifeboat with her name was presented to Holy Island. One of a series of Victorian paintings by William Bell Scott at Wallington Hall in Northumberland depicts her rescue efforts. The McManus Galleries in Dundee includes three paintings by Thomas Musgrave Joy that celebrate Grace Darling's deeds with the Forfarshire.[11]
At Bamburgh, a museum is dedicated to her achievements and the seafaring life of the area.[12] From 1990 to 2020 an RNLI Mersey-class lifeboat at Seahouses bore the name Grace Darling.[13] Singer/songwriter Dave Cousins of Strawbs wrote "Grace Darling" (on the album Ghosts) in tribute and as a love song. The children's singing group The Limeliters sang a different "Grace Darling" (featuring the refrain "Help, help, came a desperate yelp!") in their 1962 album, recorded live in concert, Through Children's Eyes. In 2017, Duke Special set Michael Longley's poem "Grace Darling" to music and recorded it on the album Hallow. The Grace Darling Hotel, one of the oldest extant hotels in Melbourne, Victoria, opened in 1854.[14] [15]