Ilfracombe Lifeboat Station Explained

Ilfracombe Lifeboat Station
Map Type:Devon
Pushpin Relief:1
Location:The Lifeboat House
Address:14 Broad Street
Location City:Ilfracombe, Devon, EX34 9EE
Location Country:United Kingdom
Coordinates:51.21°N -4.1162°W
Building Type:RNLI Lifeboat Station
Opened Date:First boat 1828
Current building 1996
Owner: Royal National Lifeboat Institution

Ilfracombe Lifeboat Station is the base for Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) search and rescue operations at Ilfracombe, Devon, England. The first lifeboat was stationed in the town in 1828 and the present station was opened in 1996. For 29 years a second boat was operated from Morte Bay at Woolacombe.

Two lifeboats operate from the station: a All-weather lifeboat (ALB) 13-09 The Barry and Peggy High Foundation (ON 1316) and a Inshore lifeboat (ILB) Deborah Brown III (D-863).

History

A pilot boat was fitted out as a lifeboat for the town in 1828, and a new lifeboat was bought by local people in 1850 which operated from a boat house in Hiern's Lane near the harbour. The RNLI started its service in Ilfracombe in 1866 when a boat house was built near the pier at the bottom of Lantern Hill with a slipway nearby. Alterations to the pier in 1871 meant that the slipway was lost and the boat then had to be taken along the road to the harbour whenever it needed to be launched. The boat house was demolished in 1893 to allow a larger building be built for the new Co-operator No. 2 (ON 355) which, at 37feet was 3 feet longer than the previous boat. This boat house was used until 1996 when it was replaced by a new facility near the slipway at the harbour.[1]

In 1871 a lifeboat was stationed at Morte Bay near Woolacombe, about 6miles south west of Ilfracombe. When the lifeboat was needed west of Morte Point a crew came out from Ilfracombe on a carriage. It proved difficult to launch into strong winds blowing onto its west-facing beach and so the station was closed in May 1900. The lifeboat was transferred up the coast to Watchet; the boat house has since been incorporated into a café known as the Boat House Café.[2]

The first motor lifeboat at Ilfracombe was placed on station in March 1936. This was a 32feet lifeboat, a type that was designed for work close inshore. It was replaced by a more conventional 35feet boat in 1945, which allowed the Surf boat to be sent to the Netherlands where there was an acute shortage of lifeboats at the end of World War II.[1] The all-weather boat has been supported by an inflatable inshore rescue boat since 1991.[3]

Service awards

The volunteer crews of the RNLI do not expect reward or recognition for their work, but the records include many rescues that have been recognised by letters, certificates and medals from the RNLI management. This list is just some of the most notable.

On 13 November 1949, the Richard Silver Oliver (ON 794) was launched to assist the SS Monte Gurugu, which was sinking near Morte Point after losing her rudder in a severe storm. After pulling the casualty clear of the shore, the lifeboat took the 23 crew aboard and safely back to Ilfracombe. Coxswain Cecil Irwin was awarded an RNLI silver medal for his work.[1]

In a Force 8 gale on 9 September 1984, the Liberty was dragging her anchor just 50yd from the shore when the Lloyds II reached her. The lifeboat's crew managed to get a line secured to the yacht and towed her into the harbour. An RNLI bronze medal was awarded to Coxswain David Clemence for his courage, leadership and seamanship.[1]

Area of operation

The lifeboat at Ilfracombe has an operating range of 250nmi and a top speed of 25kn. Adjacent lifeboats are stationed at to the West, and to the North, along with an ILB at to the East.[4]

Ilfracombe lifeboats

'ON' is the Official Number used in RNLI records from 1884; 'Op. No.' is the operational number displayed on the boat.

Pulling and sailing lifeboats

At IlfracombeStationONNameClassclass=unsortableComments
1828–?Ilfracombe(no name?)Pilot boat fitted to work as a lifeboat.
1850–?IlfracombeLady Franklin non-self-righting lifeboat.
IlfracombeBroadwater
1871–1892Morte Bay225Grace WoodburyStandard self-righterOriginally Jack-a-Jack but renamed Grace Woodbury in 1872.
1886–1893Ilfracombe53Co-operator No. 2Used as a demonstration lifeboat from 1893 until 1907.
1892–1900Morte Bay339Theophilus Sidney EchalazStandard self-righterTransferred to where it was renamed W.H.G. Kingston.
1893–1920Ilfracombe355Co-operator No. 2Standard self-righter
1920–1936Ilfracombe596Richard CrawleyStandard self-righterBuilt in 1910 and stationed at until 1918.

Motor lifeboats

At Ilfracombe[5] ONNameClassclass=unsortableComments
1936–1945779RosabellaSold for further service at Terschelling in the Netherlands and is now preserved at Aalsmeer.
1945–1952794Richard Silver OliverBuilt in 1937 for then moved to . After serving at Ilfracombe it went to then sold in 1963 for further service in Chile.
1952–1966904Robert and Phemia BrownLiverpoolSold in 1967 and subsequently used as a yacht.
1966–199098637-19Lloyds IIStationed at until 1993 but then broken up.
1990–2015116512-007Spirit of DerbyshireDecember 2023, In use as a harbour boat, Valletta, Malta
2015–131613-09The Barry and Peggy High Foundation[6]

Inshore lifeboats

Op. No.NameClassTypeclass=unsortableComments
1991–1991D-334DEA16Entered service in the relief fleet in 1987.
1992–2000D-422Alec DykesDEA16Saw further service at and in the RNLI relief fleet but was withdrawn from service in 2009.
2000–2009D-555Deborah BrownDEA16Transferred to the RNLI relief fleet in 2009.
2009–2022D-717Deborah Brown IIDIB1
2022-D-863DIB1[7]

Launch and recovery tractors

At IlfracombeOp. No.Reg. No.TypeComments
1939–1956T34FYR 552Case L
1956–1961T28EYT 780Case L
1961–1963T49KGP 854Case LA
1963–1973T69970 FGPCase 1000D
1973–1974T73500 GYRCase 1000D
1974–1975T69970 FGPCase 1000D
1975–1977T74136 HLCCase 1000D
1977–1981T69970 FGPCase 1000D
1981–1987T62PLA 698Fowler Challenger III
1987–1998T101D335 SUJTalus MB-H Crawler
1998–1999T97C282 LNTTalus MB-H Crawler
1999–2008T100D466 RAWTalus MB-H Crawler
T92A462 AUX
2015–2021HF64 CVGSLARS (Clayton)June and Gordon Hadfield
2021–HF70 EBZSLARS (SC Innovation)

Bibliography

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Leach, Nicholas . Devon's Lifeboat Heritage . 2009 . Twelveheads Press . Chacewater . 978- 0-906294-72-7 . 46–48 .
  2. Leach N. (2009) p. 45
  3. Web site: Ilfracombe History . RNLI . 2010-11-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20091023061240/http://www.rnli.org.uk/rnli_near_you/southwest/stations/IlfracombeNorthDevon/history . 23 October 2009 . dead .
  4. Book: Denton, Tony . Handbook 2010. 2010. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society . Shrewsbury . 68 .
  5. Book: Leonard . Richie . Denton . Tony . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2024. 2024 . Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society . 4–132.
  6. News: Ilfracombe's new £3m RNLI lifeboat launched . 24 April 2024 . BBC . 6 June 2015.
  7. News: Limbrick . Gudrun . Ilfracombe RNLI names latest lifeboat . 24 April 2024 . RNLI . 9 November 2022.