Fleetwood Lifeboat Station

Fleetwood Lifeboat Station is located on The Esplanade at the port of Fleetwood, a Lancashire town at the north end of The Fylde, situated at the mouth of the River Wyre.

Fleetwood Lifeboat Station
Fleetwood Lifeboat Station
Fleetwood Lifeboat Station is located in Lancashire
Fleetwood Lifeboat Station
Fleetwood, Lancashire
General information
TypeRNLI Lifeboat Station
AddressThe Esplanade
Town or cityFleetwood, Lancashire, FY7 6DN
CountryEngland
Coordinates53°55′39.9″N 3°00′23.3″W / 53.927750°N 3.006472°W / 53.927750; -3.006472
Opened1859
Owner Royal National Lifeboat Institution
Website
Fleetwood RNLI Lifeboat Station

A lifeboat was first stationed in Fleetwood by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution in 1859.[1]

The station currently operates a Shannon-class All-weather lifeboat, and a D-class (IB1) inshore lifeboat.[2]

History

edit

In November 1858, in response to a letter from Capt. Edward Frodsham Noel K. Wasey, RN, H.M. Coastguard, the RNLI agreed to place a lifeboat at Fleetwood. A new boathouse was constructed opposite the North Euston Hotel at a cost of £174-18s-6d, and a Peake-class 30-foot 6-oared rowing lifeboat was constructed by Forrestt of Limehouse, London costing £140. The boat arrived on station on 20 March 1859. John Fox was appointed Coxswain, and Capt. Wasey appointed Honorary Secretary.[3]

The request for a lifeboat by Capt. Wasey could not have come a moment too soon, as in 1860, the boat was involved in no less than three medal rescues. On 22 January 1860, the Fleetwood lifeboat was towed over four miles by a steam-tug to the Ann Mitchell, where after 7 attempts, the sole survivor was rescued. Coxswain Fox and Capt. Wasey both received RNLI Silver Medals. In a further two services, on 19 February 1860, rescuing 4 men, and on 20 October 1860, rescuing 15 men and the Pilot, Capt. Wasey was awarded second and third service clasps to his silver medal, a remarkable achievement in one year.[4]

In 1862, following a gift of £340 from Miss Mary Wasey, a new lifeboat was provided for Fleetwood, a 32-foot 10-oared self-righting boat, built by Forrestt. She arrived in November 1862, transported free of charge from London to Fleetwood by the London and North Western Railway Company, and was named Edward Wasey.[2]

Fleetwood boathouses

edit

The 1858 lifeboat house was nearly washed away in a storm of 1863, and so a new brick-built boathouse, costing £161-17s-10d, was constructed at Pharos Place, next to the Pharos Lighthouse. Today it is a private residence.

Following a gift of £900 from Col. William Blackburn, a new lifeboat was provided for Fleetwood in 1879, Child of Hale, and the residue of the money funded the construction of a third boathouse and slipway, now thought to have been close to the site of the current lifeboat station. A larger 46-foot boat arrived in Fleetwood in 1887, Edith (ON 76) to become the No.2 boat, and was moored afloat.[3]

Fleetwood had for a long time been a key Railway Hub and Steamer terminus, with vessels arriving and departing from and to the Isle of Man, Belfast, Barrow and Ardrossan, tying up right alongside the railway station. In 1840, the fastest way to Glasgow from London was via a steamer from Fleetwood to Ardrossan.[5]

In 1893, the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway, and the London and North Western Railway, needed to extend their harbour moorings, right over the site of the lifeboat station slipway. Funded by the railway companies, a fourth boathouse and slipway was constructed in 1894, which was large enough to accommodate the 46-foot lifeboat; by now the single remaining boat in Fleetwood, the Child of Hale (II) (ON 75) having been retired in 1892.[1]

However, the slipway location meant it suffered from a regular build up of sand and shingle, to the point where the boat was having to be kept moored afloat, so in 1901, a fifth site was acquired 80 yards east of the Beach Lighthouse, or Low Light as more commonly known, and a new slipway constructed. Having been the cause of the previous relocation, the railway companies moved the 1894 boathouse, and re-constructed it over the new slipway. This boathouse remained in use for the next 75 years, although the station was closed between 1930 and 1933 for alterations, and the construction of another new slipway, ready for the arrival of a new motor-powered lifeboat, the Sir Fitzroy Clayton (ON 628).[3]

The 1901 boathouse finally became redundant in 1976, and was demolished in 1977, when the new Waveney-class lifeboat Lady of Lancashire (ON 1036) arrived. This boat was designed to be moored afloat, and required the construction of a mooring pen.[3]

A small boathouse, constructed in the late 1960s to house a D-class Inshore lifeboat, was washed away in a storm of November 1977, and completely destroyed. The launch tractor was found buried in deep sand, and the Inshore lifeboat (D-187) was found on Pilling Sands, returning to service after repairs.[3]

Finally, a new RNLI and Coastguard building was constructed in 2006, complete with crew facilities, a retail outlet, and secure storage for the D-class lifeboat, which is launched with the aid of a davit.[1]

Station honours

edit

The following are awards made at Fleetwood[1][4]

Capt. Edward F. N. K. Wasey, RN, H.M. Coastguard - 1860
John Fox, Coxswain - 1860
Capt. Edward F. N. K. Wasey, RN, H.M. Coastguard - 1860 (Second-Service Clasp)
Capt. Edward F. N. K. Wasey, RN, H.M. Coastguard - 1860 (Third-Service Clasp)
William Swarbrick, Master of the Steam Tug Wyre - 1863
Robert Gerrard, Pilot - 1863
Robert Wright, Coxswain - 1890
James Fogg, Master of the fishing smack Osprey - 1890
George Wilkinson, Crew member, Osprey - 1890
Robert Wright, Coxswain - 1895 (Second-Service Clasp)
Jeffrey Wright, Coxswain - 1941
Sydney Norman Hill, Mechanic - 1941
James Leadbetter, Coxswain - 1949
  • The Thanks of the Institution inscribed on Vellum
James Leadbetter, Second Coxswain - 1941
Richard Wright, Assistant Mechanic - 1941
William Houston, crew member - 1941
David Wright, crew member - 1941
Stephen James Musgrave, Second Coxswain - 1984
William Fairclough, Coxswain - 1987
  • Vellum Service Certificate
Barrie Farmer, crew member - 1984
David Owen, crew member - 1984
  • The Ralph Glister Award 1984
    (for the most meritorious service of the year performed by a rescue boat crew)
Stephen James Musgrave, Helmsman - 1985
Barrie Farmer, crew member - 1985
David Owen, crew member - 1985
  • Bronze Medal awarded by the RSPCA
Steve Carroll, Mechanic - 2005
Christopher Hurst, Coxswain - 2009QBH[6]

Fleetwood lifeboats

edit

All-weather lifeboats

edit
ON[a] Op.No.[b] Name In service[7] Class Comments
Pre-340 Unnamed 1859−1862 30-foot Peake [Note 1]
Pre-396 Edward Wasey 1862−1879 32-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 2]
Pre-643 Child of Hale 1879−1887 34-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 3]
76 Edith
(Fleetwood No.2)
1887−1894 46-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 4]
75 Child of Hale
(Fleetwood No.1)
1887−1892 37-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 5]
359 Maude Pickup 1894−1930 46-foot Watson (P&S) [Note 6]
Station Closed for reconstruction, 1930–1933
628 Sir Fitzroy Clayton 1933−1935 38-foot Self-righting (motor)
657 Frederick H. Pilley 1935−1939 38-foot Self-righting (motor)
813 Ann Letitia Russell 1939−1976 41ft Watson
1036 44-015 Lady of Lancashire 1976−1989 Waveney
1156 47-038 William Street 1989−2016 Tyne
1321 13-14 Kenneth James Pierpoint 2016− Shannon

Inshore lifeboats

edit
Op.No.[b] Name In service[2] Class Comments
D-91 Unnamed 1966−1970 D-class (RFD PB16)
D-187 Unnamed 1970−1984 D-class (RFD PB16)
D-298 Unnamed 1984−1992 D-class (RFD PB16)
D-424 City of Chester 1992−2000 D-class (EA16)
D-556 Saddleworth 2000−2009 D-class (EA16)
D-719 Mary Elizabeth Barnes 2009−2021 D-class (IB1)
D-853 Harbet 2021− D-class (IB1) [8]
  1. ^ ON is the RNLI's Official Number of the boat.
  2. ^ a b Op.No. is the RNLI's Operational Number carried on the hull or vehicle.
Pre ON numbers are unofficial numbers used by the Lifeboat Enthusiast Society to reference early lifeboats not included on the official RNLI list.

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ 30-foot (6-Oared) Self-righting (P&S) Peake-class lifeboat, built by Forrestt of Limehouse, costing £140-1s-0d.
  2. ^ 32-foot x 7-foot 11in (10-Oared) Self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, built by Forrestt of Limehouse, costing £224-16s-6d.
  3. ^ 34-foot x 8-foot 6in (10-Oared) Self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, costing £363.
  4. ^ 46-foot x 11-foot Self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, formerly at New Brighton.
  5. ^ 32-foot x 8-foot (10-Oared) Self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, costing £392.
  6. ^ 46-foot x 12-foot 6in Watson-class non-self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, costing £875.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d "Fleetwood's station history". RNLI. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2024). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2024. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 4–132.
  3. ^ a b c d e Morris, Jeff (April 1983). The Story of the Fleetwood Lifeboats. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 1–22.
  4. ^ a b Cox, Barry (1998). Lifeboat Gallantry. Spink & Son Ltd. ISBN 0 907605 89 3.
  5. ^ Michael, Chris. "Early North West Steam Vessels". Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  6. ^ "Ordinary Members of the Civil Division of the said Most Excellent Order of the British Empire". The Gazette. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  7. ^ Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2021). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2021. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 2–18.
  8. ^ "The Naming Ceremony for the RNLI's New Lifeboat 2023". Fleetwood Town Council. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
edit