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Hunstanton Lifeboat Station

Hunstanton Lifeboat Station is a Royal National Lifeboat Institution[1] operated lifeboat station located in the village of Old Hunstanton in the English county of Norfolk.[2] This is the only lifeboat station on the east coast of England which faces westward, being positioned on the east side of the square-mouthed bay and estuary known as The Wash.[3]

Hunstanton Lifeboat Station
Hunstanton Lifeboat Station
General information
TypeRNLI Lifeboat Station
LocationHunstanton Lifeboat Station, Sea Lane, Old Hunstanton, Norfolk, PE36 6JN
CountryEngland
Coordinates52°57′14.62″N 0°30′9.53″E / 52.9540611°N 0.5026472°E / 52.9540611; 0.5026472
Opened1824 taken over by RNLI in 1867
OwnerRoyal National Lifeboat Institution

The station currently has two lifeboats: B-class Atlantic 85 lifeboat, Spirit of West Norfolk (B-848), since 23 May 2011 and H-class Hovercraft Hunstanton Flyer (Civil Service No. 45) (H-003).

History edit

1824–1900: origins and expansion edit

The first lifeboat station to be established in Hunstanton was formed by the Norfolk Shipwreck Association in 1824.[4][5]

In 1867 the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) took over the running of the station and constructed a new boathouse close to the location of the original, which had been demolished by then.[6] A local committee was formed to run the station.[6] The RNLI station's first lifeboat was the Licensed Victuallers, which was funded from donations by the Licensed Victuallers’ Lifeboat Fund and delivered free of coast to the station by the Great Eastern Railway. delivered the boat and its equipment free of cost. She was on station from 1867 to 1887, during which time she was launched 21 times and saved 86 lives.[7] The second lifeboat, also funded by the Licensed Victuallers, was the Licensed Victuallers II (ON 169), which was on station from November 1887 until July 1900.[7]

In 1900, the lifeboat station was allocated a new, larger lifeboat, necessitating a bigger boathouse. Land was acquired from the local Lord of the Manor to build the new facility, which had a watch-room above the boat bay and a concrete runway down to the chalk roadway that led down to the beach. The construction cost a total of £647. The old station house was put to use as a beach shop and café, which it still is to this day.[8]

The new lifeboat arrived on 30 July 1900, having been in storage in London since its launch and fitting out in February of the same year.[9] She was again delivered free of cost by the Great Eastern Railway, including a launching carriage supplied by the Bristol Wagon Works Co.[10] The new lifeboat was again funded by and named for the Licensed Victuallers, as the Licensed Victuallers III (ON 440).[7] She was a standard self-righting ten-oared pulling lifeboat, 35 ft in length with a beam of 8 ft 3 in and a depth of 4 ft.[9] She had two water ballast tanks, a drop keel, and eight relieving tubes. There was also a 10 ft steel sliding keel and a 17 ft 6 in bilge keel.[9] The boat also was fitted with a sailing mast. This lifeboat was on station from July 1900 until 1931, during which time she launched a total of 19 times and is credited with saving the lives of 20 people.[6]

1920s–1931: tractor trials and closure edit

Hunstanton's position on The Wash, with its wide expanse of beach and mud flats, made launching the lifeboat at low tide particularly difficult. The RNLI began to use Hunstanton for trials to assess the use of motorised tractors to launch lifeboats across such terrain. The first trial, on 26 March 1920, successfully tested a Clayton agricultural tractor to tow the lifeboat out to the waters edge.[11] The first specially adapted tractor was delivered to Hunstanton before the equipment was rolled out to other stations which had similar terrain.[4]

By the early 1920s, the Hunstanton lifeboat was launched only infrequently, and the station was officially closed due to inactivity in 1931.[12][13] The motor lifeboats stationed at Skegness and Wells-next-the-Sea were deemed sufficient to cover the coast of Hunstanton and The Wash.

1970s–1996: reopening and improvements edit

During the 1970s, an increase in marine incidents made it clear that a lifeboat service in The Wash was once again necessary. In 1979 it was agreed that the station would re-open, so the previous boathouse was reacquired and the RNLI provided a D class inflatable ILB for a one-year trial.[14] On 24 May a standard relief ILB D 181 was sent to the station, and Hunstanton lifeboat station was officially reopened in June 1979. In April 1980, another D-class ILB D 126 was sent to the station. The relaunched station was considered a strong success, and the RNLI sent a new Atlantic-class 21 ILB together with a new drive-on drive-of trailer and a new Talus MB-4H amphibious tractor[15] to launch the ILB.[16] In December 1982 a new lifeboat arrived to replace the Atlantic 21. She was named Spirit of America (B 556)[16][17] on 11 May 1983 by Vice Admiral Donald D. Engen,[16] a retired US Navy officer and the former president of the Association for Rescue at Sea.[16]

More improvements were made to the facilities in 1996. The Spirit of America was refitted with more powerful 70 horse power engines and GPS equipment, returning to the station on 2 December 1996.[16]

2001–present: hovercraft edit

In 2001[18] Hunstanton was one of five lifeboat stations chosen for evaluation trials on a rescue hovercraft, the others being Morecombe, Flint, West Kirby and Southend-on-Sea.[18] The hovercraft spent approximately two weeks at each station where local crew members were shown how to fly the craft. The trials were considered a success, and on 2 May 2003, the Hunstanton Flyer (Civil Service No. 54) (H-003) arrived on station.[18][19][20] The hovercraft was officially named on 21 May 2005 and handed to the station on 25 July 2003.[18] She had been built by Griffon of Southampton at a cost of £122,000, funded from the Lifeboat Fund of the staff and pensioners of the Civil Service, Royal Mail and British Telecom. She weighs 2,500 kg and has a hull made from marine grade aluminium and fibre reinforced composite. The hovercraft is powered by twin VW Golf turbo diesel engines.

Fleet edit

All Weather Boats edit

Dates in service Class ON Name Photo
1867–1887 Self-Righter Licensed Victuallers
1887–1900 Self-Righter, ten-oared ON 169 Licensed Victuallers II
1900–1931 Self-Righter, ten-oared ON 440 Licensed Victuallers III

Inshore lifeboats edit

Dates in service Class Op. No. Name Photo
1979- 1980 D-class D-181
1980- 1982 D-class D-126
1982–1998 Atlantic 21-class B-556 Spirit of America
1998–2011 Atlantic 75-class B-749 DJS Haverhill
2011–present Atlantic 85-class B-848 Spirit of West Norfolk  

Hovercraft lifeboats edit

Dates in service Class Op. No. Name Photo
2003–present H-class (Griffin 470TD) H-003 Hunstanton Flyer (Civil Service No. 54)  

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Hunstanton Lifeboat Station". RNLI station web-site. RNLI. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey (2002). OS Explorer Map 250 - Norfolk Coast West. ISBN 0-319-21886-4.
  3. ^ Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works: History of The Lifeboat Station in Hunstanton. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  4. ^ a b For Those In Peril – The Lifeboat Service of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, Station by Station. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher: Silver Link Publishing Ltd, First Issue 1999. Work: Part 1, East Coast of England – Berwick to Hastings, Page 43, Hunstanton. ISBN 1 85794 129 2
  5. ^ Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher: Tempus Publishing, First edition, 2008. Works: History of The Lifeboat Station in Hunstanton, Page 13 – The first lifeboat. ISBN 9780752447490
  6. ^ a b c Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher: Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works: History of The Lifeboat Station in Hunstanton, Page 14 – The first lifeboat. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  7. ^ a b c Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works: Appendix I. Pulling Lifeboats, Page 90. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  8. ^ "Images of Old Hunstanton". Image 7 and 9 show the boathouse of 1887 and the 1900 boathouse to the right. ancestry.com. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works=The last pulling Lifeboat 1900 -1931, Page 25. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  10. ^ . The Bristol Wagon and Carriage Works Co., Ltd. – description of the Company. ©Strictly Copyright E.G.Brain. 1996. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  11. ^ "Steel Wheels – The website for veteran tractors". Photos and description of a T1 Clayton tractor. Copyright © 2006-2011 David Parfitt. All rights reserved. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  12. ^ . 26 October 2009. Archived from the original on 26 October 2009. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  13. ^ . 15 January 2021. Archived from the original on 15 January 2021. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
  14. ^ Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works=Part 3 – Inshore Lifeboat, Reopening of the Station, page 44. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  15. ^ "Clayton Engineering – Talus MB-H Lifeboat Tractor". Description of the Talus MB-764 tractor. Clayton Engineering Ltd. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  16. ^ a b c d e Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works=Part 3 – Inshore Lifeboat, Upgrading the station, page 47 to 67. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  17. ^ . History of AFRAS - Section - Expanding AFRAS Assistance, to the RNLI and Beyond - reference to the RNLB Spirit of America. ©2012-2013 Association for Rescue at Sea, Inc. Archived from the original on 2 November 2013. Retrieved 23 October 2013.
  18. ^ a b c d Hunstanton Lifeboats. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher:Tempus Publishing, First edition,2008. Works=Part 4 – Flying to the Rescue, page 82 to 88. ISBN 9 780752 447490
  19. ^ "RNLI Hoverecraft". Details of the Griffon 470TD SAR Hoverecraft Fleet. lifeboatsonline@yahoo.co.uk. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  20. ^ . Details and description of the hoverecraft. The Communications and Public Service Lifeboat Fund. Archived from the original on 2 November 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.

hunstanton, lifeboat, station, royal, national, lifeboat, institution, operated, lifeboat, station, located, village, hunstanton, english, county, norfolk, this, only, lifeboat, station, east, coast, england, which, faces, westward, being, positioned, east, si. Hunstanton Lifeboat Station is a Royal National Lifeboat Institution 1 operated lifeboat station located in the village of Old Hunstanton in the English county of Norfolk 2 This is the only lifeboat station on the east coast of England which faces westward being positioned on the east side of the square mouthed bay and estuary known as The Wash 3 Hunstanton Lifeboat StationHunstanton Lifeboat StationGeneral informationTypeRNLI Lifeboat StationLocationHunstanton Lifeboat Station Sea Lane Old Hunstanton Norfolk PE36 6JNCountryEnglandCoordinates52 57 14 62 N 0 30 9 53 E 52 9540611 N 0 5026472 E 52 9540611 0 5026472Opened1824 taken over by RNLI in 1867OwnerRoyal National Lifeboat InstitutionThe station currently has two lifeboats B class Atlantic 85 lifeboat Spirit of West Norfolk B 848 since 23 May 2011 and H class Hovercraft Hunstanton Flyer Civil Service No 45 H 003 Contents 1 History 1 1 1824 1900 origins and expansion 1 2 1920s 1931 tractor trials and closure 1 3 1970s 1996 reopening and improvements 1 4 2001 present hovercraft 2 Fleet 2 1 All Weather Boats 2 2 Inshore lifeboats 2 3 Hovercraft lifeboats 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory edit1824 1900 origins and expansion edit The first lifeboat station to be established in Hunstanton was formed by the Norfolk Shipwreck Association in 1824 4 5 In 1867 the Royal National Lifeboat Institution RNLI took over the running of the station and constructed a new boathouse close to the location of the original which had been demolished by then 6 A local committee was formed to run the station 6 The RNLI station s first lifeboat was the Licensed Victuallers which was funded from donations by the Licensed Victuallers Lifeboat Fund and delivered free of coast to the station by the Great Eastern Railway delivered the boat and its equipment free of cost She was on station from 1867 to 1887 during which time she was launched 21 times and saved 86 lives 7 The second lifeboat also funded by the Licensed Victuallers was the Licensed Victuallers II ON 169 which was on station from November 1887 until July 1900 7 In 1900 the lifeboat station was allocated a new larger lifeboat necessitating a bigger boathouse Land was acquired from the local Lord of the Manor to build the new facility which had a watch room above the boat bay and a concrete runway down to the chalk roadway that led down to the beach The construction cost a total of 647 The old station house was put to use as a beach shop and cafe which it still is to this day 8 The new lifeboat arrived on 30 July 1900 having been in storage in London since its launch and fitting out in February of the same year 9 She was again delivered free of cost by the Great Eastern Railway including a launching carriage supplied by the Bristol Wagon Works Co 10 The new lifeboat was again funded by and named for the Licensed Victuallers as the Licensed Victuallers III ON 440 7 She was a standard self righting ten oared pulling lifeboat 35 ft in length with a beam of 8 ft 3 in and a depth of 4 ft 9 She had two water ballast tanks a drop keel and eight relieving tubes There was also a 10 ft steel sliding keel and a 17 ft 6 in bilge keel 9 The boat also was fitted with a sailing mast This lifeboat was on station from July 1900 until 1931 during which time she launched a total of 19 times and is credited with saving the lives of 20 people 6 1920s 1931 tractor trials and closure edit Hunstanton s position on The Wash with its wide expanse of beach and mud flats made launching the lifeboat at low tide particularly difficult The RNLI began to use Hunstanton for trials to assess the use of motorised tractors to launch lifeboats across such terrain The first trial on 26 March 1920 successfully tested a Clayton agricultural tractor to tow the lifeboat out to the waters edge 11 The first specially adapted tractor was delivered to Hunstanton before the equipment was rolled out to other stations which had similar terrain 4 By the early 1920s the Hunstanton lifeboat was launched only infrequently and the station was officially closed due to inactivity in 1931 12 13 The motor lifeboats stationed at Skegness and Wells next the Sea were deemed sufficient to cover the coast of Hunstanton and The Wash 1970s 1996 reopening and improvements edit During the 1970s an increase in marine incidents made it clear that a lifeboat service in The Wash was once again necessary In 1979 it was agreed that the station would re open so the previous boathouse was reacquired and the RNLI provided a D class inflatable ILB for a one year trial 14 On 24 May a standard relief ILB D 181 was sent to the station and Hunstanton lifeboat station was officially reopened in June 1979 In April 1980 another D class ILB D 126 was sent to the station The relaunched station was considered a strong success and the RNLI sent a new Atlantic class 21 ILB together with a new drive on drive of trailer and a new Talus MB 4H amphibious tractor 15 to launch the ILB 16 In December 1982 a new lifeboat arrived to replace the Atlantic 21 She was named Spirit of America B 556 16 17 on 11 May 1983 by Vice Admiral Donald D Engen 16 a retired US Navy officer and the former president of the Association for Rescue at Sea 16 More improvements were made to the facilities in 1996 The Spirit of America was refitted with more powerful 70 horse power engines and GPS equipment returning to the station on 2 December 1996 16 2001 present hovercraft edit In 2001 18 Hunstanton was one of five lifeboat stations chosen for evaluation trials on a rescue hovercraft the others being Morecombe Flint West Kirby and Southend on Sea 18 The hovercraft spent approximately two weeks at each station where local crew members were shown how to fly the craft The trials were considered a success and on 2 May 2003 the Hunstanton Flyer Civil Service No 54 H 003 arrived on station 18 19 20 The hovercraft was officially named on 21 May 2005 and handed to the station on 25 July 2003 18 She had been built by Griffon of Southampton at a cost of 122 000 funded from the Lifeboat Fund of the staff and pensioners of the Civil Service Royal Mail and British Telecom She weighs 2 500 kg and has a hull made from marine grade aluminium and fibre reinforced composite The hovercraft is powered by twin VW Golf turbo diesel engines Fleet editAll Weather Boats edit Dates in service Class ON Name Photo1867 1887 Self Righter Licensed Victuallers1887 1900 Self Righter ten oared ON 169 Licensed Victuallers II1900 1931 Self Righter ten oared ON 440 Licensed Victuallers IIIInshore lifeboats edit Dates in service Class Op No Name Photo1979 1980 D class D 1811980 1982 D class D 1261982 1998 Atlantic 21 class B 556 Spirit of America1998 2011 Atlantic 75 class B 749 DJS Haverhill2011 present Atlantic 85 class B 848 Spirit of West Norfolk nbsp Hovercraft lifeboats edit Dates in service Class Op No Name Photo2003 present H class Griffin 470TD H 003 Hunstanton Flyer Civil Service No 54 nbsp See also editList of RNLI stationsReferences edit Hunstanton Lifeboat Station RNLI station web site RNLI Retrieved 21 October 2013 Ordnance Survey 2002 OS Explorer Map 250 Norfolk Coast West ISBN 0 319 21886 4 Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works History of The Lifeboat Station in Hunstanton ISBN 9 780752 447490 a b For Those In Peril The Lifeboat Service of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland Station by Station Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Silver Link Publishing Ltd First Issue 1999 Work Part 1 East Coast of England Berwick to Hastings Page 43 Hunstanton ISBN 1 85794 129 2 Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works History of The Lifeboat Station in Hunstanton Page 13 The first lifeboat ISBN 9780752447490 a b c Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works History of The Lifeboat Station in Hunstanton Page 14 The first lifeboat ISBN 9 780752 447490 a b c Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works Appendix I Pulling Lifeboats Page 90 ISBN 9 780752 447490 Images of Old Hunstanton Image 7 and 9 show the boathouse of 1887 and the 1900 boathouse to the right ancestry com Retrieved 22 October 2013 a b c Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works The last pulling Lifeboat 1900 1931 Page 25 ISBN 9 780752 447490 The Bristol Wagon amp Carriage Works Co Ltd The Bristol Wagon and Carriage Works Co Ltd description of the Company c Strictly Copyright E G Brain 1996 Archived from the original on 23 October 2013 Retrieved 22 October 2013 Steel Wheels The website for veteran tractors Photos and description of a T1 Clayton tractor Copyright c 2006 2011 David Parfitt All rights reserved Retrieved 22 October 2013 Hunstanton RNLI 26 October 2009 Archived from the original on 26 October 2009 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Station history RNLI 15 January 2021 Archived from the original on 15 January 2021 Retrieved 30 December 2021 Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works Part 3 Inshore Lifeboat Reopening of the Station page 44 ISBN 9 780752 447490 Clayton Engineering Talus MB H Lifeboat Tractor Description of the Talus MB 764 tractor Clayton Engineering Ltd Retrieved 24 March 2014 a b c d e Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works Part 3 Inshore Lifeboat Upgrading the station page 47 to 67 ISBN 9 780752 447490 Association for Rescue at Sea History of AFRAS Section Expanding AFRAS Assistance to the RNLI and Beyond reference to the RNLB Spirit of America c 2012 2013 Association for Rescue at Sea Inc Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 23 October 2013 a b c d Hunstanton Lifeboats Author Leach Nicholas Publisher Tempus Publishing First edition 2008 Works Part 4 Flying to the Rescue page 82 to 88 ISBN 9 780752 447490 RNLI Hoverecraft Details of the Griffon 470TD SAR Hoverecraft Fleet lifeboatsonline yahoo co uk Retrieved 22 October 2013 Hunstanton Flyer The Lifeboat Fund Details and description of the hoverecraft The Communications and Public Service Lifeboat Fund Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 22 October 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hunstanton Lifeboat Station amp oldid 1172399071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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