Stories of the Lifeboat
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Stories of the Lifeboat - Frank Mundell
Frank Mundell
Stories of the Lifeboat
Published by Good Press, 2020
goodpress@okpublishing.info
EAN 4064066098360
Table of Contents
PREFACE
CHAPTER I.
MAN THE LIFEBOAT!
CHAPTER II.
LIFEBOAT DISASTERS.
CHAPTER III.
THE WARRIORS OF THE SEA.
CHAPTER IV.
THE GOODWIN SANDS.
CHAPTER V.
THE BOATMEN OF THE DOWNS.
CHAPTER VI.
A GOOD NIGHT'S WORK.
CHAPTER VII.
THE BRADFORD
TO THE RESCUE.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE LAST CHANCE.
CHAPTER IX.
HARDLY SAVED.
CHAPTER X.
A WRESTLE WITH DEATH.
CHAPTER XI.
A DOUBLE RESCUE.
CHAPTER XII.
DEAL MEN TO THE RESCUE.
CHAPTER XIII.
THE WRECK OF THE BENVENUE.
CHAPTER XIV.
THE STRANDING OF THE EIDER.
CHAPTER XV.
THE WRECK OF THE NORTHERN BELLE.
CHAPTER XVI.
A GALLANT RESCUE.
CHAPTER XVII.
A BUSY DAY.
CHAPTER XVIII.
A RESCUE IN MID-OCEAN.
CHAPTER XIX.
THE THREE BELLS.
CHAPTER XX.
ON THE CORNISH COAST.
CHAPTER XXI.
A PLUCKY CAPTAIN.
CHAPTER XXII.
BY SHEER STRENGTH.
CHAPTER XXIII.
WRECKED IN PORT.
"
PREFACE
Table of Contents
In sending forth this little work to the public, I desire to acknowledge my obligations to the following:--The Royal National Lifeboat Institution for the valuable matter placed at my disposal, also for the use of the illustrations on pages 20 and 21; to Mr. Clement Scott and the proprietors of Punch for permission to use the poem, The Warriors of the Sea
; to the proprietors of The Star for the poem, "The Stranding of the Eider"; and to the proprietors of the Kent Argus for so freely granting access to the files of their journal. Lastly, my thanks are due to the publishers--at whose suggestion the work was undertaken--for the generous manner in which they have illustrated the book.
F. M.
LONDON, September, 1894.
CHAPTER I.
Table of Contents
MAN THE LIFEBOAT!
Table of Contents
T o Lionel Lukin, a coachbuilder of Long Acre, London, belongs the honour of inventing the lifeboat. As early as the year 1784 he designed and fitted a boat, which was intended to save the lives of mariners wrecked on the coast.
It had a projecting gunwale of cork, and air-tight lockers or enclosures under the seats. These gave the boat great buoyancy, but it was liable to be disabled by having the sides stove in. Though Lukin was encouraged in his efforts by the Prince of Wales--afterwards George the Fourth--his invention did not meet with the approval of those in power at the Admiralty, and Lukin's only lifeboat which came into use was a coble that he fitted up for the Rev. Dr. Shairp of Bamborough. For many years this was the only lifeboat on the coast, and it is said to have saved many lives.
In the churchyard of Hythe, in Kent, the following inscription may be read on the tombstone, which marks the last resting-place of the Father of the Lifeboat
:--
"This LIONEL LUKIN
was the first who built a lifeboat, and was the
original inventor of that quality of safety, by
which many lives and much property have been
preserved from shipwreck, and he obtained for
it the King's Patent in the year 1785."
The honour of having been the first inventor of the lifeboat is also claimed by two other men. In the parish church of St. Hilda, South Shields, there is a stone Sacred to the Memory of William Wouldhave, who died September 28, 1821, aged 70 years, Clerk of this Church, and Inventor of that invaluable blessing to mankind, the Lifeboat.
Another similar record tells us that Mr. Henry Greathead, a shrewd boatbuilder at South Shields, has very generally been credited with designing and building the first lifeboat, about the year 1789.
As we have seen, Lukin had received the king's patent for his invention four years before Greathead brought forward his plan. This proves conclusively that the proud distinction belongs by right to Lionel Lukin.
In September 1789 a terrible wreck took place at the mouth of the Tyne. The ship Adventure of Newcastle went aground on the Herd Sands, within three hundred yards of the shore. The crew took to the rigging, where they remained till, benumbed by cold and exhaustion, they dropped one by one into the midst of the tremendous breakers, and were drowned in the presence of thousands of spectators, who were powerless to render them any assistance.
Deeply impressed by this melancholy catastrophe, the gentlemen of South Shields called a meeting, and offered prizes for the best model of a lifeboat calculated to brave the dangers of the sea, particularly of broken water.
From the many plans sent in, those of William Wouldhave and Henry Greathead were selected, and after due consideration the prize was awarded to the shrewd boatbuilder at South Shields.
He was instructed to build a boat on his own plan with several of Wouldhave's ideas introduced. This boat had five thwarts, or seats for rowers, double banked, to be manned by ten oars. It was lined with cork, and had a cork fender or pad outside, 16 inches deep. The chief point about Greathead's invention was that the keel was curved instead of being straight. This circumstance, simple as it appears, caused him to be regarded as the inventor of the first practicable lifeboat, for experience has proved that a boat with a curved keel is much more easily launched and beached than one with a straight keel.
Lifeboats on this plan were afterwards placed on different parts of the coast, and were the means of saving altogether some hundreds of lives. By the end of the year 1803 Greathead had built no fewer than thirty-one lifeboats, eight of which were sent to foreign countries. He applied to Parliament for a national reward, and received the sum of £1200. The Trinity House and Lloyd's each gave him £105. From the Society of Arts he received a gold medal and fifty guineas, and a diamond ring from the Emperor of Russia.
The attention thus drawn to the needs of the shipwrecked mariner might have been expected to be productive of good results, but, unfortunately, it was not so. The chief reason for this apathy is probably to be found in the fact that, though the lifeboats had done much good work, several serious disasters had befallen them, which caused many people to regard the remedy as worse than the disease. Of this there was a deplorable instance in 1810, when one of Greathead's lifeboats, manned by fifteen men, went out to the rescue of some fishermen who had been caught in a gale off Tynemouth. They succeeded in taking the men on board, but on nearing the shore a huge wave swept the lifeboat on to a reef of rocks, where it was smashed to atoms. Thirty-four poor fellows--the rescued and the rescuers--were drowned.
It was not until twelve years after this that the subject of the preservation of life from shipwreck on our coast was successfully taken up. Sir William Hillary, himself a lifeboat hero, published a striking appeal to the nation on behalf of the perishing mariner, and as the result of his exertions the Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck was established in 1824. This Society still exists under the well-known name of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. It commenced its splendid career with about £10,000, and in its first year built and