LIFEBOAT MAGAZINE ARCHIVE

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M.F.V. 7

Date: Summer 1978

Volume: 46

Issue: 465

Drifting on rocks ST ANN'S COASTGUARD informed the honorary secretary of St David's lifeboat station at 1138 on Saturday March 11 that MFV 7, on passage from Fishguard to Pembroke, had engine failure west of St David's...

December (1)

Date: 1942

Volume: War Years

Issue: 1942

GIRVAN, AYRSHIRE. At about 9.30 in the mornmg of the 7th October, 1942, a military aeroplane crashed into the sea about four miles, N.N.W. of Girvan. The sea was calm, with a light westerly wind. The Fraserburgh motor fishing boat Primrose,...

Category: Services

Centenaries of Life-Boat Stations. Presentations of Vellums Signed By the Prince of Wales

Date: September 1935

Volume: 29

Issue: 323

Presentations of Vellums signed by the Prince of Wales.

THREE life-boat stations have cele- brated their centenaries this year: Berwick-on-Tweed, the Mumbles, Gla- morganshire, and Ferryside, Carmar- thenshire. In each...

Category: Articles

William and Sarah Ann

Date: February 1893

Volume: 15

Issue: 167

CAISTER, NORFOLK.—At about 1 A.M.

on the 25th July, the side lights of a vessel were observed near the Barber Sand and it appeared that she was in great danger of stranding, and shortly afterwards flares were seen from the...

The Boy Ernest

Date: August 1890

Volume: 14

Issue: 157

On the morning of the 19th April, large red flares were seen on the Middle Gross Sand, and the Middle Cross, St.

Nicholas, and Gorton light-vessels were firing rockets. The No. 1 Life-boat, Covent Garden was launched, a...

William

Date: February 1900

Volume: 17

Issue: 195

The coxswain of the Life-boat Beauchamp, while on the watch at 3.30 A.M., on the 16th September, saw the sidelights of a vessel which was apparently stranded on the Barber Sand. About ten minutes afterwards signals of distress were shown;...

The Life-Boat Stations of the United Kingdom

Date: August 1882

Volume: 11

Issue: 125

XLXIX. RYE.—The Mary Stanford, 34 feet by 7 feet 9 inches, 10 oars.

L. WINCHELSEA.—The Frances Harris, 33 feet by 8 feet 2 inches, 10 oars.

THESE two most interesting towns well deserve the descriptive...

Category: Articles

The Motor Fleet

Date: February 1913

Volume: 22

Issue: 247

THE review of the Institution's Motor Fleet, which it is usual to make at this time of the year, reveals the fact that we are feeling our way slowly, but surely, in the use of Life-boats installed with motor power. Ten years ago there...

Category: Articles

Station Profile Weymouth

Date: Winter 2002

Volume: 58

Issue: 559

Weymouth lifeboat station, in Dorset, was established in 1869 to replace Portland station, which had closed down in 1850. Funded by the Earl of Stratford, the lifeboat gave assistance to vessels in distress on the north and east sides of...

Category: Articles

Your Letters

Date: Spring 1989

Volume: 51

Issue: 508

The future of maroons Sir - Are we to witness the total phasing out of the firing of maroons at our lifeboat stations? This issue must have been the subject of much debate during my periods at sea away from the UK, but I sincerely hope that...

Category: Correspondence