DECEMBER 20TH. - WELLS, NORFOLK.
A dinghy, assumed to belong to an aeroplane,had been reported, but nothing could be found. - Rewards, £22 19s. 3d..
JANUARY 29TH. - NEW QUAY, AND ABERYSTWYTH, CARDIGANSHIRE. An airman had been reported to have baled out from a Spitfire aeroplane, but nothing could be found. - Rewards : New Quay, £22 7s. ; Aberystwyth, £48 8s..
14th February. Life-boat put out to meet an incoming fishing boat, which came in without waiting for the life- boat.—Rewards, £12 10s..
Yarmouth, Isle of Wight—2nd April.
An aeroplane was reported to have fallen into the sea, but no machine was found or reported missing.— Rewards, £7 16s..
Falmouth, Cornwall.—16th March.
An obsolete destroyer had driven ashore, but the watchman aboard her got ashore without help.—Rewards, £6 17s. 6d..
NOVEMBER 23RD. - SKEGNESS, LINCOLNSHIRE.
A red flare, probably from an aeroplane, had been reported, but nothing could be found. - Rewards, £9 19s..
FEBRUARY 19TH. - DUNGENESS, KENT.
An object, looking like a raft flying a flag, had been reported, but nothing could be found.- Rewards, £34 17s. 6d..
AN ADDRESS BY SIR GODFREY BARING, BT.
CHAIRMAN OF THE ROYAL NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE INSTITUTION ON 10th. JULY, 1941..
Category: Articles
llth August. A fishing coble had got into difficulties, but another coble towed her to safety.—Rewards, £11 11s. (An account of this service appears in Shore- boat Services on page 168.).
St. Peter Port, Guernsey. — 22nd January. Distress signals had been reported, and an all-night search was made, but without result.—Rewards, £20 9s..