Whitehaven Lifeboat Station was located in the harbour town of Whitehaven, sitting approximately 38 miles (61 km) south-west of Carlisle, at nearly the most westerly point of Cumberland, Cumbria. A lifeboat was first stationed at Whitehaven in 1804. The station was transferred to the management of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) in 1865. On 18 Dec 1924, Whitehaven Lifeboat Station was closed.

1. History

At a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Town and Harbour of Whitehaven, on 30 September 1803, a decision was made to order for Whitehaven, the largest size of lifeboat available, from pioneering lifeboat builder Henry Greathead of South Shields. According to Greathead's documents, the 1½ ton (unnamed) boat for Whitehaven was a 12-oar 28-foot lifeboat, costing £149. After a 4-day trip overland from South Shields, the boat arrived in Whitehaven on 10 January 1804. It would be nearly 10 years until the boat was needed, when the vessel Brothers of Workington was washed ashore on 17 November 1813, at the entrance to the harbour. Even then, the lifeboat was not immediately available, its storage location at the time is unknown, and so the harbour boat with a crew of five, was first dispatched to the vessel. Sadly, one of those five crew, Thomas Farrell, was lost overboard. At a review following this incident by the harbour trustees in March 1814, a plan was made to provide a new lifeboat house on the New Quay. In July 1865, it would appear that the transfer of the provision of a lifeboat at Whitehaven, from the Trustees to the RNLI, was at the instigation of the RNLI. The RNLI had been approached by a Miss Leicester, of London, with an offer of £300 to fund a lifeboat specifically for Whitehaven. A 33-foot 10-oared self-righting boat, Robert Whitworth, costing £255 and built in 1864 by Forrestt of Limehouse, London, had served at Tynemouth for one year, and had then been transferred to Bridlington. However, she was found too heavy for Bridlington due to the soft sand, and it was this boat that was then placed at Whitehaven. A new boat house was constructed north of the North Pier, on land that is now Whitehaven Marina Yard, funded by the Harbour Commissioners, and costing £105. The boat arrived on 29 March 1866, and was renamed Elizabeth, after the donor's mother. (The lifeboat is recorded as Elizabeth Leicester on the service board, but as Elizabeth on all other documents). On 14 November 1871, the sloop Demetian Lass (Dometian Lass) was abandoned whilst on passage from Runcorn, to the Isle of Skye, Outer Hebrides, before she drifted back out to sea. Her crew of four were rescued by the Whitehaven lifeboat. Whitehaven got another boat in 1875, officially placed at Whitehaven No.2 station. This was actually Seascale Lifeboat Station, some 13 miles down the coast, but with all the crew being Whitehaven men. The station was closed in 1895, the lifeboat having launching just four times in 20 years, and having carried out just one successful rescue of 3 men, in its first year. For more information, please see –

Seascale Lifeboat Station Two more lifeboats were assigned to Whitehaven, the first in 1884 and then one in 1903. Both were named Elizabeth Leicester. On 10 May 1885, the Norwegian barque Thorsbjerg parted both her cables, and was driven ashore, while awaiting the tide to enter the port. Her crew of nine, and the Pilot, were rescued by the Whitehaven Lifeboat Elizabeth Leicester (ON 78). The 1865 boathouse was demolished in 1909, with a new one constructed on the same site. In 1924, it was noted that there had been no service calls since February 1918, over six years. At a meeting of the RNLI Committee of Management on 18 Dec 1924, the decision was taken to close the station with immediate effect. Six Whitehaven lifeboats had been called upon 19 times, and saved 33 lives, plus the whole crew of the Thistle in 1819, whose numbers were not recorded. The site of the boathouse is now a boatyard. The lifeboat on station at the time of closure, Elizabeth Leicester (ON 507), was sold from service in 1925, and last reported as a derelict yacht in Newport, Wales in 2004.

1. Whitehaven lifeboats


1. = Whitehaven Harbour Trust =


1. = RNLI =

Pre ON numbers are unofficial numbers used by the Lifeboat Enthusiast Society to reference early lifeboats not included on the official RNLI list.

1. = Whitehaven No.2 Station =

Please see Seascale Lifeboat Station

1. See also

List of RNLI stations List of former RNLI stations Royal National Lifeboat Institution lifeboats

1. Notes


1. References


1. External links

St Bees RNLI Lifeboat Station

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218 m

Phare de Whitehaven (West Pier)

Le phare de Whitehaven (West Pier) est un phare situé sur le brise-lames ouest du port de Whitehaven, dans le comté du Cumbria en Angleterre. Ce phare est géré par l'autorité portuaire de Whitehaven.
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219 m

Phare de Whitehaven (North Pier)

Le phare de Whitehaven (North Pier) est un phare situé sur le brise-lames nord du port de Whitehaven, dans le comté du Cumbria en Angleterre. Ce phare est géré par l'autorité portuaire de
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