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Porthleven Lifeboat Station

Coordinates: 50°04′58.0″N 5°19′05.2″W / 50.082778°N 5.318111°W / 50.082778; -5.318111
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Porthleven Lifeboat Station
1894 Lifeboat Station, Porthleven
Porthleven Lifeboat Station is located in Cornwall
Porthleven Lifeboat Station
Porthleven, Cornwall
General information
StatusClosed
TypeRNLI Lifeboat Station
LocationOld Lifeboat House
AddressMount Pleasant Road
Town or cityPorthleven , Cornwall, TR13 9JS
CountryEngland
Coordinates50°04′58.0″N 5°19′05.2″W / 50.082778°N 5.318111°W / 50.082778; -5.318111
Opened26 February 1863
Closed1929

Porthleven Lifeboat Station was located at the fishing port of Porthleven, the most southerly port in Great Britain, which sits approximately 20 miles (32 km) south west of Truro, overlooking Mount's Bay in Cornwall.[1]

A lifeboat was first placed at Porthleven in 1863 by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI).[2]

After 66 years of operation, Porthleven lifeboat station was closed in 1929.[3]

History

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With the offer of £150 from Thomas James Agar-Robartes, 1st Baron Robartes, MP for Cornwall East towards the cost of a lifeboat, and with the agreement of Inspecting Commander C. J. Austen, RN, H.M. Coastguard at Penzance, to act as Honorary Secretary, at a meeting of the RNLI committee of management on Thursday 31 July 1862, it was decided that a lifeboat station be established at Porthleven, in Mount's Bay, Cornwall.[4]

A 30-foot self-righting 'Pulling and Sailing' (P&S) Lifeboat, one with both sail and (6) oars, was dispatched on 26 February 1863, transported from London to Truro free of charge by the Great Western, Bristol and Exeter, South Devon and Cornwall railway companies, arriving on 4 March 1863. The lifeboat was named Agar Robartes.[2]

A boathouse was constructed at a cost of £145, on land leased from Mr Edward Coode, of St. Austell. Unusually, the lifeboat house was some distance from the water, and located on Beacon Road, above the Ship Inn.[5]

A new lifeboat would be placed at Porthleven in 1882. The cost of the larger 34-foot self-righting boat and transporting carriage, was defrayed by the legacy of Mrs Eliza Wright of Southport, and was named in memory of her late son, Charles Henry Wright.[6]

Between 08:00 and 09:00, in calm conditions on 5 October 1886, 25 fishing boats set out from Portleven. By 10:30, the sea was raging, and a red flag was hoisted, indicating "haste to harbour." Most boats returned safely, but entering the harbour was proving extremely difficult. The Charles Henry Wright was launched, and with coastguards on shore ready to assist given the high risk of being wrecked, eight of the boats were towed into harbour one at a time.[7]

In 1894, a new boathouse with slipway was constructed at a cost of £1,395. It was located on the shore off Mount Pleasant Road, on the west side of the village and opposite the pier, but crucially, it was outside the harbour. The new boathouse was in an extremely exposed position. The high tide broke the doors open in 1896, and the roof was damaged in 1906, but in all but exceptional weather, the lifeboat could now be launched at anytime, without consideration to low-tide, and without the extraordinary effort it took to bring the boat down from Beacon Road.[5][8]

On 18 March 1907, Porthleven lifeboat John Francis White (ON 444) would be one of four lifeboats sent to the aid of the SS Suevic, which ran aground on Stag Rock near Lizard Point. 18 people were brought ashore.[9]

A later service on 3 August 1907 would see the men from the Seierskrandsen of Svendborg brought ashore by the lifeboat, having abandoned the vessel in the ship's boat, when the vessel ran ashore at Loe Bar. The vessel was later recovered by the lifeboat crew with assistance from local fishermen and a tug from Falmouth.[10]

Apart from a couple of times required for assistance, no further rescues were made by the Porthleven lifeboat. Motor-powered lifeboats were placed at The Lizard in 1918, and Penlee in 1922, and the days for Porthleven's effectively obsolete 'Pulling and Sailing' lifeboat were numbered. Porthleven would actually receive a fourth and final lifeboat, Dash (ON 501), in 1926, but at that time, this boat was already 24-years-old, and just 2-years newer than the boat she replaced. At a meeting of the RNLI committee of management on 18 July 1929, the decision was made to close Porthleven Lifeboat Station.[3]

The 1894 lifeboat house still stands, although the slipway was dismantled, and it is currently used as an Art Studio. The lifeboat on station at the time of closure, Dash (ON 501), was sold from service in 1929. The boat was later acquired in 1994, for restoration in Porthleven, but after years of neglect, it was destroyed in the car park of a Porthleven supermarket in 2004.[11][12]

Porthleven lifeboats

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ON[a] Name Built On Station[13] Class Comments
Pre-407 Agar Robartes 1863 1863−1882 30-foot Peake Self-righting (P&S) [Note 1][14]
183 Charles Henry Wright 1882 1882−1900 34-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 2]
444 John Francis White 1900 1900−1926 35-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 3]
501 Dash 1902 1926−1929 35-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 4]
  1. ^ ON is the RNLI's Official Number of the boat.
Pre ON numbers are unofficial numbers used by the Lifeboat Enthusiast Society to reference early lifeboats not included on the official RNLI list.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ 30-foot x 7-foot (6-Oared) Peake self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, built by Forrestt of Limehouse.
  2. ^ 34-foot x 8-foot (10-Oared) self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, costing £363.
  3. ^ 35-foot self-righting (P&S) lifeboat.
  4. ^ 35-foot self-righting (P&S) lifeboat.

References

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  1. ^ "Cornwall Sheet LXXV.SE". Maps. National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  2. ^ a b "Additional Stations and New Life-Boats". The Lifeboat. V (49): 305, 320. 1 July 1863. Retrieved 14 February 2025.
  3. ^ a b "Summary of Meetings of the Committee of Management". The Lifeboat. XXVII (300): 387. November 1929. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  4. ^ "Summary of the Meetings of the Committe". The Lifeboat. V (46): 161. 1 October 1862. Retrieved 14 February 2025.
  5. ^ a b "Porthleven Lifeboats". Helston History. Retrieved 16 February 2025.
  6. ^ "Additional Stations and New Life-Boats". The Lifeboat. XII (129): 181. 1 August 1883. Retrieved 16 February 2025.
  7. ^ "Fishing Boats". The Lifeboat. XIII (143): 222. 1 February 1887. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  8. ^ "Cornwall LXXV.16". Maps. National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  9. ^ "SS 'Suevic': The greatest sea rescue". The Independent. 12 March 2007. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
  10. ^ "A Vessel Called Seierskrandsen". The Lifeboat. XX (227): 308. 1 February 1908. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  11. ^ "Dashing home to Porthleven" (PDF). The Lifeboat. 53 (530): 254. Winter 1994. Retrieved 17 February 2025.
  12. ^ Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2025). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2025. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. pp. 36–37.
  13. ^ Leonard & Denton 2025, pp. 8–37.
  14. ^ "Annual Report". The Lifeboat. V (48): 208–209. 1 April 1863. Retrieved 14 February 2025.
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