If any one should doubt the fact that
a lifeboat is all but indestructible, let that
sceptical one read the following tale of wreck and
rescue.
On a terrible night in the year 1857
a Portuguese brig struck on the Goodwin Sands, not
far from the lightship that marks the northern extremity
of those fatal shoals. A shot was fired, and
a rocket sent up by the lightship. No second
signal was needed. The Ramsgate men were, as
usual, keeping a bright lookout. Instantly they
jumped into the lifeboat, which lay calmly floating
in the harbour alongside the pier. So eager were
the men to engage in the deadly struggle that the boat
was over-manned, and the last two who jumped in were
obliged to go ashore again.
The tug Aid was all ready according
to custom with steam up. She took
the boat in tow and made for the mouth of the harbour.
Staggering out in the teeth of tide and tempest they
ploughed their way through a heavy cross sea, that
swept again and again over them, until they reached
the edge of the Goodwins. Here the steamer cast
off the boat, and waited for her while she dashed
into the surf, and bore the brunt of the battle alone.
It was a familiar proceeding to all
concerned. Many a time before had the Ramsgate
boat and steamer rescued men and women and little ones
from the jaws of death on the Goodwins, but they were
about to experience a few novelties that night.
It was very dark, so that the boat
had much difficulty in finding the brig. On
coming within about eighty yards of her they cast anchor
and veered down under her lee. At first they
were in hopes of getting the vessel off, and some
hours were spent in vain attempts to do this, but
the gale increased in fury; the brig began to break
up. She rolled from side to side, and the yards
swung wildly in the air. A blow from one of
these yards would have stove the boat in, so the Portuguese
crew twelve men and a boy were
taken from the wreck, and the lifeboat-men endeavoured
to push off.
All this time the boat had been floating
in a basin worked in the sand by the motion of the
wreck; but the tide had been falling, and when they
tried to pull up to their anchor the boat struck heavily
on the edge of this basin. They worked to get
off the shoals with the energy of men who believe
that their lives depend on their efforts. For
a moment they succeeded in getting afloat, but again
struck and remained fast.
Meanwhile the brig was lifted by each
wave, that came rushing over the shoals like a mountain
chain of snow, and let fall with a thundering crash.
Her timbers began to snap like pipe-stems, and, as
she worked nearer and nearer to the boat, the wildly-swaying
yards threatened immediate destruction. The
heavy seas flew continually over the lifeboat, so
that passengers and crew could do nothing but hold
on to the thwarts for their lives. At last the
brig came so near that there was a stir among the
men; they were preparing for the last struggle
some of them intending to leap into the rigging of
the wreck and take their chance. But the coxswain
shouted, “Stick to the boat, boys, stick to
the boat!” and the men obeyed.
At that moment the boat lifted a little
on the surf and grounded again. New hope was
inspired by this. They pulled at the cable and
shoved might and main with the oars. They succeeded
in getting out of immediate danger, but still could
not pull up to their anchor in the teeth of wind and
tide. The coxswain then saw plainly that there
was but one resource left to cut the cable
and drive away to leeward right across the Goodwin
Sands, which at that place were two miles wide.
But there was not yet sufficient water on the sands
even for the attempting of that forlorn hope.
As far as could be seen in that direction, ay, and
far beyond the power of vision, there was nothing but
a chaos of wild, tumultuous, whirling foam, without
sufficient depth to float them over, so they held
on, intending to wait till the tide, which had turned,
should rise. Very soon, however, the anchor began
to drag. This compelled them to hoist sail, cut
the cable sooner than they had intended, and attempt
to beat to windward off the sands.
It was in vain. A moment more, and they struck
with tremendous force. A breaker came rolling
towards them, filled the boat, caught her up like a
plaything on its crest, and, hurling her a few yards
onwards, let her fall with a shock that well-nigh
tore every man out of her. Each successive breaker
treated her in this way!
Those who dwell by the seashore know
well those familiar ripples that mark the sands when
the tide is out. On the Goodwins those ripples
are gigantic banks, to be measured by feet, not by
inches. I can speak from personal experience,
having once visited the Goodwins and walked among
the sand-banks at low water. From one to another
of these banks this splendid boat was thrown.
Each roaring surf caught it by the bow or stern,
and, whirling it right round, sent it crashing on the
next ledge. The Portuguese sailors gave up all
hope and clung to the thwarts in silent despair, but
the crew did not lose heart altogether. They
knew the boat well, had often gone out to battle in
her, and hoped that they might yet be saved, if they
could only escape striking on the pieces of old wreck
with which the sands were strewn.
Thus, literally, yard by yard, with
a succession of shocks, that would have knocked any
ordinary boat to pieces, did that lifeboat drive,
during two hours, over two miles of the Goodwin Sands!
A thrilling and graphic account of
this wreck and rescue is given in the Reverend John
Gilmore’s book, “Storm Warriors,”
in which he tells us that while this exciting work
was going on, the Aid lay head to wind, steaming
half power, and holding her own against the storm,
waiting for her lifeboat, but no lifeboat returned
to her, and her gallant captain became more and more
anxious as time flew by. Could it be possible
that her sturdy little comrade, with whom she had
gone out to battle in hundreds of gales, was overcome
at last and destroyed! They signalled again
and again, but got no reply. Then, as their fears
increased, they began to cruise about as near to the
dangerous shoals as they dared almost
playing with death as they eagerly sought
for their consort. At last the conviction was
forced upon them that the boat must have been stove
by the wreck and swamped. In the midst of their
gathering despair they caught sight of the lightship’s
bright beam, shining like a star of hope through the
surrounding darkness. With a faint hope they
made for the vessel and hailed her. “Have
you seen anything of the lifeboat?” was the
eager question. “Nothing! nothing!”
was the sad reply. Back they went again to the
place they had left, determined to cruise on, hoping
against hope, till the night should pass away.
Hour after hour they steamed hither and thither,
with anxiously straining eyes. At last grey
dawn appeared and the wreck became dimly visible.
They made for it, and their worst fears were realised the
remnant of the brig’s hull was there with ropes
and wreckage tossing wildly round it but
no lifeboat!
Sadly they turned away and continued
to search for some time in the faint hope that some
of her crew might be floating about, buoyed up by
their lifebelts, but none were found, and at last they
reluctantly made for the harbour.
And when the harbour was gained what
saw they there? The lifeboat! safe and sound,
floating as calmly beside the pier as if nothing had
happened! As the captain of the Aid himself
said, he felt inclined at once to shout and cry for
wonder, and we may be sure that his wonder was not
decreased when he heard the lifeboat’s story
from the brave coxswain’s lips how
that, after driving right across the sands, as I have
described, they suddenly found themselves in deep water.
That then, knowing the extremity of danger to be
past, they had set the sails, and, soon after, had,
through God’s mercy, landed the rescued Portuguese
crew in Ramsgate Harbour!
It must not be imagined, however,
that such work as this can be done without great cost
to those who undertake it.
Some of the men never recovered from
the effects of that night’s exposure.
The gratitude of the Portuguese seamen was very great,
as well as their amazement at such a rescue!
It is recorded of them that, before arriving in the
harbour, they were observed to be in consultation
together, and that one who understood a little English
spoke to one of the crew in an undertone.
“Coxswain,” said the lifeboat
man, “they want to give us all their money!”
“Yes, yes,” cried the
Portuguese interpreter, in broken English; “you
have saved our lives! Thank you, thank you! but
all we have is yours. It is not much, but you
may take it between you.” The amount was
seventeen pounds!
As might have been expected, neither
the coxswain nor his men would accept a penny of it.
This coxswain was Isaac Jarman, who
for many years led the famous Ramsgate lifeboat into
action, and helped to save hundreds of human lives.
While staying at Ramsgate I had the pleasure of shaking
the strong hard hand of Jarman, and heard some of
his adventures from his own lips.
Now, from all that has been said,
it will, I think, be seen and admitted that the lifeboats
of the Institution are almost indestructible.
The lifebelt, to which reference
has been so often made, deserves special notice at
this point. The figure on the title-page shows
its appearance and the manner in which it is worn.
It was designed in 1854, by Admiral J.R. Ward,
the Institution’s chief inspector of lifeboats.
Its chief quality is its great buoyancy, which is not
only sufficient to support a man with head and shoulders
above water when heavily clothed, but enables the
wearer easily to support another person the
extra buoyancy being 25 pounds. Besides possessing
several great advantages over other lifebelts, that
of Admiral Ward is divided in the middle by a space,
where the waistbelt is fastened. This permits
of great freedom of action, and the whole machine
is remarkably flexible. It is also very strong,
forming a species of armour which protects the wearer
from severe blows, and, moreover, helps to keep him
warm.
It behoves me now to say a few words
about the inventor of lifeboats. As has been
told, our present splendid boat is a combination of
all the good points and improvements made in such
boats down to the present time. But the man
who first thought of a lifeboat and invented one; who
fought against apathy and opposition; who completed
and launched his ark of mercy on the sea at Bamborough,
in the shape of a little coble, in the year 1785,
and who actually saved many lives therewith, was a
London coachbuilder, LIONEL LUKIN by name.
Assuredly this man deserved the deepest
gratitude of the nation, for his was the first lifeboat
ever brought into action, and he inserted the small
end of that wedge which we have been hammering home
ever since, and which has resulted in the formation
of one of the grandest, most thoroughly national and
unsectarian of our charitable institutions.
Henry Greathead a boatbuilder
of South Shields erroneously got the credit
of this invention. Greathead was a noted improver
and builder of lifeboats, and was well and deservedly
rewarded for his work; but he was not the inventor.
Lionel Lukin alone can claim that honour.
In regard to the men who man them,
enough has been written to prove that they well deserve
to be regarded as the heroes of the coast!
And let me observe in passing that
there are also heroines of the coast, as the
following extract from the Journal of the Institution
will show. It appeared in the January number
of 1865.
“Voted the Silver Medal of the
Institution, and a copy of its vote of thanks on parchment,
to Miss Alice R. Le Geyt, in admiration of her prompt
and courageous conduct in rowing a small boat into
the surf at the risk of her life, and rescuing two
little boys who had fallen into the sea from the outer
pier at Lyme Regis, Dorset, on the 4th August.”
Again, in October, 1879, the Committee
of the National Lifeboat Institution voted the Silver
Medal of the Institution, and a copy of the vote inscribed
on vellum, to Miss Ellen Francis Prideaux Brune, Miss
Gertrude Rose Prideaux Brune, Miss Mary Katherine Prideaux
Brune, Miss Beatrice May Prideaux Brune, and Miss
Nora O’Shaughnessy, in acknowledgment of their
intrepid and prompt services in proceeding through
a heavy surf in their rowing-boat, and saving, at considerable
risk of life, a sailor from a boat which had been capsized
by a squall of wind off Bray Hill, Padstow Harbour,
Cornwall, on the 9th August. When the accident
occurred, the ladies’ boat was being towed astern
of a fishing-boat, and Miss Ellen Prideaux Brune,
with great gallantry and determination, asked to be
cast off, and, with her companions, she proceeded
with all possible despatch to the rescue of the drowning
sailor. All the ladies showed great courage,
presence of mind, and marked ability in the management
of their small boat. They ran great risk in
getting the man into it, on account of the strong tide
and sea on at the time.
So it would appear that the spirit
of the far-famed Grace Darling has not yet departed
from the land!
If heroism consists in boldly facing
and successfully overcoming dangers of the most appalling
nature, then I hold that thousands of our men of the
coast from Shetland to the Land’s
End stand as high as do those among our
soldiers and sailors who wear the Victoria Cross.
Let us consider an example.
On that night in which the Royal Charter
went down, there was a Maltese sailor on board named
Joseph Rodgers, who volunteered to swim ashore with
a rope. Those who have seen the effect of a raging
sea even on a smooth beach, know that the power of
the falling waves is terrible, and their retreating
force so great that the most powerful swimmers occasionally
perish in them. But the coast to which Rodgers
volunteered to swim was an almost perpendicular cliff.
I write as an eye-witness, reader,
for I saw the cliff myself, a few days after the wreck
took place, when I went down to that dreary coast
of Anglesea to identify the bodies of lost kindred.
Ay, and at that time I also saw something of the
awful aspect of loss by shipwreck. I went into
the little church at Llanalgo, where upwards of thirty
bodies lay upon the floor still in their
wet garments, just as they had been laid down by those
who had brought them from the shore. As I entered
that church one body lay directly in my path.
It was that of a young sailor. Strange to say,
his cheeks were still ruddy as though he had been
alive, and his lips were tightly compressed I
could not help fancying with the force
of the last strong effort he had made to keep out
the deadly sea. Just beyond him lay a woman,
and beside her a little child, in their ordinary walking-dresses,
as if they had lain down there and fallen asleep side
by side. I had to step across these silent forms,
as they lay, some in the full light of the windows,
others in darkened corners of the little church, and
to gaze earnestly into their dead faces for the linéaments
of those whom I had gone to find but I
did not find them there. Their bodies were washed
ashore some days afterwards. A few of those
who lay on that floor were covered to hide the mutilation
they had received when being driven on the cruel rocks.
Altogether it was an awful sight well fitted
to draw forth the prayer, “God help and bless
those daring men who are willing to risk their lives
at any moment all the year round, to save men and women
and little ones from such a fate as this!”
But, to return to Joseph Rodgers.
The cliff to which he volunteered to swim was thundered
on by seas raised by one of the fiercest gales that
ever visited our shores. It was dark, too, and
broken spars and pieces of wreck tossing about increased
the danger; while the water was cold enough to chill
the life-blood in the stoutest frame. No one
knew better than Rodgers the extreme danger of the
attempt, yet he plunged into the sea with a rope round
his waist. Had his motive been self-preservation
he could have gained the shore more easily without
a rope; but his motive was not selfish it
was truly generous. He reached the land, hauled
a cable ashore, made it fast to a rock, and began to
rescue the crew, and I have no doubt that every soul
in that vessel would have been saved if she had not
suddenly split across and sunk. Four hundred
and fifty-five lives were lost, but before the catastrophe
took place thirty-nine lives were saved by the
heroism of that Maltese sailor. The Lifeboat
Institution awarded its gold medal, with its vote
of thanks inscribed on vellum, and 5 pounds, to Rodgers,
in acknowledgment of his noble conduct.
All round the kingdom the men are,
as a rule, eager to man our lifeboats. Usually
there is a rush to the work; and as the men
get only ten shillings per man in the daytime, and
twenty shillings at night, on each occasion of going
off, it can scarcely be supposed that they do it only
for the sake of the pay! True, those payments
are increased on occasions of unusual risk or exposure;
nevertheless, I believe that a worthier motive animates
our men of the coast. I do not say, or think,
that religious feeling is the cause of their heroism.
With some, doubtless, it is; with others it probably
is not; but I sincerely believe that the Word of
God permeating as it does our whole
community, and influencing these men either directly
or indirectly is the cause of their self-sacrificing
courage, as it is unquestionably the cause of our
national prosperity.