I have now somewhat to say about the
Royal National Lifeboat Institution, which has the
entire management and control of our fleet of 273
lifeboats. That Institution has had a glorious
history. It was founded by Sir William Hillary,
Baronet a man who deserves a monument in
Westminster Abbey, I think; for, besides originating
the Lifeboat Institution, he saved, and assisted in
saving, 305 lives, with his own hands!
Born in 1824, the Institution has
been the means of saving no fewer than 29,608 lives
up to the end of 1882.
At its birth the Archbishop of Canterbury
presided; the great Wilberforce, Lord John Russell,
and other magnates were present; the Dukes of Kent,
Sussex, and other members of the Royal family, became
vice-patrons, the Earl of Liverpool its president,
and George the Fourth its patron. In 1850 good
Prince Albert became its vice-patron, and her Majesty
the Queen became, and still continues, a warm supporter
and annual contributor. This is a splendid array
of names and titles, but let me urge the reader never
to forget that this noble Institution depends on the
public for the adequate discharge of its grand work,
for it is supported almost entirely by voluntary contributions.
The sole object of the Institution
is to provide and maintain boats that shall save the
lives of shipwrecked persons, and to reward those who
save lives, whether by means of its own or other boats.
The grandeur of its aim and singleness of its purpose
are among its great recommendations.
When, however, life does not require
to be saved, and when opportunity offers, it allows
its boats to save property.
It saves and rewards those
who assist in saving many hundreds of lives
every year. Last year (1882) the number saved
by lifeboats was 741, besides 143 lives saved by shore-boats
and other means, for which rewards were given by the
Institution; making a grand total of 884 lives saved
in that one year. The number each year is often
larger, seldom less. One year (1869) the rescued
lives amounted to the grand number of 1231, and in
the greater number of cases the rescues were effected
in circumstances in which ordinary boats would have
been utterly useless worse than useless,
for they would have drowned their crews. In respect
of this matter the value of the lifeboat to the nation
cannot be estimated at least, not until
we invent some sort of spiritual arithmetic whereby
we may calculate the price of widows’ and orphans’
tears, and of broken hearts!
But in regard to more material things
it is possible to speak definitely.
It frequently happens in stormy weather
that vessels show signals of distress, either because
they are so badly strained as to be in a sinking condition,
or so damaged that they are unmanageable, or the crews
have become so exhausted as to be no longer capable
of working for their own preservation. In all
such cases the lifeboat puts off with the intention
in the first instance of saving life. It reaches
the vessel in distress; some of the boat’s crew
spring on board, and find, perhaps, that there is
some hope of saving the ship. Knowing the locality
well, they steer her clear of rocks and shoals.
Being comparatively fresh and vigorous, they work
the pumps with a will, manage to keep her afloat,
and finally steer her into port, thus saving ship
and cargo as well as crew.
Now let me impress on you that incidents
of this sort are not of rare occurrence. There
is no play of fancy in my statements; they happen
every year. Last year (1882) twenty-three vessels
were thus saved by lifeboat crews. Another year
thirty-three, another year fifty-three, ships were
thus saved. As surely and regularly as the year
comes round, so surely and regularly are ships and
property saved by lifeboats saved to
the nation! It cannot be too forcibly pointed
out that a wrecked ship is not only an individual,
but a national loss. Insurance protects the
individual, but insurance cannot, in the nature of
things, protect the nation. If you drop a thousand
sovereigns in the street, that is a loss to you, but
not to the nation; some lucky individual will find
the money and circulate it. But if you drop
it into the sea, it is lost not only to you, but to
the nation, indeed to the world itself, for ever,
of course taking for granted that our amphibious divers
don’t fish it up again!
Well, let us gauge the value of our
lifeboats in this light. If a lifeboat saves
a ship worth ten or twenty thousand sovereigns from
destruction, it presents that sum literally as a free
gift to owners and nation. A free gift,
I repeat, because lifeboats are provided solely to
save life not property. Saving the
latter is, therefore, extraneous service. Of
course it would be too much to expect our gallant
boatmen to volunteer to work the lifeboats, in the
worst of weather, at the imminent risk of their lives,
unless they were also allowed an occasional chance
of earning salvage. Accordingly, when they save
a ship worth, say 20,000 pounds, they are entitled
to put in a claim on the owners for 200 pounds salvage.
This sum would be divided (after deducting all expenses,
such as payments to helpers, hire of horses, etcetera)
between the men and the boat. Thus deduct,
say, 20 pounds expenses leaves 180 pounds to divide
into fifteen shares; the crew numbering thirteen men:
Let us now consider the value of loaded ships.
Not very long ago a large Spanish
ship was saved by one of our lifeboats. She
had grounded on a bank off the south coast of Ireland.
The captain and crew forsook her and escaped to land
in their boats. One man, however, was inadvertently
left on board. Soon after, the wind shifted;
the ship slipped off the bank into deep water, and
drifted to the northward. Her doom appeared
to be fixed, but the crew of the Cahore lifeboat observed
her, launched their boat, and, after a long pull against
wind and sea, boarded the ship and found her with seven
feet of water in the hold. The duty of the boat’s
crew was to save the Spanish sailor, but they did
more, they worked the pumps and trimmed the sails
and saved the ship as well, and handed her over to
an agent for the owners. This vessel and cargo
was valued at 20,000 pounds.
Now observe, in passing, that this
Cahore lifeboat not only did much good, but received
considerable and well-merited benefit, each man receiving
34 pounds from the grateful owners, who also presented
68 pounds to the Institution, in consideration of
the risk of damage incurred to their boat. No
doubt it may be objected that this, being a foreign
ship, was not saved to our nation; but, as the
proverb says, “It is not lost what a friend
gets,” and I think it is very satisfactory to
reflect that we presented the handsome sum of 20,000
pounds to Spain as a free gift on that occasion.
This was a saved ship. Let us
look now at a lost one. Some years ago a ship
named the Golden Age was lost. It was well named
though ill-fated, for the value of that ship and cargo
was 200,000 pounds. The cost of a lifeboat with
equipment and transporting carriage complete is about
650 pounds, and there are 273 lifeboats at present
on the shores of the United Kingdom. Here is
material for a calculation! If that single ship
had been among the twenty-seven saved last year (and
it might have been) the sum thus rescued from
the sea would have been sufficient to pay for all
the lifeboats in the kingdom, and leave 22,550 pounds
in hand! But it was not among the saved.
It was lost a dead loss to Great Britain.
So was the Ontario of Liverpool, wrecked in October,
1864, and valued at 100,000 pounds. Also the
Assage, wrecked on the Irish coast, and valued at
200,000 pounds. Here are five hundred thousand
pounds half a million of money lost
by the wreck of these three ships alone. Of
course, these three are selected as specimens of the
most valuable vessels lost among the two thousand wrecks
that take place each year on our coasts; they
vary from a first-rate mail steamer to a coal coffin,
but set them down at any figure you please, and it
will still remain true that it would be worth our while
to keep up our lifeboat fleet, for the mere chance
of saving such valuable property.
But after all is said that can be
said on this point, the subject sinks into insignificance
when contrasted with the lifeboat’s true work the
saving of human lives.
There is yet another and still higher
sense in which the lifeboat is of immense value to
the nation. I refer to the moral influence it
exercises among us. If many hundreds of lives
are annually saved by our lifeboat fleet, does it
not follow, as a necessary consequence, that happiness
and gratitude must affect thousands of hearts in a
way that cannot fail to redound to the glory of God,
as well as the good of man? Let facts answer
this question.
We cannot of course, intrude on the
privacy of human hearts and tell what goes on there,
but there are a few outward symptoms that are generally
accepted as pretty fair tests of spiritual condition.
One of these is parting with money! Looking
at the matter in this light, the records of the Institution
show that thousands of men, women, and children, are
beneficially influenced by the lifeboat cause.
The highest contributor to its funds
in the land is our Queen; the lowliest a sailor’s
orphan child. Here are a few of the gifts to
the Institution, culled almost at random from the
Reports. One gentleman leaves it a legacy of
10,000 pounds. Some time ago a sum of 5000 pounds
was sent anonymously by “a friend.”
A hundred pounds comes in as a second donation
from “a sailor’s daughter.”
Fifty pounds come from a British admiral, and five
shillings from “the savings of a child!”
One-and-sixpence is sent by another child in postage-stamps,
and 1 pound 5 shillings as the collection of a Sunday
school in Manchester; 15 pounds from three fellow-servants;
10 pounds from a shipwrecked pilot, and 10 shillings,
6 pence from an “old salt.” I myself
had once the pleasure of receiving twopence for the
lifeboat cause from an exceedingly poor but enthusiastic
old woman! But my most interesting experience
in this way was the receipt of a note written by a
blind boy well and legibly written, too telling
me that he had raised the sum of 100 pounds for the
Lifeboat Institution.
And this beneficial influence of our
lifeboat service travels far beyond our own shores.
Here is evidence of that. Finland sends 50 pounds
to our Institution to testify its appreciation of
the good done by us to its sailors. President
Lincoln, of the United States, when involved in all
the anxieties of the great war between North and South,
found time to send 100 pounds to the Institution in
acknowledgment of services rendered to American ships
in distress. Russia and Holland send naval men
to inspect not our armaments and materiel
of hateful war, but our lifeboat management!
France, in generous emulation, starts a Lifeboat
Institution of its own, and sends over to ask our society
to supply it with boats and, last, but
not least, it has been said that foreigners, driven
far out of their course and stranded, soon come to
know that they have been wrecked on the British coast,
by the persevering efforts that are made to save their
lives!
And now, good reader, let me urge
this subject on your earnest consideration.
Surely every one should be ready to lend a hand to
rescue the perishing! One would think
it almost superfluous to say more. So it would
be, if there were none who required the line of duty
and privilege to be pointed out to them. But
I fear that many, especially dwellers in the interior
of our land, are not sufficiently alive to the claims
that the lifeboat has upon them.
Let me illustrate this by a case or
two imaginary cases, I admit, but none
the less illustrative on that account.
“Mother,” says a little
boy, with flashing eyes and curly flaxen hair; “I
want to go to sea!”
He has been reading “Cook’s
Voyages” and “Robinson Crusoe,” and
looks wistfully out upon the small pond in front of
his home, which is the biggest “bit of water”
his eyes have ever seen, for he dwells among the cornfields
and pastures of the interior of the land.
“Don’t think of it, darling
Willie. You might get wrecked, perhaps
drowned.”
But “darling Willie” does
think of it, and asserts that being wrecked is the
very thing he wants, and that he’s willing to
take his chance of being drowned! And Willie
goes on thinking of it, year after year, until he
gains his point, and becomes the family’s “sailor
boy,” and mayhap, for the first time in her
life, Willie’s mother casts more than a passing
glance at newspaper records of lifeboat work.
But she does no more. She has not yet been
awakened. “The people of the coast naturally
look after the things of the coast,” has been
her sentiment on the subject if she has
had any definite sentiments about it at all.
On returning from his first voyage
Willie’s ship is wrecked. On a horrible
night, in the howling tempest, with his flaxen curls
tossed about, his hands convulsively clutching the
shrouds of the topmast, and the hissing billows leaping
up as if they wished to lick him off his refuge on
the cross-trees, Willie awakens to the dread reality
about which he had dreamed when reading Cook and Crusoe.
Next morning a lady with livid face, and eyes glaring
at a newspaper, gasps, “Willie’s ship is wrecked!
five lost thirteen saved by the lifeboat.”
One faint gleam of hope! “Willie may
be among the thirteen!” Minutes, that seem
hours, of agony ensue; then a telegram arrives, “Saved,
Mother thank God, by the lifeboat.”
“Ay, thank God,” echoes
Willie’s mother, with the profoundest emotion
and sincerity she ever felt; but think you, reader,
that she did no more? Did she pass languidly
over the records of lifeboat work after that
day? Did she leave the management and support
of lifeboats to the people of the coast?
I trow not. But what difference had the saving
of Willie made in the lifeboat cause? Was hers
the only Willie in the wide World? Are we to
act on so selfish a principle, as that we shall decline
to take an interest in an admittedly grand and good
and national cause, until our eyes are forcibly opened
by “our Willie” being in danger?
Of course I address myself to people who have really
kind and sympathetic hearts, but who, from one cause
or another, have not yet had this subject earnestly
submitted to their consideration. To those who
have no heart to consider the woes and necessities
of suffering humanity, I have nothing whatever to
say, except, God help them!
Let me enforce this plea that
inland cities and towns and villages should
support the Lifeboat Institution with another
imaginary case.
A tremendous gale is blowing from
the south-east, sleet driving like needles enough,
almost, to put your eyes out. A “good ship,”
under close-reefed topsails, is bearing up for port
after a prosperous voyage, but the air is so thick
with drift that they cannot make out the guiding lights.
She strikes and sticks fast on outlying sands, where
the sea is roaring and leaping like a thousand fiends
in the wintry blast. There are passengers on
board from the Antipodes, with boxes and bags of gold-dust,
the result of years of toil at the diggings.
They do not realise the full significance of the catastrophe.
No wonder they are landsmen! The
tide chances to be low at the time; as it rises, they
awake to the dread reality. Billows burst over
them like miniature Niagaras. The good ship
which has for many weeks breasted the waves so gallantly,
and seemed so solid and so strong, is treated like
a cork, and becomes apparently an egg-shell!
Night comes darkness increasing
the awful aspect of the situation tenfold. What
are boxes and bags of gold-dust now now
that wild despair has seized them all, excepting those
who, through God’s grace, have learned to “fear
no evil?”
Suddenly, through darkness, spray,
and hurly-burly thick, a ghostly boat is seen!
The lifeboat! Well do the seamen know its form!
A cheer arouses sinking hearts, and hope once more
revives. The work of rescuing is vigorously,
violently, almost fiercely begun. The merest
child might see that the motto of the lifeboat-men
is “Victory or death.” But it cannot
be done as quickly as they desire; the rolling of
the wreck, the mad plunging and sheering of the boat,
prevent that.
A sturdy middle-aged man named Brown a
common name, frequently associated with common sense is
having a rope fastened round his waist by one of the
lifeboat crew named Jones also a common
name, not seldom associated with uncommon courage.
But Brown must wait a few minutes while his wife
is being lowered into the boat.
“Oh! be careful. Do it
gently, there’s a good fellow,” roars Brown,
in terrible anxiety, as he sees her swung off.
“Never fear, sir; she’s
all right,” says Jones, with a quiet reassuring
smile, for Jones is a tough old hand, accustomed to
such scenes.
Mrs Brown misses the boat, and dips into the raging
sea.
“Gone!” gasps Brown, struggling
to free himself from Jones and leap after her, but
the grasp of Jones is too much for him.
“Hold on, sir? she’s
all right, sir, bless you; they’ll have her on
board in a minute.”
“I’ve got bags, boxes,
bucketfuls of gold in the hold,” roars
Brown. “Only save her, and it’s all
yours!”
The shrieking blast will not allow
even his strong voice to reach the men in the
lifeboat, but they need no such inducement to work.
“The gold won’t be yours
long,” remarks Jones, with another smile.
Neptune’ll have it all to-night. See! they’ve
got her into the boat all right, sir. Now don’t
struggle so; you’ll get down to her in a minute.
There’s another lady to go before your turn comes.
During these few moments of forced
inaction the self-possessed Jones remarks to Brown,
in order to quiet him, that they’ll be all saved
in half an hour, and asks if he lives near that part
of the coast.
“Live near it!” gasps
Brown. “No! I live nowhere.
Bin five years at the diggings. Made a fortune.
Going to live with the old folk now at
Blunderton, far away from the sea; high up among the
mountains.”
“Hm!” grunts Jones.
“Do they help to float the lifeboats at Blunderton?”
“The lifeboats? No, of
course not; never think of lifeboats up there.”
“Some of you think of ’em
down here, though,” remarks Jones.
“Do you help the cause in any way, sir?”
“Me? No. Never gave a shilling to
it.”
“Well, never mind. It’s
your turn now, sir. Come along. We’ll
save you. Jump!” cries Jones.
And they do save him, and all on board
of that ill-fated ship, with as much heartfelt satisfaction
as if the rescued ones had each been a contributor
of a thousand a year to the lifeboat cause.
“Don’t forget us, sir,
when you gits home,” whispers Jones to Brown
at parting.
And does Brown forget him?
Nay, verily! He goes home to Blunderton, stirs
up the people, hires the town-hall, gets the chief
magistrate to take the chair, and forms a Branch
of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution the
Blunderton Branch, which, ever afterwards, honourably
bears its annual share in the expense, and in the privilege,
of rescuing men, women, and little ones from the raging
seas. Moreover, Brown becomes the enthusiastic
secretary of the Branch. And here let me remark
that no society of this nature can hope to succeed,
unless its secretary be an enthusiast.
Now, reader, if you think I have made
out a good case, let me entreat you to go, with Brown
in your eye, “and do likewise.”
And don’t fancy that I am advising
you to attempt the impossible. The supposed
Blunderton case is founded on fact. During a
lecturing tour one man somewhat enthusiastic
in the lifeboat cause preached the propriety
of inland towns starting Branches of the Lifeboat Institution.
Upwards of half a dozen such towns responded to the
exhortation, and, from that date, have continued to
be annual contributors and sympathisers.