RNLB Duncan
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RNLB ''Duncan'' was the first
RNLI The Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) is the largest charity that saves lives at sea around the coasts of the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man, as well as on some inland waterways. It i ...
lifeboat placed on station in the English coastal town of Sheringham in the county of Norfolk, United Kingdom.''OS Explorer Map 252 - Norfolk Coast East''. . The arrival of this lifeboat also coincided with the construction of the first RNLI lifeboat station. The station and boat worked in conjunction with the already established privateThe Sheringham Lifeboats, 1838-2000, Publisher: Bengunn 2003, ''Fishermans'' lifeboat stationThe Fishermen's Lifeboat By Peter Cox & Tim Groves:Published By Sheringham Town Council 1994, also in the town.


Expansion

In the mid-1850s the RNLI had been reformed and renamed and the institution and plans were made to expand the service around the country. During their expansion in the 1850s and 1860s the institution began to integrate many of the local and private life saving organisations which had sprung up around the country. The institution also developed new improved designs of lifeboats. This included the newly developed self-righting lifeboat and the RNLI planned to place a new station and lifeboat in the town of Sheringham. Surprisingly there was no plan to integrate the private fisherman’s lifeboat association, leaving Sheringham in the unusual situation of having two lifeboat services.


The new station

In April 1866 the RNLI sent their assistant inspector to Sheringham to assess the situation in the town. Captain David Robertson''Lifeboat Gallantry'' RNLI medals and how they were won. Edited by:Barry Cox. Published:Spink, London, 1998. Page 150. made his recommendation for a station to be placed within the town. He also met members of the Upcher family who had already provided funds and organisation for the existing fisherman’s lifeboat. Henry Upcher came to an agreement to provide land at East Cliff, opposite a coal yard for the construction of a lifeboat station. The cost was £251 and was built by J Francis of Cromer. The station was completed by 1867 and was of brick construction complete with a lecture room on the second floor. The station was situated behind an area called ''The Mo'' (The site today occupied by Sheringham Museum,Sheringham, Mo Museum website
retrieved 13 March 2013
called ''The Mo'') and a long timber slipway was built from the promenade down to the beach.


The new lifeboat

The new lifeboat placed on station was called RNLB ''Duncan''Sheringham Lifeboats: By Leach, Nicholas and Russell, Paul :Published by landmark Pub Ltd, 2009: and she arrived on station on 31 July 1867 and had arrived from the boatyard of T&W Forestt of Limehouse in London by train completing the final stage by road. With the lifeboat came a launch carriage and she was first launched from Sheringham on the next day. Funding for the new lifeboat was provided from the gift of Mrs Agnes Fraser (née Duncan) and was made in the memory of her father and uncle.


Description

The new lifeboat was of a self-righting, pulling and sailing type''Rescue at Sea'', An International History of Lifesaving, Coastal Rescue Craft and Organisations. Author:Clayton Evans. Published by: Conway Maritime Press (Chrysalis Books) 2003. and was in length and a beam of . The design encompassed air cases for reserve buoyancy, a low centre of gravity (iron drop keel), the ability to self-bail (relieving valves) and water ballast tanks which gave the lifeboat stability and the ability to self-right achieved as a result of the combination of these features.


Service

The ''Duncan'' was on station at Sheringham for a total of nineteen years between 1867 and 1877 and during that time she was launched to seven effective rescues. This record was affected by the difficulties that soon became apparent, of launching the lifeboat from its ill-conceived positioning at East Cliff. During this period launch access to the sea was never easy and frequent repair and alterations were needed to the launch route and gangway. On several occasions the gangway was damaged and swept away by the stormy seas. In 1877 the gangway was so badly damaged that it required re-building. The private lifeboat '' Augusta'' which also served the town at this time was much lighter which gave her an advantage when launches were required in inclement weather. The ''Augusta'' would often be afloat long before the ''Duncan'' and so was able to provide assistance quicker and more often than the ''Duncan'', nonetheless the RNLI lifeboat was well liked by the fishermen and crews of Sheringham.


First service

The ''Duncan''s first successful service took place on 3 December 1867 when she was launched to rescue the
schooner A schooner () is a type of sailing vessel defined by its rig: fore-and-aft rigged on all of two or more masts and, in the case of a two-masted schooner, the foremast generally being shorter than the mainmast. A common variant, the topsail schoon ...
''Hero'' of
Maldon Maldon (, locally ) is a town and civil parish on the River Blackwater, Essex, Blackwater estuary in Essex, England. It is the seat of the Maldon District and starting point of the Chelmer and Blackwater Navigation. It is known for Maldon Sea ...
. The schooner had become stranded in a north-easterly wind just of the coast close to Beeston Hill. The lifeboat, which at one point ran aground herself, saved the schooner's crew of three. Despite here grounding the RNLI's report on the rescue it was stated ''The behaviour of the lifeboat amidst the heavy breakers elicited the admiration of her crew, who expressed the greatest confidence in her''.


Last service

The ''Duncan''s last successful service took place on 6 December 1882 when she was launched in response to a distress signals sent out by the Swedish barque ''Caroline'' who was on her way from
Hull Hull may refer to: Structures * Chassis, of an armored fighting vehicle * Fuselage, of an aircraft * Hull (botany), the outer covering of seeds * Hull (watercraft), the body or frame of a ship * Submarine hull Mathematics * Affine hull, in affi ...
to Trelleborg. Along with the launch of the ''Duncan'', the ''Augusta'' was also launched. The ''Caroline'' had lost her sails and spar in the heavy weather and together the two lifeboats escorted the barque to Grimsby arriving there the following day.


Failure

On 4 October 1883 the ''Duncan'' was called to rescue the Schooner ''Alpha''. The lifeboat was unable to be launched from her station or from an alternative launch site at
East Runton East Runton is a small village in Norfolk, England situated close to the North Sea. It was once a traditional fishing village outside Cromer but is now a popular holiday destination for camping and caravan holidays. The village is within the pari ...
to help the stricken vessel. The crews were eventually rescued from the beach. By 1885 the ''Duncan'' was a cause of concern to the towns' lifeboat men. It had become apparent to these men that the ''Duncan'' was no longer suitable. In June 1885 a meeting was arranged by the local committee of the lifeboat and fishermen. So concerned were these men that 150 men attended. A request was formulated and sent to the RNLI asking for a new lighter boat with a longer keel and wider beam that would be more suitable for the difficult launch situation in the town. ''Duncan'' was replaced in 1885 by .


Coxswains of the Duncan

During the period of time that ''Duncan'' was on station at Sheringham there were five Coxswains and they were as follows *Edmund 'Pye' West, 1867 to 1868 *John Grice, 1869 *William 'Buck' Craske, 1870 to 1873 *Abraham Cooper, 1874 *Robert 'Philoloo' Cooper, 1875 to 1886


Service and rescues


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Duncan Self-Righter-class lifeboats Sheringham lifeboats 1867 ships