Littlehampton Lifeboat Station is a Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) station in the town of Littlehampton, in West Sussex, on the south coast of England.[1] The station is on the harbour side on the eastern bank of the River Arun, a quarter mile from the harbour entrance and the pier. The current lifeboat house on Fisherman's Quay was built in 2002. The lifeboat station currently operates with two inshore lifeboats: a B-class (Atlantic 85) lifeboat, Renee Sherman (B-891) and a D-class (IB1) lifeboat, Ray of Hope (D-769).[2][3]
History
The RNLI opened the first lifeboat station in the town in 1884.[4][5] It was built on the east bank of the River Arun, near what is now the Harbour Parkamusement park. The pulling and sailing lifeboat (a lifeboat using oars and sail, with no engine) was manned by local sailors and fishermen. In 1903 the boathouse was moved closer to the lighthouse. The lifeboats were launched 26 times before this original station closed in 1921 due to lack of qualified staff, and the placement of a new motor lifeboat further west at Selsey.[4][5]
Reopening and Blue Peter appeals
Increased leisure boating in the area led to a corresponding rise in marine rescues, including swimmers and small craft washed out to sea, necessitating a faster local response. The station re-opened in 1967 as an inshore lifeboat station operating a D-class lifeboat housed in a garage on the east bank of the river Arun. The cost was defrayed by a fundraising appeal on the BBC programme Blue Peter.[6][7][8] The lifeboat was called Blue Peter 1 (D-115).[7] The original Blue Peter 1 lifeboat was replaced five times, funded each time by appeals on Blue Peter; each replacement lifeboat retained the name Blue Peter 1 until 2016.[9]
1979–present
In 1979, a new boathouse was built for the station near Fishermen's Quay, enabling quick launch down a short ramp into the Arun.[4]
In 2002, the station underwent a large re-development to fit in with the recent waterside changes in the area. The new station has been designed specifically as a two-boat station at a cost of £550,000.[9] At this time, the station was provided with a B-class (Atlantic 75) lifeboat, Blue Peter 1 (B-779), at a cost of £100,000.[9]
A new D-class inshore lifeboat, D-631 Spirit of Juniper, was donated by the Campaign for Real Gin in 2004 at a cost of £25,000, and served until 2014.[9] She was replaced by D-769 Ray of Hope, a later version of the D-Class IB1, funded by a private donor at a cost of £42,000.[10]
The final Blue Peter 1 was replaced in 2016 by a B-class (Atlantic 85) boat, Rennee Sherman (B-891).[3]
The Littlehampton lifeboat station was the busiest in the West Sussex area, with 61 call outs in 2020 and 913 between 2008 and 2020.[11]
^ abOp.No. is the RNLI's Operational Number of the boat carried on the hull.
Gallery
The Littlehampton Atlantic 75-class lifeboat Blue Peter 1 (B-779) being retrieved by the stations TC45 tractor in its launch cradle on the slipway outside the lifeboat station at Fishermen’s Quay on the banks of the River Arun.
The Littlehampton D-class Spirit of Juniper (D-631) was on station from 2004 to 2014, here inside the boathouse at Fishermen’s Quay, Littlehampton.
Rennee Sherman (B-891) being launched in a cradle in the river Arun, Littlehampton Lifeboat Station, 9 May 2016.
Rennee Sherman (B-891) in the river Arun heading out to sea, 9 May 2016.
Rennee Sherman (B-891) being launched from Littlehampton Lifeboat Station, 9 May 2016.
Station honours
The following are awards made at Littlehampton[17][18]
^ abcFor Those In Peril – The Lifeboat Service of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, Station by Station. Author: Leach, Nicholas. Publisher: Silver Link Publishing Ltd, First Issue 1999. Work:Part 2, South Coast of England – Eastbourne to Weston-super-Mare, Page 74, Littlehampton. ISBN1 85794 129 2
^ ab"A Brief History of Littlehampton". Reference to the early work of the RNLI at Littlehampton. Arun District Council. Retrieved 5 March 2014.
^Strong to Save – Dramatic first-hand accounts of the RNLI lifeboat rescues around the British Iles. Author: Kipling, Ray and Susannah. Publisher:Patrick Stephens Ltd, re-printed addition – 1998. Work: Blue Peter to the Rescue – references to the Blue Peter appeals and involvement with the RNLI, Page 104. ISBN1 85260 495 6
^Never Turn Back – The RNLI since the Second World War. Author:Kipling, Ray and Susannah. Publisher:Sutton Publishing, 2006. Work: Chapter 7, page 154, From Whitehall to White City – Blue Peter book appeal, ISBN0 7509 4307 6