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You are here: PortCities Southampton > Wrecks and Accidents > Improving Safety at Sea > Saving the Shipwrecked > Lifesaving Teams and Apparatus
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Saving the Shipwrecked


Lifesaving Teams and Apparatus

Concern about the tragic loss of life in shipwrecks led to voluntary organisations being set up to do their bit. The best known of these is  Royal National Lifeboat Institution founded in 1824, but there were also teams of lifesaving volunteers. Some of these manned rocket apparatus.

The apparatus was portable and would be set up on shore as close as possible to the wreck. A light rope would be fired by rocket over the wreck, and those on board would attach it to their ship. A much heavier rope would then be hauled out, so that survivors could be brought ashore. To do this, they climbed into a breeches buoy, a piece of equipment combining two trouser legs which supported the survivor, with a lifebelt in case they were dipped into the water.

Voluntary lifesaving teams, or `companies` as they were often called, were eventually taken over by the government and incorporated into the  Coastguard Service.

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