Margate and Ramsgate RNLI each record a ‘One Moment One Crew’ photo memory

Ramsgate (top. Photo by Steve Burton) and Margate (bottom, Photo RNLI Margate) RNLI record their One Moment photo

Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) representatives from Margate and Ramsgate recently participated in a special photo moment – One Moment for One Crew – to create a photographic record of those involved with the lifesaving charity in this, its 200th anniversary year.

The charity, which was founded in 1824, asked its volunteers and staff from around the UK and Ireland to take a photo of themselves, their crew or their team, at as close to 18:24 on 1.8.24 as possible. Whether lifeguards on a beach, lifeboat crew at a station, fundraisers at an event, or volunteers in a museum – all involved with the charity have been encouraged to submit a photo of themselves representing their RNLI role.

Representatives including lifeboat crew (seagoing and shore crew), station officials, lifeguards, fundraisers, shop staff and visit guides from the RNLI communities in Margate and Ramsgate have each taken part and the photos have been uploaded to an online portal and will be used to create a montage image.

Margate (Photo RNLI Margate)

The volunteers at Margate fulfil diverse roles with the one aim of saving lives at sea. Seasonal lifeguards patrol many of Thanet’s beaches and with their Margate Main Sands operation based at the lifeboat station were included as they are very much part of our own local One Crew family.

Ramsgate RNLI has recently celebrated the appointment of Becky Cannon, believed to be the youngest female coxswain in RNLI history. She continues a long line of coxswains in her family, dating back nearly eighty-five years to Dunkirk when the Prudential lifeboat launched to evacuate the beaches.

Ramsgate Photo Steve Burton

During the one moment celebration, Ramsgate volunteers proudly gathered on the Tamar class lifeboat Diamond Jubilee, and relief Trent lifeboat Henry Heys Duckworth, docked in the Royal harbour.

The RNLI celebrated its 200th anniversary on 4 March, and this photographic moment is one of a range of events and programmes which the charity has organised to mark its bicentenary.

Anjie Rook, RNLI Associate Director, who is overseeing the RNLI’s 200th anniversary programmes, said: “The RNLI has been saving lives at sea for 200 years thanks to its incredible people – the courageous lifeboat crews and lifeguards who put their own lives at risk to save others; the dedicated fundraisers who raise the income to power those rescues; the committed volunteers who give their own time in a range of other roles such as giving out water safety advice or helping to run our retail shops and museums, and the staff who provide vital support to our volunteers.

“We have encouraged anyone who has some form of involvement with the RNLI to participate in this special One Moment for One Crew photographic event, to capture a record of everyone who, at this moment in time, is playing some part in the RNLI’s lifesaving work, continuing its legacy and securing its future.

“During our 200th anniversary year we have been remembering our past, celebrating the lifesaving service we provide today, and aiming to inspire future generations of lifesavers and supporters. One Moment for One Crew is very much about celebrating the people of today’s RNLI and, we hope, inspiring those future generations who will take the RNLI into its third century of lifesaving.’

Since the RNLI was founded in 1824, its volunteer crews and lifeguards have saved over 146,000 lives – this equates to an average of two lives saved every day for 200 years.

Founded in a London tavern on 4 March 1824 following an appeal from Sir William Hillary, who lived on the Isle of Man and witnessed many shipwrecks, the RNLI has continued saving lives at sea throughout the past two centuries. Today, it operates 238 lifeboat stations around the UK and Ireland, including four on the River Thames, and has seasonal lifeguards on 238 lifeguarded beaches around the UK. It designs and builds its own lifeboats and runs domestic and international water safety programmes.

For further information about the RNLI’s 200th anniversary, visit RNLI.org/200.