New Clifden lifeboat given emotional welcome after week-long voyage

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The first ‘Launch a Memory’ lifeboat, St. Christopher. Photo:Andrew Downes, Xposure.

Clifden RNLI’s new all-weather ‘Launch a Memory’ lifeboat arrived to an emotional welcome from crowds gathered in the Connemara community on Saturday.

The St. Christopher lifeboat arrived following a week-long voyage home from the charity’s lifeboat centre in Poole in southern England.

The vessel carries the names of over 10,000 people on its hull, which were  there by members of the public through a special ‘in memory’ fundraising initiative for the charity.

The lifeboat arrived into Clifden on in a flotilla made up of Achill Island lifeboat, Clifden’s inshore lifeboat and the station’s relief Shannon class lifeboat, along with a group of local vessels.

Friends, families and supporters lined the quayside to get a glimpse of the new €2.4 million search and rescue asset which arrived bathed in sunshine.

The main part of the arrival was held today, Sunday, with the new lifeboat beached at Clifden.

The Shannon is the first modern all-weather lifeboat propelled by waterjets which allow it to operate in shallow waters and be intentionally beached.

After the tide had receded, the 10,000 names on the lifeboat hull were visible and members of the public who had sponsored names were able to view them up close.

The names made up the letters RNLI and the number of the new lifeboat, 13-43.

The lifeboat was funded through a legacy from the south-east of England and will be officially named in a ceremony to be held at a later date.

The ten thousand names were provided by people pledging a minimum donation of €30/£30 to have their loved one’s name recorded onboard a working search and rescue lifeboat off the Irish coast.

Hundreds of people made the trip to see the lifeboat up close with some travelling over from the UK. It was an emotional trip for many who brought photographs of their loved ones with them.

Clifden volunteer lifeboat crew collected their new lifeboat in Dorset a week ago and sailed it home to Clifden with stops at Plymouth, Penlee, Ballycotton, Kinsale, Valentia and the Aran Islands.

While in Penlee the Clifden lifeboat crew paid their respects to the eight crew who were lost from there on 19 December 1981 while attempting to rescue the crew and passengers onboard a stricken coaster.

Commenting on the arrival, Clifden RNLI Lifeboat Operations Manager John Brittain, said that this weekend was the culmination of a lot of hard work by the volunteers in Clifden.

“To receive a new lifeboat is an incredibly exciting time for a station but to receive a launch a memory lifeboat, which carries the names of so many loved ones, is a great privilege and an honour for everyone here in Clifden,” he said.

“We have been so moved by the stories shared with us in the run up to the arrival and we now take each one of these names out to sea with us every time we launch. We are so grateful of the public’s support of the work we do as we continue to save lives at sea.”