SIR WILLIAM HILLARY
By Richard Banks
‘Sir William loved the sea, knew how important it was to the Manx but
knew also its cruelty, how it sunk ships, drowned brave men and made paupers of
their wives and children. Us fishermen told him about the terrible storm that
killed twenty-six of our fathers and grandfathers, said that when the waves
were at their worse the sea would always have its way. He said no, that with
courage nothing was impossible and on 6 October 1822 he showed how right he
was.
In
the midst of yet another storm we watched from the quayside as a navy cutter
floundered on the Conister Rock in
In
March 1824, at Sir William's urging, a national lifeboat institution was
founded. The first boat was at Douglas and he its coxswain. In the years that
followed he helped save over 300 people, winning three gold medals for bravery.
Not bad, I'm thinking, for a landsman who couldn't even swim.’
[The memoir of a Southend lifeboat man formerly of Douglas, Isle of
Man. Dictated at his lodgings in the Ship Inn, 25th of March 1848.]

A worthy tribute to a Victorian philanthropist. thank you Richard!
ReplyDeleteGreat story, would liked have heard more
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