Leverburgh Lifeboat Station | |
Map Type: | Scotland Outer Hebrides |
Pushpin Relief: | 1 |
Address: | Pier Road |
Location City: | Leverburgh, Isle of Harris, HS5 3UF |
Location Country: | Scotland, UK |
Coordinates: | 57.7672°N -7.0253°W |
Building Type: | RNLI Lifeboat Station |
Opened Date: | 11 May 2012 |
Owner: | Royal National Lifeboat Institution |
Website: | Leverburgh RNLI Lifeboat Station |
Leverburgh Lifeboat Station is located at Leverburgh, a village at the southern end of the Isle of Harris, part of the Outer Hebrides, an archipelago sitting off the north-west coast of Scotland.
The station at Leverburgh is one of the youngest of the stations of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), a lifeboat being placed here in 2012.[1]
The station currently operates John and Louisa Fisher (B-870), a Inshore lifeboat, on station since 2021.[1]
In 2012, the RNLI opened a new station at Leverburgh, situated at the midpoint between the two existing flanking lifeboat stations at and .
Crew selection had taken place in 2011, and training progressed through 2012. On 2 May 2012, the relief All-weather lifeboat 12-11 Lifetime Care (ON 1148) arrived at Leverburgh for final training. The station was formally declared open and operational on 11 May 2012.[1]
Only hours after the lifeboat was declared operational, the boat was called out on her first service on Saturday 12 May 2012. The fishing boat Siolta had engine problems south of Wiay Island, and were escorted to Peter's Port on Benbecula.[2]
On 7 August 2012, Lifetime Care was returned to the relief fleet, and Leverburgh received their permanent boat. Having just had the first GRP-hulled Mersey-class lifeboat, Leverburgh would now receive the last, 12-36 The Royal Thames (ON 1195), which had previously served at since 1993.[1] [3]
In 2016, an appeal launched to raise £60,000 towards the cost of a new pontoon, for safer access to the lifeboat, received a massive boost when the station received £335,377, a bequest from the late Mary Aida MacLeod MacAskill of Edinburgh. This legacy was left to the RNLI specifically to use on the west coast of Scotland, and on consultation with Ms. MacAskill's executors, it was agreed that the money be used for on-shore work at the Leverburgh station, including construction of the pontoon.[4]
On 11 April 2018, a new £2.2 million lifeboat departed the RNLI production facility at Poole in Dorset, bound for Leverburgh. This would be the longest delivery voyage for any Shannon-class lifeboat, with overnight stops at RNLI stations,,, and . After a crew change, the lifeboat then headed for,,, and then onwards via Scalpay on Harris. The new boat arrived in Leverburgh on 21 April 2018, to replace the now 25-year-old The Royal Thames, which was withdrawn to the relief fleet, and later sold out of service in 2021.[5]
The majority of the cost of Leverburgh's new lifeboat was funded by the legacy of Mr Humfrey Ingram Berkeley, a keen RNLI supporter, who left all of his residual estate to the RNLI. He requested that a lifeboat be named after him and his wife, and for it to be stationed on the west coast of Scotland. At a naming ceremony on 14 July, the Leverburgh lifeboat was named 13-25 Stella and Humfrey Berkeley (ON 1332). Other donors to the boat included Mrs Muriel Madeleine Mackay, Mr Hugh John Waterman, Miss Isabel May Hogg and the Leverhulme Trust.[6]
The first service launch would come just under one month later, on 14 May 2018, to the aid of a woman who had injured her back, on a yacht north of Lochmaddy, North Uist.[7]
In November 2019, the lifeboat was moved to Inverness for routine maintenance, but operations were suspended at Leverburgh due to difficulties maintaining sufficient crew. The lifeboat would later be placed in the Relief fleet, not returning to Leverburgh. By November 2020, not helped by the Covid pandemic, there was still no lifeboat at Leverburgh, and it was thought that the station may close permanently.[8]
It was announced in 2021, after a period of consultation with all parties, that the best solution to the difficulties at Leverburgh would be through the provision of an Inshore lifeboat. It was said that this class of lifeboat would comfortably be able to respond to the majority of calls typically received at Leverburgh, and would resolve some of the crewing issues, requiring fewer crew and launch helpers.[9]
The relief lifeboat John and Louisa Fisher (B-870) was placed at Leverburgh in 2021 on evaulation, but has since become their permanent lifeboat. A floating 'Drive-On' pontoon (Versadock) has been installed to keep the boat out of the water, but ready at a moments notice. lifeboat 13-25 Stella and Humfrey Berkeley (ON 1332) was reassigned to in 2024.[1]
ON | Op.No. | Name | In service | Class | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1148 | Lifetime Care | 2012 | |||
1195 | The Royal Thames | ||||
1332 | 13-25 | 2018–2019 | |||
– | B-870 | John and Louisa Fisher | 2021– | ||