Lionel Lukin Explained

Lionel Lukin
Birth Date:1742 5, df=yes
Birth Place:Great Dunmow, Essex, England
Death Place:Hythe, Kent, England
Nationality:English

Lionel Lukin (18 May 1742 – 16 February 1834) was a British carriage builder and inventor, noted for the invention of the 'unimmergible' lifeboat.

Private and professional life

Lukin was born in Great Dunmow, Essex, on 18 May 1742. He married twice. He had a son and daughter with his first wife, a Miss Walker of Bishops Stortford. His second wife was Heather Clissold of Reading.[1]

He was apprenticed by a local coachbuilder and later established a business in Long Acre, London. He joined the Worshipful Company of Coachmakers and Coach Harness Makers and eventaully became the company's Master.[2] [3]

He had a house in Chelsea and retired to Hythe, Kent, where he took an active interest in matters of the church. He died on 16 February 1834 and is buried at St Leonard's church. His gravestone is inscribed: This Lionel Lukin was the first to build a lifeboat, and the original inventor of that principle of safety by which many lives and much property have been preserved from shipwreck, and he obtained for it the King's patent in the year 1785.[3] [4]

Lifeboats

Lukin was granted a patent on 2 November 1785 for an 'unimmergible' boat. The design had increased buoyancy because of sealed air spaces along the side of the boat and in the bow and stern. This enabled it to stay afloat if swamped with water, or when carrying people rescued from the water. A heavy iron keel gave stability. These principles were used in most lifeboats built until the 1960s.[5]

Rather than use the patent to make a profit, he published the design so that everyone could benefit from his ideas. The Royal Humane Society commended him for his "very praiseworthy liberality".[3]

Experiment

Lukin tried to interest the Royal Navy in his ideas without success. Instead he had a prototype converted from a yawl sailing boat which he purchased in 1784. It was about long and renamed Experiment. Lukin tested it on the River Thames and then loaned it to a pilot at Ramsgate for testing. It was reported to have crossed the English Channel several times in rough weather but was believed impounded on suspicion of being used for smuggling.[2] [1] [6] [7]

Witch

Lukin's second prototype lifeboat was named Witch, a similar yawl to the Experiment. It was tested at Margate and found to sail well and impossible to sink.[2]

Bamburgh Castle

A charity in Northumberland asked Lukin to design a lifeboat for them. It was based on the design for a local coble rowing boat and kept at from 1786.[2] [7]

Frances Ann

The Suffolk Humane Society approached Lukin to design another lifeboat. This was long and

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Gentleman's Magazine. Sylvanus Urban. 1834. July to December. New Series. II. 653–654. Obituary – Lionel Lukin Esq. https://books.google.com/books?id=y2OYNXvykVcC&pg=PA653.
  2. Lifeboat . 1992 . 52 . 520 . 224 . Sharp . Robin. Lionel Lukin - Lifeboat Inventor .
  3. Lifeboat . 1985 . 49 . 492 . 200–201 . Martin . Frank. Lionel Lukin - Lifeboat Inventor .
  4. Life-boat . 1900 . 17 . 195 . 537–542 . Sketch of the progress made in the construction of coast life-boats (Part 1) .
  5. Life-boat . 1900 . 17 . 195 . 537–542 . Sketch of the progress made in the construction of coast life-boats (Part 1) .
  6. Book: Annual Register, 1834. Edmund Burke. Baldwin and Craddock.... London. 1835. 213. 24 November 2008.
  7. Book: Cameron . Ian . Riders of the Storm . 2009 . Orion Books . 978-0-7528-8344-1. 15–16.