- The Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society
=The Shipwrecked Mariners Society=
The Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society or the Shipwrecked Mariners for short, is a national charity founded in 1839, which operates throughout the United Kingdom and Ireland, whose purpose is to provide help to former merchant seamen, fishermen and their widows and dependants who are in need. It was founded at the instigation of Mr John Rye, a
philanthropic retired medical man ofBath, Somerset and his servant Mr Charles Gee Jones, a former Bristol Pilot and Landlord of the Pulteney Arms in Bath, following the tragic loss of life from theClovelly fishing fleet in a severe storm in November 1838. Aided by SirJahleel Brenton , at that time Governor ofGreenwich Hospital , Mr. Rye succeeded in establishing the Society, and of collecting a respectable sum as a first subscription, initially by going from house to house in Bath collecting half crowns. [The British Almanac - Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) 1913] The portrait "(below)" of Mr Rye and Mr Gee Jones was painted to commemorate the founding of the Society, which now hangs in the boardroom of the Society's Headquarters in Chichester.The Society's first President was Admiral
Sir George Cockburn, 10th Baronet , who in the War of 1812 cruisedChesapeake Bay and captured and burnt Washington on 24 August 1814. The Society's first Patron wasQueen Victoria and it has had a Royal Patron ever since, today it is HRH ThePrincess Royal . One of its first Vice-Presidents wasSir Robert Peel , 2nd Bt. The Society was incorporated by anAct of Parliament in 1850.The Society's flag, a
St George's cross with the letters SFMS in the quadrants and a number, was displayed by ships and their position reported by the coastguard to the "Shipping and Mercantile Gazette" in London. From 1851 until 1854 it operated lifeboats atLytham ,Rhyl ,Portmadoc ,Tenby ,Llanelly ,Teignmouth ,Hornsea and Newhaven but it was subsequently agreed that it would be wiser if one organisation concentrated on rescuing lives at sea while the other helped the survivors or their bereaved families ashore, so in 1854 the Society transferred its lifeboats to theRNLI .The Society, which operates through a national network of volunteers known as Honorary Agents, deals with over 2,000 cases of need a year and is based in
Chichester ,West Sussex .References
The Shipwrecked Fishermen & Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society, Brief History of the First Hundred Years published in 1939.
ee also
George Cockburn External links
* [http://www.shipwreckedmariners.org.uk Official website]
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