- Life saving reel
The surf life saving reel was beach life saving apparatus from
Australia .The reel was originally invented at
Bondi Beach by Lyster Ormsby and then was later that year redesigned by G H Olding. It was a giant reel with rope wrapped around it with a harness at the end. The reel rested in a frame that would rest on the sand. The life saver would attach the harness to his or her self thenswim out to the struggling bather/surfer. Once they reached the patient they would attach the patient to the harness and another life saver on thebeach would reel them in. The life saver in the water would tend to another patient or swim alongside the patient to reassure them if they were conscious or make sure that nothing went wrong if they were unconscious.The actual reel and rope would weigh about 50-60 pounds and was officially made part of the
surf lifesaving community on Sunday 24th March 1906. The reel then was used in theBritish Isles shortly after being invented. One of the last places to accept the reel wasCairns in 1925. The reel was used up to 1993 where it was replaced by IRBs (Inflatable Rubber Boats). The first person to rescued using the reel was the famous aviatorCharles Kingsford Smith . Kingsford-Smith was awarded aMilitary Cross duringWWI and was the first person to make a trans-pacific flight to Australia and won the England to Australia air race and crashed during the same race some years later and his body was never found. The airport inSydney is named after him.The surf life saving reel was especially useful during the disaster on the 6th of February 1938. This day at Bondi was given the name Black Sunday after the events that took place on that day. On this day a series of
freak wave s hit the beach and washed about 300 bathers into rough surf conditions where most required assistance. 80 surf life savers equipped with 8 reels saved all but 4 swimmers that died before reaching shore. These were the first surf related deaths ever on Bondi beach.
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