Life Boat Day at Rhyl

From the collection of

Archif Sgrin a Sain Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru / National Library of Wales Screen and Sound Archive
Established in 2001, the National Library of Wales Screen and Sound Archive holds an unrivalled collection of films, TV and radio broadcasts, video tapes and sound recordings relating to Wales and the Welsh, from 1898 to the present day. The collection spans multiples formats and genres, both professional and amateur.

Life Boat Day at Rhyl


All of Rhyl turns out to launch its cutting-edge lifeboat, seen hauled along streets and sands before putting to sea.

All of Rhyl (certainly all its Scouts) turns out to launch the lifeboat, some hitching a ride as it's horse-drawn along the prom, leaving the ‘Marine Lake' charabanc forlorn. Down the street it trundles, then on to the sands on boarded wheels before launching. Our next view is from the air, the boat's oars like matchsticks, before its ‘Return', horses hitched and heaving, safe into the boathouse.

Derek Shannon took over Rhyl's Market Street cinema from Arthur Cheetham in May 1919, and with the Shannon Film Company produced local topicals covering events such as the Flying Week, Lifeboat Day and May Day celebrations. The Shannon brothers knew that film of the lifeboat's special day would fill cinema seats, and the vessel seen here is ‘Caroline Richardson II', of the pioneering Richardson ‘banana boat' tubular design with slatted deck to allow drainage. The film seen here in fact combines footage from films of the Life Boat Day shot in both 1919 and 1920.


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