During the 1960s and 1970s the RNLI introduced fast lifeboats capable of considerable greater speeds than the of existing designs. The first of these were only able to be kept afloat as their propellers would be damaged if launched using a slipway or carriage. In 1982 the steel-hulled came into service, which could be launched down a slipway, but weighed 25 tons, and so was not suitable for being moved across a beach on a carriage. The answer was to build a smaller boat with an aluminium hull, which became the Mersey-class. The first prototype Mersey (ON 1119) was built in 1986, but was never named or given an operational number. After trials during 1987 and 1988, the unnamed boat was never placed on station, and was sold in 1989. Two more boats were built in 1988, with the first one to take up active service going to
Bridlington Lifeboat Station the following year. In 1989, 12-11
Lifetime Care (ON 1148) was built with a fibre-reinforced composite (FRC) hull. Boats built in 1990 continued to use aluminium but from 1991 FRC became the standard hull material. On Wednesday 13 December 2023, Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Edinburgh joined RNLI representatives at Windsor Castle for the handover of RNLB 12-30
Her Majesty The Queen (ON 1189) to the
Chatham Historic Dockyard for temporary display. The RNLI intended to have 25 knot lifeboats at all offshore lifeboat stations by the end of 2019, and the first of the lifeboats replaced the Mersey lifeboats at Dungeness, Exmouth and Hoylake in 2014. It would be eleven years later, when the last Mersey-class lifeboat in RNLI service, 12-20 Leonard Kent (ON 1177), at , was formally withdrawn from service on 18 December 2025. Four former RNLI Mersey-class boats are still in service overseas, three operated by ADES Uruguay, and one by Bote Salvavidas de Valparaiso in Chile. ==Description==