13 silver medals without the lifeboat The National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck (as the RNLI was known at the time) was established in 1824 and one of its objectives was that 'medallions or pecuniary awards be given to those who rescue lives in cases of shipwreck'. Three
silver medals were earned at Plymouth before the year was over, all as the result of a single storm on 23 November.
CoastguardJames Craggs saved a woman from the
John (although her husband and his crew all drowned), Coastguard John Miller saved 7 of the 13 crew of the
Harmonie, and Richard Eddy, a local ship's pilot, saved 4 from the
Coromandel. All three men received silver medals. Richard Eddy carried out a second silver-service on 13 January 1834, saving 10 people from the
Koningsberg when it ran aground. Another member of the coastguard, John Woolland Bake, was awarded a silver medal for saving 25 people from the
Mary Ann when it was wrecked in
Bovisand Bay on 13 January 1828. Three
Royal Navy sailors, Francis Strong, Thomas Huss and Augustus May, also received silver medals for saving the 10 crew members of the
Erin which struck Plymouth breakwater during a storm on 20 February 1833, and then Lieutenant Adrian Thomas Mann was similarly rewarded for saving 6 on 26 April 1833 – 2 from a barge and 4 others who had tried to rescue them but capsized. The lifeboat crew saved a yacht in a Force 9 gale and rain storm in 2002. Second Coxswain Sean Marshall was awarded a bronze medal for his bravery and the 'Thanks of the Institute Inscribed on Vellum' was given to Coxswain David Milford. The five crew of a French trawler abandoned ship on 25 February 1985 but were rescued from their life-raft by the Plymouth lifeboat. Coxswain John Dare was given the 'Thanks of the Institution Inscribed on Vellum' for leading the rescue. Patrick Marshall received the same recognition for saving a fishing boat with its crew of 5 which was dragging its anchor in a storm on 6 September 1995. == Facilities==