2nd November 1872
Lifeboat men awarded Norwegian medals
The Isabella Northcote, a 700 ton Norwegian cargo vessel, was bringing timber from Montreal to London when she struck the Echero off the Cherbourg peninsular in rough seas. When lookouts spotted her from Gorey, they alerted the Jersey lifeboat, which put out to sea and ferried some of the crew back to Jersey over the course of several trips. The remaining crew members were stranded on rocks for two days and two nights until the wind and seas had calmed enough for the lifeboat to draw aside and rescue them.
The Isabella Northcote was badly damaged, with a hole below the waterline which not only let in water and put her at risk of sinking, but damaged her cargo, which had to be sold at auction as spoiled goods.
The following year, Charles Blampied, John Bouchard and Elias Whitley, who had manned the lifeboat that saved the 18 crew members of the Isabella Northcote, were each awarded silver medals by the Norwegian government. A third man, John Pinel, who was employed by Blampied, also aided in the rescue, but received only £5 in recognition of his bravery, not a medal like his boss.
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The States votes to flood Queen’s Valley
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Equestrian Simon Laurens is born
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Contact 94 goes off the air
- Radio station Contact 94 broadcast from France but went off the air when the chance to apply for a licence in the Channel Islands came up.
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MP worries about Jersey’s butter consumption
- British MPs debated the amount of butter that Jersey was consuming in 1919, with suggestions that it might be being sent to France.
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