About Zetland Lifeboat Museum and Redcar Heritage Centre
The Zetland is the oldest surviving lifeboat in the world and is listed within the National Historic Ship Register as part of the Nations Historic Fleet and was built in 1802 by Henry Greathead at his South Shields boatyard.
She saw 78 years of service and saved over 500 documented lives from the treacherous Redcar coast. For many years, lives lost were never recorded.
She has laid in her present boathouse since 1907 and has only been removed twice: in 1963 she was taken and displayed in Edinburgh where she was the centrepiece of the International Lifeboat Conference and 2018 to Middlesbrough for the much needed conservation work.
The Friends of Zetland Lifeboat is a charity, number
Redcar & Cleveland Borough Council gave their total support for the Zetland conservation project with help from volunteers, sponsors, funders and the general public by way of supporting our fundraising events.
The Zetland was originally purchased by the Redcar people, for the use of the Redcar people, She remains today, very much a peoples boat and is still the pride and joy of the Redcar folk.
Zetland gave outstanding service ensuring the safety of the Redcar Fishermen, Pilots and other seafarers and we are dedicated to conserving her, not just for the townsfolk but as a significant and historically important vessel recognised the world over.