Cornwall volunteers who help save lives around the coast celebrated when HRH The Princess Royal visited the National Coastwatch station at St Ives.

Princess Royal plaque
A plaque will commemorate Her Royal Highness’s visit to St Ives. She is pictured here with NCI chair Stephen Hand. Photographs: Mike Sinclair

The Princess Royal is Royal Patron of the National Coastwatch Institution (NCI), a charity run entirely by volunteers. It celebrated its 30th anniversary of helping to save lives around the coast last year.

NCI St Ives opened in 1999, and in 2010 it received the Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service, the highest award given to voluntary groups in the UK, equivalent to an MBE.

The station stands high on a promontory, allowing the volunteer watchkeepers to survey the whole of St Ives Bay, from Godrevy lighthouse in the north to Clodgy Point in the south.

In total 2,800 National Coastwatch volunteer watchkeepers maintain a daily visual and radio watch of the coast, looking out for anyone in potential danger. They report any coastal safety-related incidents to HM Coastguard so that expert help can be sent, including the Coastguard Rescue Teams and helicopters, the RNLI, independent lifeboats and all emergency services.

It is one of 24 stations in Cornwall, all of which are on the South West Coast Path. They are popular destinations for walkers, keen to get their passports stamped as a record of their route.

Princess Royal at NCI station
The Princess Royal sees displays at St Ives NCI, explained by deputy station manager Paul Edwards

The Princess Royal was received at the station by His Majesty’s Lord Lieutenant of  Cornwall, Sir Edward Bolitho. He presented NCI chair, Stephen Hand, who introduced station manager, Jonathan Mills, and deputy station manager Paul Edwards.

Jonathan escorted Her Royal Highness into the station’s watch room for a briefing about their work and the particular coastal safety challenges at NCI St Ives, including the Stones Reef, moving sandbars, and very strong tides, which can pose a danger to swimmers. Duty watchkeepers Margaret Neal and Nigel Mawditt were also presented.

NCI St Ives has a crew of more than 50 fully-trained watchkeepers who monitor all the coastal activity during daylight hours, with an emergency team on 24/7 standby.

After visiting the station, The Princess Royal attended a reception at the nearby Tregenna Castle Hotel. The reception and use of the facilities were generously donated by the hotel.

Princess Royal meets volunteers
The Princess Royal meets NCI volunteers at Tregenna Castle

The reception was attended by around 60 NCI St Ives volunteers, as well as representatives from NCI’s Cornwall-based national office and nearby National Coastwatch stations at Cape Cornwall, Gwenapp Head, and Penzance, and NCI sector managers Jim Jeffries, Kevin Wyre, and regional trustee Helen Simpson.  

Also present were maritime search and rescue partners, including HM Coastguard, the RNLI, and RNLI lifeguards. The local community was further represented by the mayor of St Ives, St Ives Town Council, Devon and Cornwall Police, and local supporters of NCI St Ives.

The Princess Royal then unveiled a plaque to mark her visit to the station, and presented epaulettes to Kevin Wyre, sector manager. Long service awards were presented to Susan Barraclough, Margaret Neal, and Judi Haggerty (10 years), and Mick Haggerty (15 years).

The Princess Royal also presented the NCI Certificate of Merit, the organisation’s highest award, to Karin Stratford of NCI Gwenapp Head, for her prompt action over a concern for two people and a yacht in difficulties, resulting in a successful rescue.

Stephen Hand, NCI chair, formally welcomed Her Royal Highness to NCI St Ives and thanked her for her visit. “Your visit is the source of huge motivation and encouragement to our volunteers in their work of helping to keep people safe along this busy stretch of the Cornish coast, and we are extremely grateful for the time and commitment that you give to NCI,” he said.