Four Brook Green Schoolgirls Rescued from River Thames


Happy ending for Chiswick RNLI Lifeboat's 3,000th callout

This dramatic video shows the moment four schoolgirls from Hammersmith were rescued from the Thames after their boat capsized.

The students, from St Paul's Girls' School in Brook Green were lifted onto a lifeboat at around 9.30am on Tuesday, October 25 after they fell into the water near Chiswick RNLI station.

The girls were said to be cold but were fortunately uninjured in the incident.

For the crew of the Chiswick RNLI lifeboat however, the incident was memorable as it was their 3,000th callout since lifeboats were established in London 14 years ago.

Chiswick RNLI reports that at 9.30am the crew were cleaning the lifeboat at its mooring on Chiswick Pier, when they saw four rowers in difficulty a little way downstream. It appeared that a quad from St Paul's Girls' School was swept by the strong current onto a large buoy after taking action to avoid a vessel coming upstream, and the four rowers were tipped into the river.

The coach's launch was nearby dealing with a capsized sculler.

RNLI helmsman Andy Mayo brought the lifeboat alongside and crewmembers Gavin Simmons and Holly Walters quickly brought the rowers on board the lifeboat. The girls were in good spirits but cold; the crew wrapped them in blankets and the lifeboat returned them to their base at Tideway scullers near Chiswick Bridge were they were able to warm up.

Chiswick RNLI, along with other lifeboat stations on the Thames at Tower, Teddington and Gravesend, was established in January 2002. The RNLI was approached to provide a dedicated search and rescue service on the Thames in the wake of the enquiry into the Marchioness disaster.

Andy Mayo, Chiswick RNLI lifeboat helmsman on the 3,000th callout, joined the RNLI as a volunteer on Dover lifeboat in 1994 and at has been on the crew at Chiswick since the station opened.

He said: "When the RNLI search and rescue service on the Thames started, no one could have predicted how busy it would be. Today's incident shows how we were able to deal swiftly with a situation that could have had a very different outcome. It just shows that the RNLI really is needed on the River Thames and is seen by other authorities as an invaluable service."

The RNLI remains a charity that relies entirely on voluntary contributions to continue its lifesaving work. Chiswick RNLI has an active fundraising group and is always keen to have new helpers from the local community. There is a wide range of roles; as well as helping with events there are currently opportunities for those with skills in social media, videos and graphics.

Find out more about these activities and how you can get involved here.

October 27, 2016

Related links
Related links

Chiswick RNLI

St Paul's Girls' School