Zetland Lifeboat MuseumTees Valley • TS10 3AH • Scenic Place
The Zetland Lifeboat Museum in Redcar on the Teesside coast houses the Zetland, the oldest surviving lifeboat in the world, a clinker-built rowing lifeboat constructed in 1802 by Henry Greathead of South Shields that served the community of Redcar for seventy-eight years, saving over five hundred lives from wrecks in the dangerous waters of the Tees Bay and the north Yorkshire coast. The preservation of this vessel and its display in a purpose-built museum beside the beach where it was launched makes the Zetland Museum one of the most important maritime heritage sites in the north of England.
Henry Greathead is credited as the inventor of the modern lifeboat, his design of 1789 incorporating the curved bottom, raised bow and stern, and cork buoyancy that gave his boats the ability to right themselves after capsizing and to operate in conditions where conventional open boats would have been overwhelmed. The Zetland, built to Greathead's improved design in 1802, is the finest surviving example of this pioneering lifeboat type and provides direct evidence of the design principles that made the organised rescue of shipwreck survivors a practical possibility for the first time.
The museum provides interpretive displays explaining the Zetland's history, the development of lifeboat design and the extraordinary record of service of the Redcar lifeboat crews across the vessel's active years. The stories of individual rescues in the treacherous conditions of the Yorkshire coast in the days before mechanical power and radio communication give the museum's narrative a human urgency that supplements the technical interest of the historic vessel.
Redcar itself is a coastal town with a long beach and a modest resort character, and the museum provides one of the most significant heritage attractions on the Teesside coast.
Roseberry ToppingTees Valley • TS9 6QR • Scenic Place
Roseberry Topping is the most distinctive summit in the North York Moors National Park, a conical hill of 320 metres with a characteristic asymmetric profile caused by the partial collapse of one face due to mining subsidence that gives it one of the most immediately recognisable silhouettes of any hill in northern England. Visible from a wide area of Teesside and the Cleveland Plain below, the hill has been a landmark and a destination for walkers since the Victorian period and retains a particular hold on the affections of people who grew up within sight of it. The collapsed east face of the hill, which gives Roseberry Topping its jagged, asymmetric profile, was caused by the undermining of the ironstone beneath the hill during the extensive extraction that took place in the Cleveland Hills during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A major collapse in 1912 removed a substantial section of the eastern face, creating the dramatic profile that distinguishes the hill from all others on the North York Moors escarpment. The instability of the remaining rock means that the summit ridge itself requires care, and the rock faces below the summit are unstable enough to require care. The hill is strongly associated with Captain James Cook, who grew up in the nearby village of Great Ayton and climbed Roseberry Topping as a child. The Captain Cook monument on the hill at Easby Moor nearby provides a further connection to the great navigator who explored the Pacific from beginnings in these Yorkshire hills. The walk from Great Ayton, combining Roseberry Topping with the Cook monument on the ridge above, is one of the most popular short walks in the North York Moors and the views from the summit over Teesside, the Cleveland Plain and on clear days to the Durham coast are excellent.