Museum News
Celebrating winning ‘Object of the Year’
We are thrilled to announce we won the public vote for ‘Object of the Year’ at the Cornwall Heritage Awards for Henry Trengrouse’s Life Saving Equipment.
In 1825 Henry wrote about his distress at witnessing drownings from shipwrecks
“These melancholy disasters continued to exercise my mind intensely day and night; and I was led to consider what means could have been applied to save those who had so miserably perished within hail of their countrymen and friends, and within a few yards of land and safety: and thus, by such continued reflection, I very undesignedly became possessed by the idea of devising means for the preservation of life in cases of general shipwreck: from which period I have made this great object the principal of my pursuits.” (Henry Trengrouse)
His kit comprised of a rocket, which would help form a line of communication between the ship and the shore; a ‘life spencer’, a cork buoyancy aid which has since been developed into the life-jacket, and a ‘Bosun’s chair’, a seat you could sit in to be helped ashore using the line communication established by the rocket, which is an early form of Breeches Buoy.

On his deathbed he said to his son “If you live to be as old as I am, you will find my rocket apparatus along our shores”, and he was correct that his designs became widely used and developed, saving numerous lives at sea.
The Life Saving Equipment by Henry Trengrouse is a most special part of the Museum collection and not just of Cornish heritage but of the world’s heritage. There is not a single corner of the globe that hasn’t benefitted from his inventions.
You can read more about Henry Trengrouse here
.









