
Last modified: 2017-10-25 by rob raeside
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![[Caister Volunteer Lifeboat Service]](../images/g/gb_cvls.gif) image by 
Andrew Turner, 20 September 2017
 
image by 
Andrew Turner, 20 September 2017
See also:
The Caister Lifeboat Flag
The design of the new 
  House Flag of the Caister Lifeboat reflects the traditional format for 
  maritime flags used in the nineteenth and twentieth century by shipping 
  companies and other maritime organisations. For greater visibility at sea, 
  these designs tended towards the bold; frequently incorporating the initials 
  of the shipping companies they represented, along with simple shapes or the 
  more complex heraldic devices of their owners to create distinctive "one of a 
  kind" designs. These banners or "house flags", borne in conjunction with 
  specific hull and funnel colours, became the livery by which the individual 
  ships of different companies were identified. 
The Oxford blue field of 
  the Caister Lifeboat flag may be taken to represent the North Sea upon which 
  the Caister Lifeboat operates. The Cross of St George with its white 
  fimbriation, references the previous lifeboat flag and is emblematic of an 
  English organisation. Overlying these are the anchor and lifebelt, the ancient 
  and modern symbols of hope and salvation, their cables intertwined. These 
  symbols are particularly pertinent as they are to be found at the foot of the 
  Caister Lifeboat Memorial to those who lost their lives on 13th November 1901, 
  when the lifeboat Beauchamp capsized whilst responding to a distress call. 
  
The formal name of the organisation, Caister Volunteer Lifeboat Service, 
  is spelt out in initials CVLS in each of the four quarters of the design. This 
  final element of detail echoes the house flag of the RNLI, alluding to the 
  fact that Caister's lifeboat was once under the commission of that 
  organisation, up until 1969 when Caister Lifeboat became the UK’s first 
  independent all-weather lifeboat charity.
Andrew Turner, 20 September 2017