Bishop owes his life to Norfolk lifeboat crew

Bishop
David who is a member of the retired clergy team
in the
Benefice of Aylmerton, Runton, Beeston Regis and Gresham
has just
discovered that he owes his life to the family of a recently
retired Cromer
lifeboat coxswain which sparked a cheerful reunion.
Bishop David
Leake
retired to his family home in the
North Norfolk
village of
East
Runton six
years ago and recently started researching his family history.
His father,
Canon Alfred
Leake
travelled in 1926 as a missionary to Argentina.
David was born
in Argentina where he served with the Anglican Church together
with his wife
Rachel for forty years. He became the Anglican Bishop of Argentina
before his
retirement and move to Norfolk in 2003.
In the course of
working through his father's letters and papers in readiness to
deposit them in
the Norfolk County Hall record archive, Bishop David discovered
a cutting from a
Norfolk paper dated November 1893. There he found recorded a
gallant rescue
by the Cromer lifeboat of three East Runton fishermen.
The fishermen
had gone out to sea and in the course of the day a very strong
wind began to
blow creating very heavy seas. The fishermen were in danger
and had it not
been for the brave response and endeavours of the lifeboat crew
they would
certainly have ended in a watery grave.
The fascinating
discovery is that one of the fishermen in the boat was Bishop David's
great-grandfather and the coxswain of the lifeboat was the
great-grandfather of recently
retired
Coxswain Richard Davies, also living in East Runton. The other
fishermen were
Bishop
David's grandfather and great-uncle.
Bishop Leake said "The bottom line is that if Coxswain Richard Davies'
great-grandfather
had
not rescued my great-grandfather I would not be here, so I owe a lot
to the famous Davies lifeboat dynasty".