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Harwich Lifeboat Station

HarwichLifeboat stations in EssexUse British English from December 2017
Harwich lifeboat station
Harwich lifeboat station

Harwich Lifeboat Station is a Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) station located in the town of Harwich in the English county of Essex. The station is positioned on the southern side at the mouth of the River Orwell estuary. The station serves a particularly busy section of coastline with Harwich being a very busy ferry terminal. Across the estuary is the Port of Felixstowe which is the United Kingdom's busiest container port.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Harwich Lifeboat Station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Harwich Lifeboat Station
The Quay, Essex

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Wikipedia: Harwich Lifeboat StationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.948613888889 ° E 1.2871 °
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Address

Harwich Lifeboat Station

The Quay
CO12 3HH Essex
England, United Kingdom
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Website
rnli.org

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Harwich lifeboat station
Harwich lifeboat station
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Electric Palace Cinema, Harwich
Electric Palace Cinema, Harwich

The Electric Palace cinema, Harwich, is one of the oldest purpose-built cinemas to survive complete with its silent screen, original projection room and ornamental frontage still intact. It was designed by the architect Harold Ridley Hooper of Ipswich, Suffolk and opened on 29 November 1911. Other interesting features include an open plan entrance lobby complete with paybox, and a small stage plus dressing rooms although the latter are now unusable. The original Crossley gas engine, which provided, in conjunction with a 100 V DC generator, the electricity for the "Electric" Palace until 1925 is also still present. Unfortunately it is neither practical to restore, or remove, this engine. The cinema closed in 1956 after being damaged in the 1953 East Coast floods, but re-opened in 1981, retaining the original screen, projection room and frontage as well as much of the original interior. It is now a community cinema and until 2006, when a Wednesday screening programme was introduced, films were shown at weekends only. The building also hosts regular jazz and folk concerts. The cinema is a Grade II* listed building and in 2009 was removed from the Buildings at Risk Register maintained by English Heritage following structural refurbishment, the completion of which, was celebrated on 15 July 2009.In November 2006, British actor Clive Owen became patron of the cinema and at his first official visit he helped launch an appeal to raise funds to repair this historic building. In May 2021 the Electric Palace was used as a location for Downton Abbey: A New Era