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The Ocean City Life-Saving Station (also known as U.S. Life Saving Station 30 and U.S. Coast Guard Station No. 126) is the only life-saving station of its design in New Jersey still in existence. Designed by architect James Lake Parkinson in a Carpenter Gothic style, the building is one of 25 stations built of the 1882 life-saving type.
The New Jersey Life Saving Service was established on August 9, 1854. [3] [4] Samuel Chadwick was appointed the first lifeguard in 1856. [2] A boathouse for the Toms River Life Saving Station was built in 1872 on Decatur Avenue. [3] [5] The station was transferred to the United States Life-Saving Service in 1898. [2]
A New Jersey teenage lifeguard, who was new on the job, is dead after an accident off a beach in Cape May. Norman Inferrera III, 16, of Phoenixville, Pa., died Friday night following the previous ...
Lifeguards Without Borders was founded by doctors Justin Sempsrott and Andrew Schmidt in 2006 in Jacksonville Beach, Florida. [2] [3] Sempsrott, the organization's executive director, had been a lifeguard since the mid-1990s.
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Ludlam's Beach Light was a lighthouse formerly located in Sea Isle City, New Jersey. It was decommissioned in 1924 and converted to a private residence which was demolished in September 2010. It was decommissioned in 1924 and converted to a private residence which was demolished in September 2010.
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A lifeguard (United States) on patrol during Hurricane Earl. Red and yellow flag indicating a bathing area patrolled by lifeguards. A lifeguard is a rescuer who supervises the safety and rescue of swimmers, surfers, and other water sports participants such as in a swimming pool, water park, beach, spa, river and lake.