British Empire Medal for Peter’s 50-plus years of saving lives

British Empire Medal for Peter’s 50-plus years of saving lives

Veteran coastguard Peter Brown has received a British Empire Medal in HM The King's Birthday Honours.
Peter Brown, Coastguard Rescue Officer and BEM recipient

A volunteer Coastguard Rescue Officer who has dedicated more than 50 years to keeping people safe at sea and by the coast has been awarded a British Empire Medal in the King’s Birthday Honours announced today (14 June 2025).

Commenting on the royal recognition for his services to maritime safety, Peter Brown said: “The volunteers all do a brilliant job and I’m so proud to be part of the team.”

 Originally from London, it was in 1970 that Peter moved to the Essex and joined the RNLI as volunteer crew for the RNLI Clacton-on-Sea lifeboat. In 1975, Peter also joined the Volunteer auxiliary coastguard.  Three years later, he joined HM Coastguard as a full-time officer in East Sussex, leading teams of volunteers responding to emergencies by the coast.

Peter’s coastguard career then involved stints at Dover, Isle of Wight, Lee-on-Solent, and Aberystwyth, where he became a Section Manager.   He then became a training instructor at HM Coastguard’s training centre in Dorset, teaching courses in cliff and boat rescue, search planning and management.

Peter’s career later took him as a civil servant to the Maritime and Coastguard Agency where he held various safety roles, including Head of Research & Planning, Accident Prevention Policy Manager, and UK Search and Rescue Aviation Manager.

 When Peter retired in 2008, he rejoined as a volunteer Coastguard Rescue Officer with Lymington Coastguard Rescue Team, alongside his position as volunteer coxswain with the independent Hamble Lifeboat where he has been since 1986.

 Peter said: “I am delighted and so very honoured to be recommended for the British Empire Medal. It’s amazing and completely unexpected.

“In the UK we are so lucky to have such capable and willing coastguards and lifeboat crews promoting maritime safety and rescuing those in need. It is my absolute pleasure to continue to volunteer with the very best of them.

 “They are prepared to dash away from anything at a moment’s notice to bring their skills and knowledge to help others in difficulty or distress around the coast.”

 He added: “I think any honour should really be going to my lovely wife, Alison, who often gets woken up in the middle of the night by emergency pager calls and then is normally awake to make certain I get back home safety.”

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