ST DAVIDS' multi-million pound lifeboat station was opened today and its Tamar class lifeboat officially named at a prestigious ceremony.

More than 200 dignitaries, invited guests and lifeboat volunteers were in attendance to see the launch of the £2.7million Norah Wortley.

St Davids’ new state-of-the-art £10million lifeboat station took two years to build in one of the most remote corners of the Welsh coastline.

Dozens of past and present lifeboat crew from decades of saving lives at sea in St Davids will be on hand to help usher in the new era.

There was also be a nod to the past as the Watson class lifeboat Joseph Soar, which served St Davids RNLI for 22 years until 1985, will be afloat in the waters off the station for the event.

The new Tamar class lifeboat was funded by the generosity of Diana Symon, of Newton Abbot, Devon, who died in 2010. Her legacy, as well as donations from her charitable trust, funded the 25-knot lifeboat, which is named in memory of her mother Norah Wortley-Talbot.

Mrs Symon’s grandparents were owners of the Blue Funnel shipping line based in Liverpool and were part of a nautical family. Mrs Symon and her sister Phoebe spent much of their early lives sailing with the Blue Funnel line and in later life Diana Symon and her husband enjoyed sailing their own yacht.

St Davids RNLI’s crew of volunteers are already familiar with the lifeboat as it has been launching to maritime emergencies from a floating mooring for a couple of years while the new station was under construction. It has already launched 63 times on service and helped St Davids crew rescue 50 people and save four lives.

Now it has pride of place in its new home on the top of the slipway in the newly completed lifeboat station.

During a ceremony with music from Goodwick Brass Band and Haverfordwest Male Voice Choir, Linda Grafton, a long-time friend of Diana Symon, handed Norah Wortley over to RNLI Operations Director George Rawlinson. He then passed her over to Captain James Wilcox, Lifeboat Operations Manager at St Davids RNLI, who accepted her on behalf of the station and its volunteers.

Champagne was be poured over the bow as Mrs Grafton officially named the lifeboat.

Captain Wilcox said: "This is a day all our volunteers have been looking forward to for years and it is a great honour to be asked to accept the lifeboat on behalf of St Davids RNLI.

"The thanks of everyone connected to St Davids RNLI goes out to Diana Symon and all the other donors who made this day possible. Their generosity and the support of the local community mean our volunteers will be able to save lives at sea off the coast of St Davids for many more years to come."

Michael Vlasto, former RNLI Operations Director, was invited to declare the new boathouse open. He unveiled a slate plaque crafted by former St Davids lifeboat Coxswain Malcolm Gray.

The new station building, which is situated around 100m from the historic former boathouse at St Justinian, was a feat of engineering built at the base of some of the St Davids Peninsula’s most remote coastal cliffs.

As well as the slipway for the Tamar class lifeboat, the new boathouse has additional space to accommodate the smaller D-class inshore lifeboat. Its facilities include a drying room for kit and better provision for crew training and equipment maintenance. There is better access to the station, which is important for the delivery of equipment and, more importantly, for the evacuation of casualties brought in by the lifeboat

Matt Crofts, RNLI Lifesaving Manager, said: "This was amongst the most ambitious build projects the RNLI has undertaken in recent years. Primary contractors BAM Nuttall and everyone else involved deserve huge credit for finding ways to get the job done in some of the most challenging environmental conditions.

"We hope this building is something the St Davids RNLI volunteers, the local community and the whole charity can be proud of. It will ensure the legacy of lifesaving which so many generations have dedicated their lives to will continue for many more generations to come."

Funding for the lifeboat station was contributed to by a number of generous donations, as well as a huge boost from the local community fundraising appeal, which was fronted by former Welsh football and rugby internationals Ian Walsh and Gerald Davies and raised more than £214,000.