How Lifeguard Training Start?
American Lifeguard Association provides Professional Lifeguard Training
This eventually involved specially designed rescue stations with personnel and rescue boats. In 1786, The United States Made the Humane Society of Massachusetts for lifeguardstraining. They also built houses to shelter shipwreck survivors on their shores. By the mid-1800s it had 18 boat stations and rope launch equipment.
The manual of the time advised:
“Tear the clothes of the injured person and wipe or dry his body with flannels. Place it near the fire and introduce hot air through its mouth through a cannula.
Of course, if this did not revive the drowned man, they would finish him off! However, strange as it may seem, the fumigation of tobacco in the intestines, through the rectum, was not a novelty.
17th century, The Native Americans of Acadia start this foundation and fight against tobacco smoke, and squeezing it.
European physicians in the 18th century were enthusiastic about this practice.
* Organized international water rescue activities date back to 1878 when the First World Water Rescue Congress was sponsored in Marseille, a city in the south of France. Since then, for decades, in each independent nation, there have been many outstanding achievements in water rescue. Because of this, the need for an international forum to exchange ideas was soon recognized.
In 1897
* In 1897 Captain Harry Sheffield developed the first lifeguard float for a club in South Africa.
was in charge of ensuring security in Spanish waters.
Years later, the company would change its way of working, giving way to the state company Remolques Marítimos SA in charge of safety on the high seas and leaving the safety of the beaches to the Spanish Red Cross.
Although in the public sphere (as were the beaches) the Aquatic Lifeguard was beginning to cover the Spanish geography, in the private sphere few swimming pools hired a Professional Lifeguard training to ensure the vigilance of the bathers.
* In 1908
on the beach of Long Beach in California, and after a series of events in the US and beaches abroad, he decided to create a professionally trained and trained figure to ensure the safety of bathers, the “Professional
Aquatic Lifeguard”.
Among the founding countries were: Belgium, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Luxembourg, Switzerland, and Tunisia.
In 1914, 30 different organizations participate in this water rescue. Many organizations also promote this idea after this.
The origins
of salvage in Spain go back to the first salvage association in 1914 under the name Sociedad Española de Salvamento de Náufragos, which later became part of the American Lifeguard Association, like the Aquatic Salvage Section.