'I've spent 60 years volunteering and won't give up'

Zoe Applegate
BBC News, East of England
RNLI photographer John Huggins, wearing a hard helmet, a white shirt and tie with sturdy safety gloves, leans back against the ropes as he starts an abseil down the lighthouse. Mr Huggins is very high up above the rooftops of houses and commercial buildings with the water tower and fields in the background.RNLI photographer
Mr Huggins helped the RNLI's Southwold and Dunwich fundraising branch to make £110,000 through different challenges, including abseiling down Southwold Lighthouse

John Huggins has helped save hundreds of lives and raised more than £210,000 over 60 years of charity work. What keeps him going?

Mr Huggins, of Southwold, Suffolk, was just 13 when he started volunteering at his local sailing club before going on to juggle 70-hour weeks in his wet fish shop with duties at the town's RNLI lifeboat station.

Now he is urging others to follow his lead, saying "nearly every bit of volunteering helps somebody at the other end".

A tragic turn of events - the death in 2013 of his granddaughter Sophie, aged eight - saw him start raising money for The Brain Tumour Charity in order to provide a "legacy" and ensure her name was not forgotten.

"I have been asked the question a number of times, 'Do you sleep?'," said Mr Huggins.

"My younger daughter regularly says to me, 'Dad, you'll soon have to give something up.' But I'm not in a mind to give anything up yet."

John Huggins John Huggins, wearing ear protectors and safety goggles, oversees a student, who is also wearing the same safety equipment, pressing down on a machine to drill a hole in wood.John Huggins
The retired fishmonger developed his love of woodwork at school and said he enjoyed passing on his love of the craft to others

Now 73, the divorcee spends three days a week in charge of a woodwork shop at Clinks Care Farm at Toft Monks, Norfolk.

His passion for the craft has come full circle since his teenage days repairing and maintaining the fleet at the former Southwold Youth Sailing Centre.

At the social enterprise farm, the retired fishmonger has spent five years both sharing his passion for making things and guiding people who can struggle to get into the workplace due to health and isolation issues.

But such has been the sales success of their reclaimed wood items, that a purpose-built workshop was opened for them in November.

Handmade bird boxes, chopping boards and candle holders now fill the farm shop.

Mr Huggins said volunteering at the farm gave him the "drive to want to do something" and to get up in the morning with purpose.

"The successes are when we find a place of work for people attending the farm," he said.

"It doesn't happen every day or every week, but... that's always a great moment."

John Huggins Sophie, with red hair in bunches and wearing a striped dress with a white long-sleeved T-shirt, stands holding white physiotherapy training bars. She has a tube coming from her throat and is smiling at the camera. In the background is a play table with a puppet theatre, next to a child's chair. She is in a conservatory.John Huggins
Mr Huggins continues to raise money every year in memory of his granddaughter Sophie, who died in 2013

Alongside this work, Mr Huggins also organises two annual events each year in tribute to his late granddaughter.

The Sophie Elin Harper Fund raises money for The Brain Tumour Charity.

He welcomes people into his garden each summer for a day of cream teas and hosts a permanent book stall outside his house.

The grandfather of four has also been busy putting the finishing touches to his forthcoming tribute band night at Southwold Arts Centre on 21 February, featuring The Counterfeit Quo.

John Huggins Mr Huggins, dressed in a navy fleece and grey zip-up pullover, holds a giant cheque for £60,000 donated by the Sophie Elin Harper Fund. The cheque is also branded with the words: thank you for going further to accelerate cures next to The Brain Tumour Charity logo. A man wearing a red charity coat holds the other side of the cheque. The pair stand in front of Southwold boating lake and tearoom.John Huggins
Earlier this month Mr Huggins officially handed over a £60,000 cheque in his late granddaughter's name to The Brain Tumour Charity

"Losing a grandchild is something you never get over," said Mr Huggins.

"But this is the way I deal with it and I look at it now as being her legacy.

"If there is one family we can spare in going through what we went through, it would all be worth it."

He said he had helped raise about £60,000 for the fund, enabling him to honour the memory of Sophie, who had a "wicked sense of humour" and "infectious laugh".

"We had some very sad times, but we also had some very memorable times as well," he said.

John Huggins A large group of people wearing different fancy dress outfits stand at an angle waving to the photographer on a grassy common. The sky is blue with some cloud.John Huggins
Mr Huggins (dressed as Bob the Builder) organised two fancy dress picnics to raise money for charities that had helped his granddaughter

Among those treasured memories were when Mr Huggins organised two "largest gatherings of people in fancy dress" record attempts, with families parading from the town's pier to a picnic on Southwold Common.

The spectacles in the late 2000s raised about £43,000 for four charities - Cancer Research UK, East Anglia's Children's Hospices, The Children's Trust and The Sick Children's Trust - involved in supporting Sophie, first diagnosed with a tumour when she was 19 months.

Family album A black and white photo of four teenage boys - mostly smiling - and standing next to a chain which has fenced off a replica of the engine, with a model of Father Christmas at the controls. Lloyds bank sign is in the background.Family album
Mr Huggins (wearing glasses) volunteered at the age of 14 with school friends to build a working replica of Stephenson's Rocket for a 1965 Christmas display in Southwold Market Place

Busy though he is, gone are the days when Mr Huggins had to balance long hours managing his shop on Southwold's main thoroughfare with his 41-year-long commitment to the town's RNLI lifeboat.

An official certificate from the charity stated during his service "the lifeboat rescued 229 lives from shipwreck".

The stalwart first volunteered there at the age of 20 before eventually becoming lifeboat operations manager, overseeing the station's day-to-day running and ensuring it was always ready to respond to emergencies.

It was where - as chairman, and part of the fundraising committee between 1980 and 1990 - he helped to drum up £110,000 for the station.

Crew member The Duke of Kent, wearing a dark suit jacket, blue shirt and tie, speaks to Mr Huggins, wearing a dark suit jacket, white shirt and dark tie, in the whitewashed lifeboat shed. Three women are in the background.Crew member
Mr Huggins was invited to the Queen's garden party for his charity work and also met the Duke of Kent when he visited the lifeboat station in the 1990s

Mr Huggins remembered his lifeboat role as being tough at times, alongside his duties as a father of three and business owner.

He retired from his shop at the age of 58, having only taken 16 weeks' holiday in more than 25 years.

"The things that stick in my mind most are the sad things... when you lose somebody, when you don't actually bring them ashore alive, that... stays with you for a long, long time," said Mr Huggins.

"But everybody helped everybody else and we'd talk among ourselves and move on."

John Huggins A gold medal featuring Queen Elizabeth's head and wording with blue, white and burgundy striped ribbon. Next to it is a matching medal in silver with a different striped ribbon but in the same colours. They are both on a black background.John Huggins
Mr Huggins was awarded the Queen's Golden Jubilee and Diamond Jubilee medals for his RNLI service from 1972 to 2013

Overall, Mr Huggins said the camaraderie he had enjoyed, friends he had made and sense of achievement gained by volunteering had been to his benefit.

"You know what they say, 'Give a job to a busy person,'" said Mr Huggins.

"I can't imagine my life without having been a volunteer.

"I always say to people if you can manage to give up just one hour, one hour a week or one hour a fortnight, you're a volunteer.

"There are always people asking for volunteers - and a lot of people are missing out.

"There's so much to be gained from volunteering... and nearly every bit of volunteering helps somebody at the other end."