The team was founded in 1965 and is currently staffed by 50 members, both men and women. Originally, the team was known as Cleveland Search and Rescue, and was a sister operation to the Ryedale Search and Rescue Team. Both had formed in response to the number of people who were injured or lost attempting the Lyke Wake Walk. The team have twelve members trained in specialist recovery techniques in flooded water situations. These skills were used during the 2015 flooding in York. The Department of Transport donated £3,500 to the team in 2017, to allow them to purchase a trailer for their rescue equipment. The team operates with three vehicles; one large van with communication and mapping equipment that acts as a command and control vehicle, and two Land Rovers. Cleveland MRT's base of operations is located in Great Ayton, North Yorkshire, and Lord Crathorne is the president. Like other mountain rescue teams, the Cleveland MRT has its own area which is concentrated around Cleveland and the Northern part of the North York Moors. However, requests from what is outside of their traditional area are taken, which has seen the team deployed as far north as Kielder Forest and Blackhall Rocks. The team is dedicated to searches and rescues in the North East region alongside other mountain rescue teams; Northumberland National Park Mountain Rescue Team, North of TyneMountain Rescue Team, Swaledale Mountain Rescue Team, and Teesdale and Weardale. Together, the Mountain Rescue Association list this as being the North East Search and Rescue Association. Roseberry Topping, which is on the border between North Yorkshire and Cleveland, is an often visited location for the team. On average, the team are called out twelve times a year to accidents and incidents at the location, so much so, that the MRT and the North York Moors National Park Authority, improved access for 4x4 vehicles.
Call-outs
Below are listed some of the notable call-outs that the team have been called out to;
1976 – The team were required to help extinguish the moorland fires on the North York Moors, which saw them out on an average of one night in every two over a fortnight.
1988 – The team were deployed to Kielder Forest in December 1988 to search for debris from the Lockerbie disaster. What they found was mostly personal effects of those onboard.
2005 – The team were drafted in to help search woods near Richmond for an absconded man who was suspected of murdering Jenny Nicholl.
2018 – The team rescued 30 runners in the North York Moors who were attempting the Hardmoors 55 run. This ultramarathon starts in Helmsley and finishes in Guisborough, some further on. The course rises and on the day, bad weather arrived after the runners had set off.