Grahame Farr
Grahame Edgar Farr was a maritime historian, specialising in the history of ships and shipping in the south-west of England from the eighteenth century onwards. He also wrote about the history of the lifeboat.
Farr was born, educated, lived and worked in Bristol; his interest in ships and shipping came from his father, and his upbringing in Bristol. Farr worked for a printing firm; his research and writing therefore had to be conducted in his spare time. Farr wrote many books on maritime history; the most notable being Records of Bristol Ships, 1800-1838; Somerset Harbours, including the Port of Bristol; and West Country passenger steamers. He archives are held by the National Maritime Museum and the Friends of Purton.
Personal life
Farr was born in Clifton, Bristol on 27 October 1912. His father was Edgar James Farr, who worked for the Bristol Steam Navigation Company for 50 years, starting as an office boy and finishing as an accountant. The Western Daily Press described Edgar Farr as "A well-known figure in Bristol shipping circles". Farr's interest in ships and shipping came from his father, and his upbringing in Bristol. Farr was educated in his hometown at Clifton College.Prior to the Second World War, Farr married a governess named Elsie. Their son Michael was born in Bristol on 18 November 1938. Before Michael's first birthday, Farr enlisted in the British army. While Farr served in the military, his wife and son lived in a house near the Avonmouth Docks in Bristol. To protect themselves when Germans bombed their town, Elsie and Michael stayed in a steel shelter in their dining room. In 1942, Elsie and Michael moved to a cottage owned by her employers in the village of Temple Cloud, where there was less likelihood of being bombed. In 1945, they visited family in Scotland. The family—Grahame, Elsie, and Michael—returned to their home in Bristol in July 1945.
Career
On leaving Clifton College, Farr worked for a printing firm in Bristol, where he stayed for the whole of his professional life, apart from his war service. Farr's research and writing had to be conducted in his spare time.During the Second World War, Farr served with the Royal Army Service Corps, being made Second Lieutenant on 23 November 1940. By 1944 he was a War Substantive Lieutenant. His war service took him to Kenya, Madagascar and Ceylon.
Farr was an early member of the Bristol Shiplovers Society ; he became its Honorary Secretary before the war. An objective of the society was to "collect data, past and present, of ships and sailors, chiefly relating to the Port of Bristol. These facts are entered into the log-books of the society and due course recorded in the archives of Bristol". During the war, his father, Edgar Farr, acted as secretary to Bristol Shiplovers Society on his son's behalf. Farr also became a member of the Society for Nautical Research, continuing as a member for nearly 50 years. His earliest article for the Society's journal, The Mariner's Mirror, was about Brunel's Great Western, built in Bristol. It was published in 1938.
Farr's earliest book was The Somersetshire Life-Boats. Following the war, Farr wrote many books on maritime history, specialising in the history of ships and shipping in the West Country from the eighteenth century onwards. He wrote several monographs for the National Maritime Museum. Farr also contributed articles to journals, including The Mariner's Mirror. He was the first maritime historian to make intensive use of the Statutory Registers of Merchant Ships.
Farr was the archivist of the Lifeboat Enthusiasts' Society. The Society was formed in 1964, with the active co-operation of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, "to facilitate communication between persons interested in the technical and historical aspects of life-boat work". Farr was also the honorary editor of the International Lifeboat Journal between 1974 and 1983.
Death and legacy
Farr died on 22 November 1983, after a long struggle against deteriorating health and eyesight. His obituary in The Mariner's Mirror described him as "a remarkable man, assiduous and painstaking in his research, and yet ever-ready to share his knowledge with others".Works
Works by Farr are variously catalogued under the names Grahame Edgar Farr, Grahame E. Farr, Grahame Farr, and G. E. Farr. The following lists are largely derived from the catalogue of the British Library.''Wreck and rescue'' series
- Wreck and rescue round the Cornish coast. 1. The Story of the north coast Lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1964.
- Wreck and rescue round the Cornish coast. 2. The Story of the Land's End lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1965.
- Wreck and rescue round the Cornish coast. 3. The Story of the south coast lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1965.
- Wreck and rescue in the Bristol Channel. 1. The Story of the English Lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1966.
- Wreck and rescue in the Bristol Channel. 2. The story of the Welsh lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1967.
- Wreck and rescue on the coast of Devon. The Story of the South Devon Lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1968.
- Wreck and rescue on the Dorset coast. The story of the Dorset lifeboats. Truro: D. Bradford Barton, 1971.
Papers on life-boat history
- No. 1: William Plenty's life boats, 1817-29 : and James and Edward Pellew Plenty's life boat model, 1851. Portishead, 1975.
- No. 2: George Palmer's life-boats, 1828-47 : with allied types and variants. Portishead, 1975.
- No. 3: Life-boats of the Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society, 1851-4. Portishead, 1976.
- No. 4: The tubular life-boats, 1850-1939. Portishead, 1977.
- No. 5: The steam life-boats : with notes on earlier projects, and overseas steam life-boats. Portishead, 1981.
- No. 6: The Lincolnshire Coast Shipwreck Association 1827-1864. Portishead, 1981.
Aids to life-boat history
- No. 1: Hand-list of R.N.L.I. official numbers : and operational numbers. Portishead, 1978. 5th edition, 1993.
- No. 2: British life-boat stations : a historical and geographical list. Portishead, 1979. 4th edition, 1993.
Maritime monographs and reports
- No. 20: The ship registers of the Port of Hayle, 1864-1882. Greenwich: National Maritime Museum, 1975.
- No. 22: Shipbuilding in North Devon : containing a list of the vessels known to have been built on the North Devon coast and rivers, with an introduction, notes on the builders, appendices, tables and a map. Greenwich: National Maritime Museum, 1976.
Other books
- The Somersetshire Life-Boats. A brief history of rescue work on the Somersetshire coast. Bristol, 1935.
- Records of Bristol Ships, 1800-1838. Vessels over 150 tons. Bristol, 1950. Bristol, 1985 edition.
- Somerset Harbours, including the Port of Bristol. London, 1954.
- Chepstow Ships. Chepstow, 1954.
- West Country Passenger Steamers. London, 1956. Second edition, 1967.
- The Bristol Shiplovers' Society, 1931-1956. Bristol, 1957.
- The Steamship Great Western: the first Atlantic liner. Bristol, 1963. Bristol, 1974 edition.
- The Steamship Great Britain. Bristol, 1965.
- West Country passenger steamers. Second edition. Prescot, 1967.
- Cornish shipwrecks. Truro, 1969.
- Ships and Harbours of Exmoor. Dulverton, 1970. Second edition, 1974.
- Bristol shipbuilding in the nineteenth century. Bristol, 1971. Paperback, 1996.
- Penlee Lifeboat: History of the Penlee and Penzance Branch of the R.N.L.I. Penzance, 1983.
Archives
The Friends of Purton acquired Farr's photographic collection in 2007. Started in the 1930s, the collection consists of several thousand black and white images of local coasters, lighters, paddle steamers, schooners, trows and related subjects.
The Exmoor Society's archives include extensive material relating to the commissioning and publication of Farr's microstudy on the ‘’Ships and Harbours of Exmoor’’.