James Clayton Barr


James Clayton Barr was a Senior Commodore of the Cunard line.

Biography

Born in Burnley, Barr first went to sea in 1877 and served mainly in the South American trade. During the Boer War, he was in command of the Catalonia, requisitioned by the Admiralty and employed as a floating prison camp for captured Boers. He was Master of from 1905 to 1914. In October 1913, while eastward bound, Barr responded to a distress call from the SS Volturno to pick up survivors.
On 7 August 1914, Carmania was commissioned into the Royal Navy as an auxiliary cruiser under the command of Captain Noel Grant, R.N. Captain Barr was retained as navigator and advisor, with the acting rank of Commander, Royal Naval Reserve.
On 14 September 1914, while at sea in the South Atlantic, Carmania encountered and sank the German auxiliary cruiser, an armed merchant cruiser of the Imperial German Navy under the command of Korvettenkapitän Julius Wirth. As a result of that successful action, Barr was subsequently invested as a Commander of the Order of the Bath and was Mentioned in Despatches.
Released from the navy on health grounds, he rejoined Cunard as a relief captain and in 1915 and 1916 served as master of the troopships and. By June 1916 he was master of the. He retired from Cunard later that year, and died on 29 March 1937, at the age of 82.