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Master mariner, nautical instructor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Francis Joseph Bayldon MBE (1872–1948) was an Australian master mariner and nautical instructor. Born in England, he was apprenticed to Devitt & Moore, and was an officer on their passenger ships, on a route that circled the globe, around the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn. He was later with the Canadian-Australian Line, sailing between Vancouver and Sydney, Australia. He was on the Burns Philp ship the Moresby in 1901–1902.
Francis Joseph Bayldon | |
---|---|
Born | 23 April 1872 Partney, Lincolnshire, England |
Died | 21 July 1948 76) Edgecliff, Australia | (aged
Resting place | Bayldon Shoals 09°08′S 160°08′E |
Other names | Gentle Annie |
Employer | Burns Philp |
Title | M.B.E. 1938 |
Spouse | Stella Clare Summerbelle |
Children | Dr. Francis Wood Bayldon |
Parent(s) | Rev. Joe Wood Bayldon, Jessie Caroline Nicholls |
He helped correct nautical charts for Pacific navigation. Bayldon Shoals, near Tulagi in the Solomon Islands, is named for him.[1]
He was a fellow of the Royal Australian Historical Society, and in 1925, published an article on the journeys of Luis Váez de Torres from the New Hebrides to the Moluccas.[2] He was also a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society. He was president of the local League of Ancient Mariners and vice-president of the Shiplovers' Society in Sydney.
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