Life of a Sailor: v. 5: Seafarers' Voices
By (Author) Frederick Chamier
Edited by Vincent McInerney
Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Seaforth Publishing
17th March 2011
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
359.00941
Hardback
224
Width 116mm, Height 178mm
Chamier was a Royal Navy Officer, who like his exact contemporary Captain Marryat is best remembered for a series of naval novels. The Life of a Sailor was his first publication and is usually catalogued as fiction, which may be a tribute to Chamier's story-telling skills but it is wrong the book is an exact account of his naval career, with every personality, ship and event he describes corroborated by his service records. By the time he went to sea in 1809, the heroic age of Nelson was over, but the war was far from won, and he was to see a lot of action, from anti-slavery patrols off Africa to punitive raids on the American coast during the War of 1812. He descriptions of the latter were to prove highly controversial. Like many liberal officers, he deplored the strategy of bringing the war to the civilian population, and the book was much criticized by more senior naval officers for saying so. Chamier represents a new generation of post-Nelsonic naval officer, more gentlemanly, better educated and perhaps more open-minded-he certainly got on well with Lord Byron, whom he met in Constantinople-and his sympathies generally look forward to the Victorian age. He was too young to rise to high rank, and after the Napoleonic War, like many others, he was condemned to a life on half-pay and perhaps forced into a literary career, but out of it came one of the era's most authentic accounts of a junior officer's naval service. AUTHOR: Frederick Chamier saw service in the Walcheren campaign, then in the Mediterranean, and later in the operations around Baltimore and Washington. A Lieutenant in 1815, he was promoted to Commander in 1827. Apart from series of novels, he edited and expanded a new edition of James's Naval History. *
Frederick Chamier saw service in the Walcheren campaign, the Mediterranean, and operations around Baltimore and Washington. His novels include The Unfortunate Man and The Arethusa, among other books.