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The name of Humphrey Barton has been an enduring theme throughout this
history, not just because he was the Founder but also because he was so influential
in the development of deep-sea cruising throughout its formative period after
the war. He raised awareness of the possibility of crossing oceans in small,
well- constructed boats by his much- publicised transatlantic voyage in
Vertue XXXV. He went on to form and lead the first worldwide fraternity of
deep-sea cruising folk and he led by example for the rest of his life, never once
failing to write of his adventures to the end. Hum was the very embodiment of
the Objects of the OCC.

When he died in October 1980 aged 80, messages of
sympathy poured in from around the world and the affection and respect in
which he was held can best be expressed by repeating some of these tributes.
The first word came from Journal Editor, David Wallis:
‘The Spectacle Man has gone. This news will be received with
sadness by the natives around the Caribbean Islands who perhaps
recall the eccentric old Englishman who had a habit of rowing
ashore armed with a boxful of discarded spectacles which he
used to distribute as a kind of largesse among people for whom
the idea of a visit to an oculist was an unimaginable luxury. It
explains Humphrey Barton’s occasional appeals for discarded
spectacles and displays an aspect of his character unsuspected
by many who knew him as a somewhat formal, plain-speaking
man.
It was old age that finally vanquished the old lion. Towards the
end he had endured more ill health than would have been
necessary to scupper lesser men and he was sailing his beloved
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Rose Rambler almost to the last. Writing to this scribe a bare
week before he slipped his cable Hum was describing with
enthusiasm the marina at Larnaca where he had fetched up, a
refugee from Mintoff’s Malta which had proved inhospitable and
doused his dreams of ending his days in the Blue Sisters hospital.
Born in Wimbledon, Surrey, he lived an adventurous life,
learning to fly fighters in World War I at the age of 17. He
afterwards joined Callender’s Cables and served with them
around the world until he teamed up with Laurent Giles in 1936
as a marine surveyor.
When the Second World War began he served with the Royal
Engineers with the rank of major, subsequently rejoining Laurent
Giles until his retirement in 1959. He first came to public notice in
1950 with his epic passage to New York with Kevin O’Riordan. He
wrote Vertue XXXV on his first Atlantic passage, and then Atlantic
Adventurers, which took three years of research and was
reprinted several times with a translation into French. This work
formed the kernel of an idea for linking these wandering spirits
into an association and marked the beginning of the Ocean
Cruising Club.’
Peter Carter-Ruck, the Commodore of the day, wrote:
‘By one of those coincidences in life, the first year in which I met
Hum was 1954, the year the Club was founded. I was interested
in a Laurent Giles 43 footer lying at Falmouth, and Hum did the
survey for me. I didn’t meet him for some time, having been
unable to attend the survey, but when I did I found it a most
rewarding experience. A year or so later the late Rev Henry
Kendall, Warden of St Edward’s School, Oxford, and himself a
great sailor, asked if I knew ‘an amazing yachtsman’ by the name
of Humphrey Barton.
Regrettably it was not until the 1960s that I really got to know
him, having of course already read Vertue XXXV and Atlantic
Adventurers, and I could not but be impressed by his charm,
diffidence and modesty. With his outstanding record and the lasting
memorial to his endeavours in the shape of the Ocean Cruising
Club, he is to me one of the immortals.’
From across the Atlantic founder member Carleton Mitchell added:
‘Hum was undoubtedly one of the outstanding yachtsmen of our
time. Our courses converged infrequently, alas! But his
personality and charm will never be forgotten, nor his exploits
aboard Rose Rambler. The yearly distances Hum put astern over
such a long span of time, plus his activities as Founder and Admiral
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of the Ocean Cruising Club, are an enduring memorial and
continuing inspiration to all who go to sea.’
Hum’s daughter Pat reflects:
‘How do I remember my father? What has he passed on to me
that I treasure most? Undoubtedly the answer must be that he
has bequeathed me a very deep and abiding love of sailing and
an extremely healthy respect for the sea.
I learnt to know my father best when sailing with him delivering
yachts in the mid fifties. We shared many a grim watch together
and many that were a great delight to us both. He loved to find
new cruising grounds and to gather new harbours and anchorages
into his already vast repertoire. He would always share in the
excitement of exploring unknown places. The few motor boats
we delivered we both found tedious. But the many beautiful sailing
yachts from 7 to 70 tons that we sailed with crews large and
small to North European and Mediterranean ports gave us both
great pleasure and satisfaction.
Above all my father was proud of his seamanship. He could
handle a yacht under sail to perfection; he loved sailing in and
out of port instead of switching on the engine. But, just as
important, he knew how to handle men, how far to drive a tired
crew and how to inspire them to follow his leadership. Founding
the Ocean Cruising Club was just one of the ways in which he
has encouraged many cruising people to follow their own ambitions
and to enjoy the great and varied sport of sailing.’
Founder member and racing rival, Adlard Coles wrote:
‘I am glad to have been invited to give my recollections of our
late Admiral, Humphrey Barton, who was one of my oldest sailing
friends and a close contemporary.
Hum was one of the partners with Laurent Giles and Partners
which he joined in 1936 and could be termed the sailing partner
as it was his job to go on the trials of the new yachts designed by
the firm and, when required, to deliver them to their owners. His
professional training with one of the leading yacht designing firms,
coupled with his intensive sailing experience with new boats,
endowed him with a knowledge of yachts which was quite unique;
there was nothing in a boat that he could not do, whether in sails
and rig down to hull construction and accommodation below. He
was experienced in ocean racing as well as cruising.
When in America for the Bermuda and Transatlantic races in
1950, I saw Humphrey at the New York Yacht Club shortly after his
crossing in Vertue XXXV. He looked tired after his 47 day passage
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and the ordeal in the storm in which he had broken ‘a few ribs’ so
was recuperating before going as sailing master in Gulvain.
My last meeting with him was when he came to a reception
given for him in 1979 by the Royal Lymington Yacht Club to mark
the occasion of his award of the Blue Water Medal of the Cruising
Club of America, the highest honour which the club can confer.
This, I think, was a fitting tribute to one of the greatest amateur
seaman of our time.’
Colin Mudie, founder and professional colleague, contributed:
‘Everybody has his heroes and Humphrey Barton has been one
of mine since I first met him in 1946. There are many reasons,
of course, but one of them must be the manner in which he
practised what might be called ‘creative seamanship’. Anyone
who saw him sailing a big cutter out of St Peter Port hard on the
wind in a strong breeze and luffing his masthead neatly one by
one over a row of moored yachts as he came to them, knows
what I mean. To see him leave a lee quay in Cherbourg with all
hands on the spring or to moor at speed with precision and
confidence a few feet from disaster, was both a pleasure to behold
and an education in the arts of seamanship. Who will forget the
way he used the pumps that were keeping some old vessel afloat
to jet across Bournemouth Bay when the engines failed?
I first fell into the Hum orbit when I was an apprentice with
Laurent Giles and Partners. Although I was in the design end of
the business it was, fortunately for me, thought to be a good
thing that on occasions I should accompany ‘Mr Barton’ on
surveys. Thus it was that on one occasion I found myself well up
in the bows of a thirty square metre pushing strongly on the
great man’s feet to insert him right up into the pointed end. Lesser
surveyors used torches and non-committal words.
Later I had some sea time with him, mostly ocean racing. In
Tilly Twin in a great Fastnet gale year we were sporting a new
kind of crosstree socket and as we bashed out past the Bridge
buoy all the lee crosstrees fell out. Before even our mouths fell
open Hum ran up the mainsail, and I don’t mean hoisted it, lashed
the weather crosstrees in firmly, slid down to deck again and
gave us hell for hesitating to cross some rival vessel.
I was boat keeper on Vertue XXXV before the great voyage
and I have always suspected that I was earmarked as the very
ultimate reserve for his crew. I have mixed feelings about some
of the dangers of the passage but I have always wished I was
there when Hum’s porridge leapt out of his plate into Kevin
O’Riordan’s sleeping bag. It was, recorded Hum, in the immortal
words, ‘Bad luck for both of us.’
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Ian Nicolson, founder member, Port Officer Clyde and fellow surveyor reflects
on Hum as a man of his time:
‘Many people look upon the 20 years starting in 1945 as the
golden age of yachting. It was still a truly amateur sport, limited
in its appeal, free from commercialism, innovative without being
gimmicky, with roots in tradition yet interesting, progressive and
a great pleasure to everyone concerned. In that era the leading
firm of European designers was Laurent Giles and Partners, and
Hum Barton (one of four partners) was their surveyor. He did not
carry out a vast number of surveys, under 700 which by current
standards is a modest number. But such was his standing that he
was in constant demand, his opinions were widely sought and his
judgement was trusted. The reasons for his prestige are obvious;
he was often at sea in all weathers, and he knew the factors
which make a boat safe, sea-kindly and reliable.
As a yachtsman he was unusual in that he was a successful
racing man yet he cruised widely with enthusiastic enjoyment.
Some of his cruises had more than a touch of the racing element
in them; for instance there was his 23 day voyage along the
French coast which covered 22 harbours in a boat only 21 foot 6
inches on the waterline, with no engine. And this was no glorified
dinghy which could be tacked on a button and ghosted into a
windless land-locked rabbit-hutch of a harbour. How many sailors,
amateur, pseudo amateur or professional could equal that record?’
Finally, perhaps the present writer could be allowed space for a few reflections
on Hum as I knew him in his old age. We met in Malta when he was 76, some
30 years my senior, but we got to know each other well in the two years we
had together on that island. I had joined the OCC two years previously, but
before I knew of its existence the name Humphrey Barton was etched on my
mind as one of the greats.
I recall holding a party for the large crew of a visiting yacht, watching the
young paying court to Hum with a degree of reverence usually reserved for
popes or presidents. Once, when the party was on Rose Rambler, Hum took
me aside and whispered that it was his and Mary’s wedding anniversary and
asked me to propose a toast. I was somewhat diffident as the other guests
were Batchy Carr and Charles Nicholson, both of Hum’s age and all four of
us ex-fighter pilots, they in the First World War and me after the Second. I
valiantly tried to dredge up flying stories to match theirs, but couldn’t compete
with Hum’s four engine failures in one flight, each time landing in a field to
make repairs.
Hum had accepted that there were few deep-sea miles left in him and greatly
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relied on Mary for the heavy work, be it up the mast or on the foredeck, but
they were usually the first away in the spring and often the last back of the
several Med commuters who wintered in Malta. But by 1980 his time had
come; after fighting many an illness successfully he was flown home for a
mercifully short spell in hospital and, as Mary put it, “was spared the final
indignity of living ashore”.
Despite his addiction to ocean crossing Hum always spoke nostalgically of
gunk holing. I like to think that his restless soul found peace in the way that the
inimitable Belloc describes it:
‘I love to consider a place which I have never yet seen, but
which I shall reach at last, full of repose and marking the end of
those voyages, and security from the tumble of the sea.
This place will be a cove set round with high hills on which
there shall be no house or sign of men, and it shall be enfolded
by quite deserted land; but the westering sun will shine pleasantly
upon it under a warm air. It will be a proper place for sleep.
The fairway into that haven shall lie behind a pleasant little
beach of shingle, which shall run out aslant into the sea from the
steep hillside, and shall be a breakwater made by God. The tide
shall run up behind it smoothly, and in a silent way, filling the
quiet hollow of the hills, brimming it all up like a cup – a cup of
refreshment and of quiet, a cup of ending.
Then with what pleasure shall I put my small boat round, just
round the point of that shingle beach, noting the shoal water by
the eddies and the deeps by the blue colour of them where the
channel runs from the main into the fairway. Up that fairway
shall I go, up into the cove, and the gates of it shall shut behind
me, headland against headland, so that I shall not see the open
sea any more, though I shall still hear its distant noise. But all
around me, save for that distant echo of the surf from the high
hills, will be silence; and the evening will be gathering already.
Under that failing light, all alone in such a place, I shall let go
the anchor chain, and let it rattle for the last time. My anchor will
go down into the clear salt water with a run, and when it touches
I shall pay out four lengths or more so that she may swing easily
and not drag, and then I shall tie up my canvas and fasten all for
the night, and get me ready for sleep. And that will be the end of
my sailing.’159
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