Francis Joseph Bayldon

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.

Born23 April 1872
Died21 July 1948(1948-07-21) (aged 76)
Edgecliff, Australia
Resting place
Bayldon Shoals
09°08′S 160°08′E
OthernameGentle Annie
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Francis Joseph Bayldon
Dimensional sketch of HM Bark Endeavour by Bayldon, dated 1923
Born23 April 1872
Died21 July 1948(1948-07-21) (aged 76)
Edgecliff, Australia
Resting place
Bayldon Shoals
09°08′S 160°08′E
Other nameGentle Annie
EmployerBurns Philp
TitleM.B.E. 1938
SpouseStella Clare Summerbelle
ChildrenDr. Francis Wood Bayldon
Parent(s)Rev. Joe Wood Bayldon, Jessie Caroline Nicholls
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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.

References

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