Afbeelding van de auteur.
8+ Werken 180 Leden 2 Besprekingen
There is 1 open discussion about this author. See now.

Over de Auteur

Ann Savours Shirley was on the staff of the Scott Polar Research Institute from 1954 to 1966, and at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich from 1970-1987. She was also Research and Displays Officer for 'Project Discovery', in connection with Captain Scott's famous ship.
Fotografie: Ann and her dog Liffey at home in Bridge, Kent, May 2011.

Werken van Ann Savours

Gerelateerde werken

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geslacht
female
Korte biografie
Educated at Thistley Hough Grammar School for Girls, Stoke-on-Trent, at Royal Holloway College, London University (B.A. Hons. in History), at Burslem School of Art and at the Sorbonne. First post in the University of Aberdeen (King's College Library); then for twelve years (1954-66) on the staff of the Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge. This period included a year's sabbatical leave in Australasia working on a catalogue of polar and whaling mss, (S.P.R.I. mimeographed, 1963). Travelled outwards via the Suez Canal in the liner Arcadia (P&O) and home via Panama, the latter a nine week voyage in MV Mélanésien, a cargo and passenger vessel owned by Messageries Maritimes, Marseilles, calling at the French Pacific islands. Joined the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, as Assistant Keeper (Manuscripts) in 1970. Custodian of Mss. 1973-77. Responsible for the Arctic Gallery; also Research and Displays Officer for "Project Discovery" after the vessel's handover by the Royal Navy to the Maritime Trust, ca.1984. Retired 1987. Lecture and consulting tour of Australia, sponsored by British Council, 1989.

Publications:

Edited The Discovery diary of Edward Wilson, 1901-04 (London and New York, 1966), and Scott's last voyage (London, New York and Amsterdam, 1974). Author of The Search for the North West Passage (London, Chatham Publishing, and New York, St. Martin's Press, 1999). "Biography" of Captain Scott's ship Discovery (now in Dundee), published September 1992 by Virgin Books, London under the title The Voyages of the "Discovery". This merited a "Best Book of the Sea" award and was reprinted in "limpback," August 1994 and subsequently. On the vessel's centenary in 2001, an abridged edition was published by Chatham Publishing in London and New York. With H.G.R. King, edited Polar Pundit (Cambridge, 1995), a book of reminiscences about Dr. Brian Roberts, C.M.G. Biographical essay on Sir Clements Markham, F.R.G.S. (1830-1916) published in the 150th anniversary volume of the Hakluyt Society Encompassing the great globe of the Earth, edited by R.C. Bridges ard P.E.H. Hair, 1996. Another, well illustrated, article on Markham was published in History Today, March 2001.

Member of ARTAF (the Archival Research Task Force), United Kingdom of the Meta Incognita Project in Canada, researching aspects of Sir Martin Frobisher's Arctic voyages, 1576-78, published by the Canadian Museum of Civilisation in 1999. Contributor to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography as well as to sundry encyclopaedias and to the Polar Record, Geographical Journal, Mariner's Mirror, etc. Delivered the Annual Lecture to the Hakluyt Society in 1986 on "Discovering the Discovery" (published 1987) and the Annual Lecture 2002 on "The North West Passage in the 19th Century: perils and pastimes of a winter in the ice," published by the Society the following year. After ten years' work off and on, the fourth volume of The South Polar Times, Midwinter 1912, was published In facsimile by the Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge and J. and S.L. Bonham, London, in a collectors' edition of 500 copies at £250-£275 each in 2010. Beautifully designed by Vera Brice, the Introduction, extensive commentary and biographical notes on the contributors are by Ann Savours. The original had been edited in the Antarctic at Cape Evans, Ross Island, by Apsley Cherry-Garrard in 1912, but was not reproduced in London (unlike the earlier volumes) on the return of Captain Scott's Terra Nova expedition 1910-13. The same year, Ann Savours contributed the lead article in Northward Ho! A Voyage towards the North Pole 1773, the book of the exhibition held in the Captain Cook Memorial Museum, Whitby, about the naval scientific and exploring voyage, commanded by the Hon. Captain Constantine John Phipps in H.M. Ships Racehorse and Carcass,1773.

Polar Travels, Societies, etc.:

Member, as a guinea pig, of the Cambridge Physiological expedition 1955 to Spltsbergen. Sailed to Macquarie Island in the Southern Ocean in Magga Dan as assistant algologist with A.N.A.RE (Australian National Antarctic Research Expeditions), 1960. Crossed Lapland by reindeer sledge with a Lapp (Same) 1954. Visited Churchill and York Factory on Hudson Bay with the Centre for Rupert's Land Studies (University of Winnipeg) c. 1988. Lecturer during voyage to North Pole in Russian nuclear icebreaker, Yamal, August 2001. Longstanding member of the National Trust and the Royal Geographical Society. Member of R.G.S. Council, 1978-80. Received the Murchison Award from the Royal Geographical Society, June 2001. Liaised between the Gographical Club and the Librarian, Map Curator and Archivist of the R.G.S. in the provision of grants by the Club for the repair and conservation of items in their care, a scheme which she initiated a decade ago. Member of Council of the Hakluyt Society (founded 1846) at intervals 1980 to present. Elected a Vice President 2002-06. For the past ten years, she "shepherded" the annual lectures set up fifty years ago in honour of Professor E.G.R. Taylor, between the sponsoring societies—the R.G.S., the Society for Nautical Research, the Royal Institute of Navigation and the Hakluyt Society. Sometime Honorary Research Fellow, Australian National University, Canberra and Exhibitioner, Royal Holloway College, University of London. Hon. Secretary of the Society for Nautical Research, January 1988 to December 1990 and member of Council at intervals, 1991-2000. Cruised up the west coast of Greenland, summer 2004, and had the joy of visiting one of hte Viking churches. Initiated the conference, held after the hand-over of Hong Kong, at the Merseyside Maritime Museum, with the Society for Nautical Research, on "British Ships in China Seas," which resulted in a book with the same title, edited by Richard Harding, et al. published in 2004. Hon. Member, Eliot College and Hon. D. Litt. University of Kent at Canterbury. Lecturer and occasional outside examiner for M. Phil in Polar Studies, University of Cambridge, 1989 to 1998.

Married Laurence Shirley (met on the MV Mélanésien voyage noted above) in November 1961, who died in January 2003. Sons John and Nicholas born 1962 and 1966, respectively. Six grandchildren.

http://www.antarctic-circle.org/treas...

Leden

Discussies

Besprekingen

From the photos I've seen of this book, I was worried it would be quite small and that the pages would not do the original periodical justice. But I was quite mistaken: this book is very large and presents the original pages in all their glory. Highly recommended piece of history.
½
 
Gemarkeerd
tnilsson | Jan 27, 2021 |
Basic description of Scott and the Antarctic through the lens of Ponting.
 
Gemarkeerd
michaelwarr | Apr 2, 2014 |

Lijsten

Misschien vindt je deze ook leuk

Gerelateerde auteurs

Statistieken

Werken
8
Ook door
1
Leden
180
Populariteit
#119,865
Waardering
4.1
Besprekingen
2
ISBNs
17
Talen
1

Tabellen & Grafieken