2 Nautical Books by Basil Lubbock


The Down Easters: The Story of the Cape Horners

American Deep-Water Sailing Ships 1869-1929

With Illustrations and Plans

Published by Brown, Son & Ferguson, 1971

Hardcover, Dust Jacket in Protective Mylar Sleeve

9.5 x 7.5 x 2.0 Inches


Round the Horn Before the Mast

With Illustrations

Published by Brown, Son & Ferguson, 1986

Hardcover, Dust Jacket in Protective Mylar Sleeve

7.25 x 5.0 x 1.25 Inches


Near Fine, Like New Vintage Condition. The books and dust jackets are clean, covers attached, secure bindings, unmarked, no writing, no highlighting, crisp inner pages, no fading, no stains, no ripped pages, no edge chipping, no corner folds, no crease marks, no remainder marks, not ex-library. Some very light surface and edge wear from age, use, storage and handling. 


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Alfred Basil Lubbock  MC  (9 September 1876 – 3 September 1944 at Monks Orchard,  Seaford) was a British historian, sailor and soldier. He was a prolific writer on the last generation of commercial sailing vessels in the  Age of Sail. He was an early (1911) member of the  Society for Nautical Research, served on its council (1921–24) and contributed to its journal,  The Mariner's Mirror.


He was born 9 September 1876 at Rowley Bank,  Arkley, Hertfordshire, the second of five children. His father, who was also named  Alfred Lubbock, had married his mother, Louisa Wallroth, in 1875. Alfred senior worked as an  underwriter  for  Lloyd's of London  and was a director in Robarts, Lubbock & Co, a private bank founded in 1772. He was descended from  Sir John Lubbock, 2nd Baronet. Basil Lubbock spent most of his early life in the care of an uncle. He was educated at  Eton College, where he was a member of the cricket team, 1894–95. (His father had also attended Eton, where he was a noted sportsman. Lubbock senior continued to play cricket as an adult and was considered one of the best batsmen in England). While at Eton, Lubbock junior acquired some skill in drawing and watercolour painting. Some of his paintings appeared in his first book. Others are held in the collection of the  National Maritime Museum, London. He was expected to follow family tradition and attend  King's College, Cambridge. Instead he decided to travel and left Britain by steamship for Canada.


In 1898 he set out for the  Klondike Gold Rush. He sailed to Alaska in the steamer  City of Seattle  and hiked over the  Chilkoot Trail  to the  Yukon  gold fields. After several unsuccessful months, and a harsh winter, he gave up gold prospecting. He spent the summer of 1899 on  Vancouver Island, intending to prospect for copper. He abandoned the idea and instead went to  San Francisco  where he briefly joined the California Cricket Club. On 12 July 1899, he signed on to serve as a crewman of the British-registered four-masted barque  Ross-shire  which had just arrived from Japan. The vessel sailed on 25 August, bound for  Queentown. His account of the voyage was published as  Round the horn before the mast  (1902), his first book. Lubbock travelled to South Africa to serve in the  Boer War. He was commissioned as a lieutenant in the  Royal Field Artillery  (RFA). By 6 March 1901, at Durban, he had joined Menne's Scouts. He was  mentioned in despatches  on 8 August 1901 for helping to rescue another scout whose horse had been shot from under him. Lubbock was admitted to hospital shortly after the incident. After the war ended in 1902 he returned to England.

On 13 March 1903, he arrived New York aboard the  White Star  liner  Germanic  on route to Canada. In 1903, he signed on as a crewman on the full-rigged iron-hulled saling ship  Commonwealth. While aboard he fell from the rigging and injured his thigh and broke his ankle, which left him with a slight life-long limp. He was back in England by 1905 when he joined the recently formed  Legion of Frontiersmen. He also began yachting around then. By 1908, he was living in the new family home, Kilmarth Manor, in Cornwall and playing for the  Cornwall County Cricket Club. He was living in  Chelsea, London, by 1911. In May 1912, he married Dorothy Mary Warner. She was from a large family and had 20 siblings, the youngest of whom was the noted cricketer,  Plum Warner.  The couple were living in the coastal village of  Hamble-le-Rice, Hampshire, by 1913.


He was a member of the  Territorial Force  by November 1914 when he and his wife boarded a steamship at  Tilbury  for India. They arrived at  Bombay  in December and by April 1915 he was attending the army signal school at  Poona. They returned to the United Kingdom where he joined the artillery. He was a second lieutenant by October 1915. In June 1916 he was made an acting lieutenant with the  Royal Field Artillery  (RFA). In October 1916, he was made acting captain attached to 52 brigade RFA. He was awarded the  Military Cross  while serving on the  Western Front. He reverted to the rank of lieutenant when he stood down from active service in April 1919. When he finally left the Territorial Force in 1921, he was granted the rank of captain. Lubbock had been yachting since at least 1905 and after the war he became more involved. He became the first  Commodore  of the Hamble River Sailing Club in 1919. He sailed extensively himself and worked with  Alfred Westmacott  to develop a new yacht design, the Hamble One Design Class. Lubbock had a long and active friendship with Captain Wilfred Dowman, the man who purchased the  Cutty Sark  back from the Portuguese; their friendship sprang from examining the work log of the Cutty Sark. He wrote two works that deal with that famous clipper:  The Log of the Cutty Sark  and  Sail: The Romance of the Clipper Ships. Basil Lubbock died on 3 September 1944 at Monks Orchard,  East Blatchington, Sussex, aged 67.


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