F. G. Loring

Frederick George Loring (1869–1951) was an English naval officer and writer, and an early expert in wireless telegraphy.

Family

Loring was born on 11 March 1869 in Ryde, Isle of Wight (then still part of Hampshire), the eldest son of Admiral Sir William Loring (d. 1895), and his wife, Frances Louisa Adams. His grandfather, Sir John Wentworth Loring (1775–1852), had been the lieutenant-governor of the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth in 1819–37,[1] and his great-grandfather, Joshua Loring (1716-1881), a colonial American commodore in the Royal Navy, who moved to London after 1776.[2] In 1896 he married Charlotte Elizabeth Arbuthnot (1862–1933), daughter of the Hon. James Edward Arbuthnot of Mauritius; they had two daughters, Evelyn Frances and Iris. In 1949 he remarried, to Margaret Mackenzie, daughter of Montague S. Napier. Loring died on 7 September 1951 in Foots Cray, Kent.[3]

Career

Loring served as a sub-lieutenant on the royal yacht Victoria and Albert in 1891. As a lieutenant he was aboard HMS Victoria when she was rammed and sunk by HMS Camperdown off Tripoli on 22 June 1893 with much loss of life, and was awarded a bronze medal by the Royal Humane Society for saving two lives.

In 1896, he qualified as a torpedo lieutenant and joined the staff of HMS Defiance, the schoolship, at Devonport, where he was among the first to specialize in wireless telegraphy. He was put in charge of Admiralty shore wireless stations, and in 1904 selected to accompany Guglielmo Marconi to America for wireless experiments. He retired in December 1909 with the rank of commander, having transferred to the Post Office, where he was inspector of wireless telegraphy responsible for the operating staff until his retirement in 1930. He was appointed a civil OBE in 1926 for his services to the development of radio. In 1930, he continued his career in the International Marine Radio Company, where he became a director. He finally retired from the company in 1950.[4]

Writings

Loring's writing abilities appeared first as a technical journalist[5] and as naval correspondent for the Western Morning News.

Loring also wrote poetry and short stories,[4] of which "The Tomb of Sarah" gained acclaim as a classic vampire story after it appeared in the Pall Mall magazine in December 1910. It tells what happens when the tomb of the evil Countess Sarah, murdered in 1630, is disturbed during the restoration of a church. Along with Hume Nisbet's "The Vampire Maid"[6] and E. F. Benson's "Mrs. Amworth",[7] it is among the foremost early 20th-century stories to feature a female vampire.[8]

The story soon began to be anthologized. Later it was included in the 1939 Everyman Ghost Stories, the 1977 Citadel Press Dracula Book of Great Vampire Stories, and the Oxford University Press anthologies Victorian Ghost Stories (1991) and The Young Oxford Book of Supernatural Stories (1997).[9] Ray Danton's 1972 film Crypt of the Living Dead was an uncredited adaptation of this.[10]

External source

"The Tomb of Sarah" can be read online here or here.

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gollark: Actual question: thus which?
gollark: Question: I wish to interact with """matrix""". However, due to synapse memory use bad, I can *either* have a working homeserver thing with bridge support (for APIONET and whatever) or a somewhat experimental one without that but which will not utterly consume all RAM ever when joining big rooms.
gollark: Anyway, see, concepts like "esolang" and "not esolang" have fuzzy boundaries so trying to insist that something is or isn't or give a highly rigorous definition is no.
gollark: Lisp is so wondrous that minoteaur is to be inevitably unfinished and rewritten in it.

References

  1. ODNB entry for F. G. Loring: Retrieved 7 September 2011. Subscription required.
  2. Drake, Francis S.: Dictionary of American Biography, Including Men of the Time (Boston: James R. Osgood & Co., 1872).
  3. ODNB entry for F. G. Loring.
  4. ODNB entry.
  5. E. g. as co-author of "A survey of marine radio progress, with special reference to RMS Queen Mary". Institution of Electrical Engineers' Journal, 1937.
  6. First published in Stories Weird and Wonderful (London: F. V. White & Co., 1900).
  7. First published in Visible and Invisible (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1923).
  8. Fun Stuff Café site: Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  9. Literary Gothic website: Retrieved 8 September 2011.; British Library Integrated Catalogue.
  10. Vampire Movies site: Retrieved 7 September 2011; IMDb site: Retrieved 7 September 2011.
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