Sailing the China Seas

William Duncan BRYMER

William was born in Dundee to Alexander BRYMER and Mary Ann SINCLAIR in 1867. He married his wife Irene Vivienne GLOVER in 1918 in Portsmouth and a year later (November 1919) had a set of twins – Mary and Kenneth. They appear to have stayed in Portsmouth when he went back to China. There are some very interesting details on William’s life in this article from the Dundee Courier on the 7 April 1924 and although there is not much information about his family relationships, the fact that his brother-in-law was James Murray makes it possible to confirm which of the two men called William born in 1867 he is:

News has been received of the death at Hankow, China of Captain William Duncan Brymer, an officer widely known and esteemed in the mercantile marine.

A native of Dundee, Captain Brymer served his apprenticeship as a ship’s joiner in the yard of Messrs Gourlay Brothers & Co., and was afterwards carpenter and A.B. on sailing and steam vessels. Qualifying as an officer he was subsequently employed on large steamers in the Atlantic and other trades, and twenty-five years ago he transferred to the China Seas, where he acted as master on coasting and Tangtse river steamers. Early in the war Captain Brymer resigned his appointment and volunteered his services to the Admiralty, and while on the way home on board the Sir Richard Awdry, the vessel was shelled and torpedoed in the Mediterranean and he was wounded by shell fire. Afterwards he saw much active service as lieutenant in command of an Admiralty vessel.

In 1919 he returned to China and entered the service of the Asiatic Petroleum Company as master of one of their vessels with headquarters in Shanghai.

During his long service in the china Seas Captain Brymer had many exciting experiences. Immediately after the naval battle of Tsu Sima in the Russo-Japanese War he picked up, destitute of food and fuel, the Russian torpedo boat destroyer Bodry with over 200 men on board and eluding the vigilance of Japanese cruisers and other craft, towed her to safety into territorial waters at Shanghai. For this service he received the special thanks of the Russian Government. In 1910 similar recognition was paid him by the Japanese Government for his rescue of the crew of a Japanese vessel disabled by a typhoon.

Captain Brymer, who was 57 years of age, leaves a widow and two young children resident at Southsea. He was brother-in-law of Mr James Murray, Oakgrove, Broughty Ferry.


Brimer-Brymer database last updated at 2016-07-02 00:29:43 with 4028 census records and 2856 individuals