Friends of Hastings Cemetery


Detailed publication on Chamier's life and works - PhD dissertation by P. J. van der Voort, The Pen and the Quarterdeck (Leiden University Press, 1972).

In 1870 The Times described Chamier as 'a veteran novelist, one, indeed, whose sea novels some quarter of a century ago were almost as universally popular as those of Captain Marryat'. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia

He is related to Daniel Chamier.
http://www.chamier-family.org/roo/cha/ind/c096.htm


Company director.
(Times: 4 Oct 1845 (Great Paris and Lyons Railway), 14 Oct 1845 (Northampton and Cambridge Railway), 16 Oct 1845 (Rugby, Warwick, and Worcester Railway)


Books:
Following his retirement from the Royal Navy Frederick Chamier wrote a series of novels with nautical themes.  In doing so he followed in the footsteps of the author Frederick Marryat (1792 - 1848) who also was in the Royal Navy. The two Fredericks had another characteristic in common - they were both of Huguenot descent.


At least two of his books (Jack Adams, the Mutineer and Passion and Principle) were translated into German under the titles Jack Adams, der Meuterer and Leidenschaft und Grundsatz.

A review of the French Revolution of 1848 *

(1849)

My Travels or an Unsentimental journey through France, Switzerland and Italy *

(1855)

 

Trevor Hastings


 edited (and continued down to 1827)

James’ Naval History

(1837)

J K Laughton: “Chamier, Frederick (1796 - 1870)”, rev. Roger Morriss, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
Frederick Chamier - Oxford Dictionary of National Biography

Frederick Chamier continued