David Bonner-Smith Explained

David Bonner-Smith (19 May 1890 – 10 December 1950), historian of the Royal Navy, served as Admiralty Librarian from March 1932 until May 1950.[1]

Personal life

Bonner-Smith married Vlasta Eileen Done. At the time of his death, he resided at Uplands, Lyth Hill Road, Bayston Hill, near Shrewsbury in Shropshire.[2]

Professional career

Bonner-Smith entered civil service at the Admiralty on Trafalgar Day (21 October) 1909. After serving in the Admiralty's record office, he was appointed to the staff of the Admiralty Library in March 1911. During World War I, he held an honorary commission in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. From 1923 tp 1925, he served as the secretary to the Naval Attaché in South America. he was appointed deputy librarian in 1931 on the death of W.G. Perrin and the appointment of J. Falkner Phillips, M.B.E., as Admiralty Library. Bonner-Smith was appointed Phillips's successor in March 1932 and served until his retirement at the age of 60 in 1950.[3] [4] A frequent contributor to the Mariner's Mirror, he served as its editor from 1932 to 1939. The Society for Nautical Research elected him an Honorary Vice-President on his retirement.[5] [6]

His anonymous obituarist in The Mariner's Mirror wrote of him that "it has been said that Bonner-Smith not only knew every one of the 100,000 books in the library, but was also familiar with all their contents. It is a fact that he could immediately direct students and enquirers to whatever references were needed, and have the necessary books at once placed before them, Scores of our members must owe a great debt of gratitude to his ever-ready and encyclopaedic acquaintance with books and documents dealing with the sea and the services."[7]

The Times reported that "It was a bitter disappointment to him that his scholarship and unique qualifications had received so little appreciation that, during the war, he was transferred to mere routine work of small importance while the library to which he devoted all his enthusiasm and the greater part of his official life was put into other hands; and later, that the official call for a volunteer to succeed him on his coming retirement should specify that no previous library experience was necessary."[8]

Publications

Bonner-Smith was a devoted member of the Navy Records Society and, at the time of his death, was reputed to have "edited more volumes than any other member; his scholarly were a model of what such contributions should be."[9]

References

  1. Who was Who, 1941-1950
  2. Who was Who, 1941-1950
  3. Who was Who, 1941-1950
  4. "Obituary: Mr. D. Bonner-Smith," The Times, 13 Dec 1950, p. 8
  5. "Editorial," Centenary Issue, Mariner's Mirror, vol. 97, no. 1 (2011), p.3.
  6. "Obituary". The Mariner's Mirror, vol. 37, no. 1 (1951), p. 4
  7. "Obituary", The Mariner's Mirror, vol. 37, no. 1 (1951), p. 4
  8. "Obituary: Mr. D. Bonner-Smith," The Times, 13 Dec 1950, p. 8.
  9. "Obituary: Mr. D. Bonner-Smith," The Times, 13 Dec 1950, p. 8
  10. Note in the Bodleian Library Catalog: "Correspondence between the Admiralty and Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Napier respecting naval operations in the Baltic.--Correspondence between the Admiralty and Vice-Admiral Sir James Deans Dundas respecting naval operations in the Black Sea."
  11. Note in the Bodleian Library Catalog: "The work was begun by David B. Smith, Admiralty librarian, and completed after his death by the R. N. College, Greenwich, in collaboration with the National Maritime Museum".