{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/f547f9fb-a077-4e85-b19a-beae9eb42c1f/673b10a3c55a425ba25cb1f1?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"The Last Shantyman: The Remarkable Maritime Life of Stan Hugill","description":"<p>Stan Hugill was known in his lifetime as the ‘Last Working Shantyman’ and became a guardian of the tradition of maritime music. Stan had a colourful and eventful life. He spent 23 years at sea including a stint as the official shantyman on board the steel four-masted barque <em>Garthpool</em>, the last British commercial sailing ship. In the Second World War he worked as the helmsman on the <em>ss Automedon</em> which was sunk by a German auxiliary cruiser and led to Stan being held as a prisoner of war for four years. In later life he taught sailing skills in Wales and aboard the sail-training vessel <em>Pamir</em>. In these years Stan began to write down the shanties he had learned, authoring several books, recording several albums and regularly performing in public. He became something of a star in the British folk scene anchoring a BBC show <em>Dance and Skylark</em> in the 1960s ‘featuring The Spinners with Bosun Stan Hugill who welcomes friends and visitors aboard his old Sailing Barque.’ To find out more Dr Sam Willis spoke with Mollie Carlyle, a historian of maritime music with an encyclopaedic knowledge of her own and an expert on Stan’s life.</p>","author_name":"The Society for Nautical Research and the Lloyds Register Foundation"}