Displaying items by tag: Peter Gray
Peter Gray 1935 – 2022
The death of Peter Gray of Dun Laoghaire at the age of 86 has taken from among us a remarkable and multi-talented man who, in many ways, was the personification of maritime Dun Laoghaire and its interaction with Dublin Bay and the seas and oceans of the world beyond.
His extended family’s numerous connections with the sea were most directly expressed though his brother, Captain Dennis Gray, who rose to become Operations Manager for Irish Lights, while Peter’s own involvement was in enthusiastic sailing at all levels up to the Olympics.
At a personal level, the matrix of his life with boats was further developed by becoming one of the “Millar Men” with marriage to Susan Millar, one of the five daughters of sailing architect Toby Millar whose courageous wife Joy – widowed in 1958 – continued the family’s exuberant involvement with boats both on Dublin Bay and along the Shannon, with inland waterways cruising and sailing the lakes being added to Peter Gray’s many waterborne interests.
In professional life he began working in the Ulster Bank when the local bank branch was one of the most highly-respected cornerstones of any community, and having become manager of the Dun Laoghaire branch, he was subsequently recruited to headquarters staff in Dublin and retired as one of the Directors.
This steady working progression was to provide him with a security of employment – a steady job – of a kind which is beyond the imagination of many folk today. With a comfortably-regulated life, he was able to give large chunks of his free time to other interests, including much voluntary work in sailing and its administration. Thus in his latter years he was somewhat at odds with the increasing specialization and inevitably paid positions which were being brought to projects which, in his younger years, he’d happily have filled on an amateur basis.
His sailing started in the embryonic junior section of the National Yacht Club with talented contemporaries such as Michael O’Rahilly and Johnny Hooper. The specified junior boat in those pre-Optimist days was the Heron, but any promising young talent would soon have access to the Firefly fleet and the highest levels of team racing, which became one of Peter Gray’s many talents.
Other boats he was to sail with varying levels of involvement were to include over time Mermaids, Flying Fifteens, 505s, and Fireballs, but through the 1950s his hopes for active Olympic involvement increased, and in time he moved his sailing focus to the Royal St George YC, home club of Jimmy Mooney and his father Billy, who had been advocating active Irish Olympic participation for years.
The Mooney enthusiasm had been first met in 1948, with Irish participation by two boats at Torquay, the two-man 26ft Swallow keelboat raced by Alf Delaney and Hugh Allen, while the single-handed Firefly was raced by Jimmy Money. By 1952 in Helsinki, Olympic boat types had been slightly rationalised, and the advent of the challenging but rewarding Olympic Finn for the 1952 Games encouraged Alf Delany to be Irish sailing’s only Olympic representative.
The 1956 Games in Melbourne provided an even more demanding logistics challenge, yet the gallant Somers Payne of Cork managed to get himself out there to race a Finn for Ireland. However, the key outcome of 1956 was Ronnie Delany’s athletics Gold Medal for Ireland in the 1,500 metres.
This transformed Irish attitudes to Olympic involvement by a national team, and with the 1960 Olympics within reach in Rome, with the sailing to be staged in Naples, the Irish Dinghy Racing Association - with Clayton Love Jnr of Cork as President - took on the role of acting National Authority with every intention of sending the strongest possible team to Naples.
By this time Peter Gray and Johnny Hooper and their supporters had the resources to contemplate an admittedly very economically-run campaign for the two-man Flying Dutchman. Their Corinthian enthusiasm to see it through was the stuff of legend. Their campaign vehicle was the ingeniously-modified family Volkswagen Beetle, the main modification being an above-car structure – the term “roof rack” is scarcely adequate – so that they could make their journeys much more nimbly and economically by carrying the boat on top.
Modern sailors have this explained to them by saying that it was like have a VW Beetle going around with a Flying Fifteen hull on top, but in fact that’s an under-statement – the Flying Dutchman was a magnificent beast of a boat which could actually plane when going to windward, and while similar in overall length to the Flying Fifteen hull, it was volumetrically almost twice the size.
Yet despite the somewhat Heath Robinson-style mode of travel, Ireland’s Flying Dutchman crew got to Naples in good order to join Clayton Love Jnr as Team Manager, Jimmy Mooney, Robin Benson and Rob Dalton racing a Dragon, and Somers Payne with a Finn. And in the end, it was the FD which got the best result.
Indeed, they eventually were conceded as having Ireland’s first win in an Olympic Race. But they had missed the singular glory of getting the victory gun.
That went to the Italian super-star FD sailor, the pin-up boy of the Italian Olympic Sailing team. But when some killjoy produced evidence to show that in order to win he hadn’t actually rounded a very crowded mark, it was eventually grudgingly conceded that it had been an Irish win.
Despite the frustrations and getting by on minimal resources, Peter Gray’s enthusiasm for the Olympics never dimmed, but his enthusiasm increasingly was for a lost world, as he believed passionately in the Corinthian ideal right up to the Olympic level.
He quietly but tellingly expressed this in 1973 when he became Honorary Treasurer of the Olympic Council of Ireland. In today’s world, the very thought of an honorary official looking after the day-to-day finances of such a body seems like a dream, yet Peter Gray’s lifetime happened to coincide with last years of an innocent period when amateur enthusiasm still did mean just that, albeit against increasing pro-professional pressures.
Meanwhile with a growing family and regular sailing in Dublin Bay helping life to move smoothly along during the later 1960s, he’d something of a shock to his general lifeview in 1970. For in 1970, the bank clerks of Ireland – and whether they liked it or not, the bank managers with them – went on strike for six whole months.
Today with online banking, we can visualise a world with closed doors at the now-few bank branches, but in 1970 this was an earthquake. And for Peter Gray, now manager of the Ulster Bank in Dun Laoghaire and a local pillar of society, it was particularly stressful. Yet typically he reacted with action. He and Ger Dowling set up a temporary sailing school with two Mermaid 17ft dinghies, and kept themselves busy through the summer with much good work which resulted in a steady stream of newcomers into sailing, and particularly into the then hugely-popular Mermaid class.
Yet as he was by this time very much part of the Dun Laoghaire sailing establishment with its three majestic waterfront clubs, the success of his temporary sailing school led him to the conclusion that the clubs were failing to fulfill their potential in introducing and training newcomers in sailing. It became his mission to remedy this through increasing involvement with the Irish Sailing Association as it emerged from the Irish Yachting Association which in turn – in 1962 – had emerged from the Irish Dinghy Racing Association.
Yet despite his reverence for the basic structures of Dublin Bay sailing, he was open to welcome technological developments, and when the Laser first appeared in the early 1970s, he was bowled over with enthusiasm, and he and locally-based international sailing administrator Ken Ryan set about getting a strong Dun Laoghaire class up and running, and inevitably Peter became the Class’s Honorary Treasurer in 1974.
In his eyes, one of the virtues of the Laser was that its ingenious simplicity left you plenty of other energy for other boats, and by this time he was a sailing polymath, his interests including Dragon racing, cruiser-racing, the occasional offshore passage event, and cruising too. He and Susan made such a compatible and able couple on a cruising boat that they were actively welcomed on board several craft, and by 1980 they joined the Irish Cruising Club. But while they were such an onboard asset that there was no need for a boat of their own, they were increasingly nurturing a retirement dream of a round the world cruise in their own craft. But there was much work to be done and other sailing to be completed before the time arrived to achieve that dream.
Peter’s active role in sailing administration continued to develop and in 1985 he became President of the Irish Sailing Association for a three year term. He was a hard-working and effective administrator, and an able negotiator when working out sponsorship deals, even if his reverence for the amateur ideal in all its manifestations made him still somewhat wary of sponsorships.
Equally, he was more than ever convinced that the yacht and sailing clubs of Ireland were failing to reach their full potential to encourage sailing growth within their own infrastructure. So during his time as President, the ISA was most definitely not encouraging towards the growth of commercial sailing schools, particularly in Dun Laoghaire where the increasingly extensive club shoreside facilities seemed to be under-utilised for much of the time, and then briefly but grossly over-used at others.
In having this attitude, Peter Gray was reflective both of his time and of the belief that the strength of the national authority and sailing lay in serving the best needs of the clubs. This was particularly so where the clubs needed to be quietly encouraged into seeing where their best interests lay. It was an attitude which persists today, and in a sense reflects the unrivalled length of history in Ireland’s many sailing clubs – it’s arguable that a tradition like that should be nurtured rather than changed with a totally commercial point of view.
Certainly, if everyone had the genuinely Corinthian outlook on sailing of Peter Gray – an outlook shared throughout his by-now very extended boat-minded family – then such an attitude would be for the good. But by the time the crude harshness of modern life - with a price on everything - had seeped into sailing, Peter and Susan Gray were well removed from the debate, as they were off round the world on an eight year cruise with their Rival 41 Waxwing.
Their global cruise from 1995 to 2003 was ostensibly for a family visit in New Zealand, but in truth with their broad range of sailing friends and relations, it was a glorious moveable feast of many visiting crews in exotic places, with the flavour of it all perfectly captured in a stream of consciousness paragraph contributed by Susan to the 1997 Irish Cruising Club Annual:
While we were in Vava’u, our daughter Nickey and our two small grandchildren flew up from Auckland to spend time with us and we re-learned the near-forgotten skills of sandcastle building and rock pool exploring and responding to excited children who imagined whales and dolphins in every white-capped wave while we sailed among the many reef-fringed islands with their luxuriant foliage and wonderful beaches of fine golden sand
Of course it wasn’t all gentle family sailing. The Pacific Ocean is an enormous space where – twenty years ago – violent storms could still sweep undetected though some un-populated areas, and in making the final stage of their passage from Tonga to New Zealand, Waxwing ran into a three-day storm so violent that a lesser boat and crew might have succumbed. They were awarded the Irish Cruising Club’s Rockabill Trophy for seamanship for their skill and determination in coming safely through, and for remaining keen to sail.
Indeed, such was their enthusiasm that after leaving New Zealand following a protracted stay, they extended their overall voyage to return to cruising the Pacific Isles, become part of that international sea-wandering community which provides mutual support and fellowship.
Yet on one long passage, Waxwing was on her own when a violent tropical storm engulfed her, and despite being a hefty 41 footer she was completely caught up in a huge breaking sea which they managed to survive, but with such damage to all electronics and other equipment that they had to have an extended stay in Tahiti getting it all sorted professionally before heading west and reluctantly leaving their beloved isles to cross the Indian Ocean and reach the Atlantic via South Africa.
Their return to Ireland in 2003 was low key at first, quietly making their number with friends at Sandycove in Kinsale. But inevitably the Date With Dublin Bay beckoned, and in a sunny Sunday in July 2003 Waxwing returned to Dublin Bay and a gala welcome from the Royal St George Yacht Club.
They had seen much and done more, and achieved great things. But there was still considerable cruising curiosity in Peter and Susan Gray, and for several seasons they cleverly based Waxwing in the almost anonymous marina in Cahirsiveen in Kerry, and explored the southwest and west coast of Ireland in peaceful detail. Subsequently, they were to be found at New Ross in the River Barrow, but age and illness were taking their toll, and they parted company with the beloved vessel with which they’d shared so many exceptional experiences.
And now, Peter Gray’s extraordinary life is ended. A frequent shipmate gives him this salutation: “If I was heading into bad weather far at sea, there’s no skipper I would rather be with than Peter Gray. He was one of the greatest seamen of his generation”.
Our heartfelt condolences to Susan and the immediate family, and to Peter’s extended family and very many friends - they are legion.