“The voyage would not have been undertaken, and assuredly it would never have been completed, without the impulse derived from her perseverance and determination”– Thomas Brassey Anna Brassey’s idea, in 1876, was that she and her husband, along with their children, household staff, professional yacht crew and three or four friends, should sail around the world for pleasure. Many men had previously circumnavigated in pursuit of knowledge, conquest or financial gain, but not for the sheer enjoyment of it.
Anna’s husband Tom had inherited a fortune from his father, a farmer’s son who’d become a civil engineer. Brassey senior had met George Stephenson and Thomas Telford and profited from their advice to make his career in railways. He’d worked with engineers like Robert Stephenson and Isambard Kingdom Brunel, and by…
