Background
He was born in Thirsk, North Yorkshire to Dorothy F. Place and Tom Place.
He was born in Thirsk, North Yorkshire to Dorothy F. Place and Tom Place.
From 1948 to 1950 he served in the military, he then studied briefly at an agricultural college, worked as a bartender and managed the family farm.
He had three siblings, Ullin, Dorothy and David. Early in his life he worked as a forester. Place lived much of his life on the sea.
In 1953 he sailed to South Africa where he worked in a copper mine.
In 1955 he returned to England and worked as a journalist. In 1958 he sailed to New York and from 1958 to 1961 lived in the Bahamas.
In 1961, he bought his first ship and sailed it through Miami and England to Mallorca. During the Algerian War, he was a smuggler.
The years 1962 and 1963 he spent in Bilbao and Madrid.
In 1965 he captained a sailing ship built in the Netherlands to Lisbon. In the following years he drove several ocean races with Juan Carlos the future King of Spain. In 1966 in Denmark he turned a barge into a yacht and in 1967 and 1968 he ran a yacht charter in Malta for wedding couples and regularly sailed the route via Lampedusa and Tunisia.
In 1969 he was a consultant for Forte International Hotels in Sardinia and Greece before he organized a fishing fleet in Ecuador.
Shortly thereafter, he fled to Peru on charges of alleged piracy. He then worked for the Manu River Project and for similar projects in Brazil and Panama.
In 1971 he returned to England before working for time in the Canary Islands as a photographer. In 1973 he traveled to Mexico to write an ultimately unpublished novel.
While struggling with the novel he took up poetry as a relief from working on the novel.
Milner Place was an editor for Poetry Circle, a forum for contemporary poetry in the United States.