Career
Martyr"s varied adult life started when he went to sea at the age of 15 to serve on square-riggers and then steamers. He then worked as a miner in South Africa, a labour recruiter in China for Rand Mines and in the merchant and steamship business in Japan. He also spent time trading in the South Seas and banking in Formosa (Taiwan), and also acted as consul in Shimonoseki.
After serving with the Royal Engineers during the First World War in France, he returned to the Pacific, and then ran a steamship business in New New York
In 1922 he finished his wandering and turned to writing. Inspired by the Bermuda Race, he helped create the Fastnet Race in 1925.
Many of his stories were published in Blackwood"s Magazine and heard on British Broadcasting Corporation Radio. The £200 Pound Millionaire (1931) explains how to live cheaply on a yacht, and a follow-up essay, Five Hundred Pound Millionaires (1957) describes how to do the same on canals and inland waterways.
Weston Martyr was also a keen archer, writing about his hobby for Blackwood"s and other publications.