[1] After education at Downside School, Barraud trained at the Brighton School of Art and then worked as a manager at his father's photographic business before becoming a full-time artist.
[1] He was close to Francis Barraud and helped him with the final version of "His Master's Voice".
In 1915, he taught Canadian artist Walter J. Phillips etching skills.
[3] His work covers landscapes in Suffolk, Essex, Kent, the Thames Estuary and Rye.
He also painted and etched: Barraud was married twice, first to Gladys Seanor (with whom he had two children) and, after her death, to Evelyn Dixon.