Frederick George Loring (1869–1951) was an English naval officer and writer, and an early expert in wireless telegraphy.
His grandfather, Sir John Wentworth Loring (1775–1852), had been the lieutenant-governor of the Royal Naval College, Portsmouth in 1819–37,[1] and his great-grandfather, Joshua Loring (1716–1881), a colonial American commodore in the Royal Navy, who moved to London after 1776.
In 1896, he qualified as a torpedo lieutenant and joined the staff of HMS Defiance, the schoolship, at Devonport, where he was among the first to specialize in wireless telegraphy.
[4] Loring's writing abilities appeared first as a technical journalist[5] and as naval correspondent for the Western Morning News.
It tells what happens when the tomb of the evil Countess Sarah, murdered in 1630, is disturbed during the restoration of a church.