Hendry wrote from his own experiences.[5] His time at sea included on Singapore ships.[6] Hendry eventually retired to an area in the north of Scotland to focus on writing.[5]
^ ab"Military Cross - National Maritime Museum". collections.rmg.co.uk.
^Fforde, Desmond (December 20, 2012). A Seaman's Book of Sea Stories. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781681467061 – via Google Books.
^Carty, T. J. (December 3, 2015). A Dictionary of Literary Pseudonyms in the English Language. Routledge. ISBN 9781135955786 – via Google Books.
^Latimer, Courtenay (November 4, 2005). Creeping Up on Auckland. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781461744283 – via Google Books.
^ abSparks, Jared; Everett, Edward; Lowell, James Russell; Lodge, Henry Cabot (February 10, 1931). "The North American Review". University of Northern Iowa – via Google Books.
^"The Nautical Magazine". February 10, 1950 – via Google Books.
^Hendry, Frank Coutts (February 10, 1940). "A windjammer's half-deck". Penguin books – via Google Books.
^"From All the Seas, by Shalimar (f.c. Hendry)". William blackwood. February 10, 1933 – via Google Books.
^Milne, Graeme J. (2016-08-24). People, Place and Power on the Nineteenth-Century Waterfront. ISBN 9783319331591 – via books.google.com.
^Spectre, Peter H. (February 10, 2005). A Mariner's Miscellany. Sheridan House, Inc. ISBN 9781574091953 – via Google Books.
^Hendry, Frank Coutts (February 10, 1938). "The Peaceful Wanderer, By Shalimar (F.C. Hendry)" – via Google Books.
^Matthews, William (January 1, 1984). British Autobiographies: An Annotated Bibliography of British Autobiographies Published Or Written Before 1951. University of California Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780520053571 – via Internet Archive. frank coutts hendry.
^Hendry, Frank Coutts (1929). "Around the Horn and Home Again" – via Google Books.
^Fforde, Desmond (20 December 2012). A Seaman's Book of Sea Stories. ISBN 9781681467061 – via Google Books.
^Tanner, Tony, ed. (2002) [1994]. The Oxford book of sea stories. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192803700. OCLC 1200552340.