Claude Francis Barry was born in
Kensington, London, the eldest son of Sir Edward Arthur Barry, 2nd Baronet, son of
Sir Francis Tress Barry, who was awarded the
Baronetcy in 1899 for his services to
Queen Victoria as a
diplomat after making a fortune from mining copper in Portugal. Barry was educated privately and then at
Harrow School. On leaving Harrow in 1899 at the age of 16, he travelled in Italy with a tutor for almost a year. From 1900 Barry studied at
Bournemouth Art College and then privately with
Sir Alfred East, who was a friend of the family. In 1905 Barry followed East to
Newlyn in
Cornwall, where a colony of artists had been formed. There Barry also studied with the artist
Stanhope Forbes. Barry later moved to
St Ives, where another colony of artists had formed after Newlyn became too industrial, and he became involved in the St Ives Society of Artists. Barry was elected to the
Royal Society of British Artists in 1906, when Alfred East was its President. Barry is believed to have been exempted from military service during the
First World War for medical reasons but was drafted to do agricultural work. == Career ==