Clare joined the Royal Navy as a seaman at HMS Ganges in 1966, aged 15, and rose to become a rear admiral in 1999, serving in a NATO appointment before leaving the service voluntarily in 2000 to take up the role of Director of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.[1]
Clare was a trustee of HMS Bronington between 1989 and 1999, after she was decommissioned from the Royal Navy. He was vice-president of the Bronington Trust in 1999 until the Trust ceased to exist in 2002. He edited the book HMS Bronington: A Tribute to One of Britain's Last Wooden Walls And a Celebration of The Ton Class, which was published in 1996.[citation needed]
Museums career
Clare was director of the National Maritime Museum between 2000 and 2007,[1] during which time he oversaw a series of exhibitions, including Elizabeth, Skin Deep and Nelson & Napoleon. He instigated SeaBritain 2005,[4] a partnership with Visit Britain and sixty other organisations to commemorate the bicentenary of Admiral Nelson's victory in the Battle of Trafalgar.[citation needed]
Clare led a re-structuring of collections management, including a partnership project with Chatham Historic Dockyard to display and store models of ships. He initiated the £16 million Time and Space project to restore buildings at the Royal Observatory, which included the building of the Peter Harrison Planetarium.[4] The refurbished Royal Observatory was opened by Queen Elizabeth II in May 2007.[5]
From 2007 Clare was chief executive of the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA), of which he had been a board member during the previous year.[1] The organisation was subsequently merged within Arts Council England. During that period Clare was also chairman of Living Places, a grouping of UK cultural agencies including Arts Council England, the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE), English Heritage, the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council and Sport England.[7][8]
In 2014 Clare was elected to the Board of Museums Aotearoa (the association for New Zealand's museums). He was Chair of Museums Aotearoa from May 2015 until May 2016.[citation needed]
^Clare was the first lieutenant from 1975 to 1977 with the then Prince of Wales, Later Charles III as the captain, and then commanded Bronington from 1980 to 1981.