Historical records matching Arthur Waugh
Immediate Family
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About Arthur Waugh
Waugh was born at Midsomer Norton, Somerset, in 1866 and was educated at Sherborne School[1] and New College, Oxford, where in 1888 he won the Newdigate Prize for Poetry for a ballad on the subject of Gordon of Khartoum.[2]
In 1892, he wrote the first biography of the poet Alfred Tennyson, which was published by William Heineman. In 1894, he contributed to the first issue of the infamous Yellow Book. He was also a regular correspondent for the New York Critic, and from 1906 to 1931 he was a literary critic for The Daily Telegraph.[2]
His published works include poetry, biographies, literary criticism, and an autobiography, titled One Man's Road, in 1931.
From 1902 to 1930, he was managing director and chairman of the publishing house Chapman and Hall,[2] about which he wrote a detailed history titled A Hundred Years in Publishing in 1930. He died at his home in Highgate in June 1943.[3] Fourteen volumes of his diaries covering the period of 1930 to his death are held in the Boston University Library.
Bibliography
One Man's Road: being a Picture of Life in a Passing Generation by Arthur Waugh, 1931.
My Father: Arthur Waugh in "The Early Years of Alec Waugh" by Alec Waugh, 1962.
Fathers and Sons: The Autobiography of a Family by Alexander Waugh, 2004.
Arthur Waugh's Timeline
1866 |
1866
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Midsomer Norton, Somerset, England, United Kingdom
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1898 |
July 8, 1898
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London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
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1903 |
October 28, 1903
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Golders Green, London, England
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1943 |
1943
Age 77
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Highgate, Middlesex, England, United Kingdom
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