James Ewing Ritchie
| James Ewing Ritchie | |
|---|---|
| Born | 
May 1, 1820 Wrentham, Suffolk  | 
| Died | 1898 | 
| Nationality | English | 
| Other names | Christopher Crayon | 
| Occupation | Writer | 
James Ewing Ritchie (May 1, 1820 – 1898) was an English journalist and writer.[1]
Born in Wrentham, Suffolk, the son of Reverend Andrew Ritchie, he was educated at University College, London.[2] He became an author of travel books and political biographies.[3] Seven of his books were about nineteenth-century London.[4]
Bibliography
- Northern antiquities (1847)
 - Freehold land societies; their history, present position, and claims (1853)
 - The new Sunday liquor law vindicated (1855)
 - The public-house trade as it is: or An epitome of the evidence taken before a committee of the house of commons in the parliamentary sessions of 1853-4 (1855)
 - Ratcliffe-Highway (1857)
 - The London pulpit[5] (1858)
 - The night side of London[5] (1858)
 - Here and there in London[5] (1859)
 - About London[5] (1860)
 - Modern statesmen, or sketches from the strangers' gallery of the house of commons[5] (1861)
 - The life of Richard Cobden: a biography (1865)
 - The life and times of viscount Palmerston (1866)
 - British senators: or, political sketches, past and present[5] (1869)
 - The religious life of London (1870)
 - The life and discoveries of David Livingstone (1876)
 - On the track of the pilgrim fathers; or: holidays in Holland (1876)
 - The cruise of the Elena; or, yachting in the Hebrides[5] (1877)
 - The life and discoveries of David Livingstone L.L.D., F.R.G.S. (1877)
 - Christopher Crayon's Christmas stories (1881)
 - Imperialism in South Africa[5] (1881)
 - Famous city men (1884)
 - To Canada with emigrants: a record of actual experiences[5] (1885)
 - The life of the Right Hon. William Ewart Gladstone (1886)
 - Pictures of Canadian life: a record of actual experiences (1886)
 - The spring at Bournemouth (1886)
 - Hydropathy and health: or, sketches of hydropathic establishments (1888)
 - Our Premiers. From Walpole to Salisbury (1888)
 - An Australian ramble, or, a summer in Australia[5] (1890)
 - Brighter South Africa: or life at the Cape and Natal[5] (1892)
 - East Anglia: personal recollections and historical associations[5] (1893)
 - Some of our east coast towns (1893)
 - Crying for the light or fifty years ago (1896)
 - The Cities of the Dawn: Naples - Athens - Pompeii - Constantinople (1897)
 - Christopher Crayon's recollections (1898)
 - The real Gladstone: an anecdotal biography[5] (1898)
 
References
- ↑ Moyles, R.G., ed. (1994), Improved by Cultivation: English-Canadian Prose to 1914, Broadview Press, p. 58, ISBN 1551110490.
 - ↑ Allibone, Samuel Austin (1899), A critical dictionary of English literature and British and American authors, living and deceased, from the earliest accounts to the latter half of the nineteenth century 2, Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott company, p. 1282.
 - ↑ Ingles, Ernest Boyce; Peel, Bruce Braden (2003), Bibliography of the Canadian Prairies to 1953 (3rd ed.), University of Toronto Press, p. 836.
 - ↑ Laroon, Marcel; Shesgreen, Sean (1990), The Criers and Hawkers of London: Engravings and Drawings, Stanford University Press, p. 72, ISBN 0804715068.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "Online Books by J. Ewing Ritchie", The Online Books Page (University of Pennsylvania), retrieved 2013-02-27.
 
External links
- Works by James Ewing Ritchie at Project Gutenberg
 - Works by or about James Ewing Ritchie at Internet Archive
 -  Works by James Ewing Ritchie at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks) 

 
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, May 04, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.