Robert Richardson (poet)
Robert Richardson | |
---|---|
Born |
New South Wales, Australia | 7 January 1850
Died |
October 1901 Armidale, New South Wales, Australia |
Occupation | writer and store-keeper |
Language | English |
Nationality | Australian |
Years active | 1875–1901 |
Robert Richardson (1850–1901) was an Australian poet and writer for children, possibly the first Australian-born children's writer.[1] He was born in New South Wales to John Richardson, a New South Wales politician and store-keeper, and his wife Janet, sister of Peter Nicol Russell.[2]
Richardson completed a B.A. at the University of Sydney and later became well-known for his contributions to a number of Sydney and Australian periodicals and newspapers. He was also a member of the firm of Richardson and Company, an Armidale-based millers and general store-keepers, started by his father.[3]
He left Australia for a life in Edinburgh in 1886 before returning to Sydney around 1894. He died in Armidale in October 1901.[3]
Bibliography
Childrens fiction
- Our Junior Mathematical Master; and, A Perilous Errand (1876)
- Black Harry, or, Lost in the Bush (1877)
- The Young Cragsman and Other Stories (1878)
- A Little Australian Girl, or, The Babes in the Bush; and, Jim : A Little Nigger (1881)
- Little Flotsam : A Story for Boys and Girls, and Other Tales (1881)
- The Best of Chums and Other Stories (1881)
- A Lighthouse Keeper for a Night and Other Stories (1881)
- The Hut in the Bush : A Tale of Australian Adventure, and Other Stories (1883)
- Adventurous Boat Voyages (1884)
Poetry
- Willow and Wattle : Poems (1893)
References
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