Walsh, J. H. (John Henry), 1810-1888
URI(s)
Fuller Name
Variants
Walsh, John Henry, 1810-1888
Walsh, John H., 1810-1888
Walsh, John, 1810-1888
Additional Information
Additional Related Forms
Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Sources
found: The dog in health and disease, 1872:t.p. (Stonehenge)
found: NUC pre-56(hdg.: Walsh, John Henry, 1810-1888; usage: J.H. Walsh; Stonehenge)
found: LC in OCLC, 2/23/96(hdg.: Walsh, John Henry, 1810-1888; usage: J.H. Walsh)
found: Oxford dictionary of national biography online, 8 August 2014(John Henry Walsh, pseudonym Stonehenge; writer on sport; born 21 October 1810, in Hackney, Middlesex; died 12 February 1888 in London, England)
found: Wikipedia, viewed Oct. 19, 2021:John Henry Walsh (John Henry Walsh FRCS (21 October 1810 - 12 February 1888) was an English sports writer born in Hackney, London who wrote under the pseudonym "Stonehenge." Walsh was educated in private schools and became a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1844. For some time, he was surgeon at the Ophthalmic Institution and lectured on surgery and descriptive anatomy at the Aldersgate School of Medicine. For several years he practiced medicine at Worcester, but returned to London in 1852. He worked as a surgeon for several years, but gradually changed his profession after his written works on rural sports became successful. He relocated from the country to London in 1852. The following year he published his first important book, The Greyhound (3rd ed. 1875), a collection of papers originally contributed to Bell's Life. In 1856, his Manual of British Rural Sports was published, along with many additions. During the same year, he joined the staff of The Field, and became its editor at the close of 1857.) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Henry_Walsh
Instance Of
Scheme Membership(s)
Collection Membership(s)
Change Notes
1996-02-27: new
2021-10-20: revised
Alternate Formats