John Berwick Harwood

John Berwick Harwood
Born 1828
The Rookery,[1][2] St Mary Cray, Kent (now the London Borough of Bromley), England
Died (1899-02-16)16 February 1899, aged 70
Chertsey, Surrey, England
Resting place Municipal Cemetery, Chertsey, Surrey, England
Occupation Writer
Residence U.K.
Nationality British
Spouse Emily Mary Worsop Harwood (née Trollope)

John Berwick Harwood (1828 – 15 February 1899) was an English writer, best known for his ghost stories. He wrote many (usually anonymous) stories and articles, some of them about his experiences in China. He contributed short stories to Once A Week, Cassell's Family Magazine, Blackwood's Magazine and the Cornhill Magazine. He wrote about twenty novels and several Christmas horror tales.[3]

He married Emily Mary Worsop Trollope in Ostend, Belgium on 24 April 1850.[4]

Bibliography

  • The Underground Ghost.
  • The Painted Room at Blackston Manor.
  • Poems. 1849.
  • The bridal and the bridle: or honeymoon-trip in the East, in 1850. 1851.
  • Stamboul, and the sea of gems. 1852.
  • Falconbeck Hall: a novel. 1854.
  • The serf-sisters: or the Russia of to-day. 1855.
  • Horror: A True Tale. 1861. published anonymously in Blackwood's Magazine
  • Picking up a pocket-book. London: Chapman and Hall. 1861. Retrieved 5 October 2012. Part of a frame story called Tom Tiddler's Ground that was edited by Charles Dickens and written by Dickens and four other authors.
  • Lord Lynn's wife. 1864.
  • Lady Flavia. 1865.
  • Odd neighbours. 1865.
  • Plain John Orpington. 1866.
  • Major Peter. 1866.
  • Lord Ulswater: a novel. 1867.
  • Miss Jane, the bishop's daughter. 1867.
  • Lady Livingston's legacy: a novel. 1874.
  • Sir Peregrine's Heir. 1875.
  • Helena Lady Harrogate: a tale. 1878.
  • Paul Knox, pitman. 1878.
  • The tenth earl. 1880.
  • Young Lord Penrith. 1880.
  • The merchant prince: being the fortunes of Bertram Oakley. 1882.
  • Ralph Raeburn and other tales. 1882.
  • One false, both fair: or a hard knot. 1884.
  • Within the clasp: a story of the Yorkshire jet-hunters. 1884.
  • Sir Robert Shirley. 1886.
  • The Lady Egeria, or brought to light: a novel. 1890.

References

  1. "British Listed Buildings". Retrieved 5 October 2012.
  2. "The History of St Mary Cray". Retrieved 5 October 2012. Sadly, the fine 18th century mansion known as the Rookery is no more, and is now recalled only in name (it had once been the property of William Joynson). Neglected for many years, plans had actually been prepared for converting it into flats. In spite of its Grade II listing, it was finally demolished following a mysterious fire on the night of April 16th 1980.
  3. "Cyclopaedia of Ghost Story Writers". Retrieved 5 October 2012.
  4. Gentleman's Magazine. XXXIV. London: John Bowyer Nichols and son. 1850. p. 88. Retrieved 5 October 2012.


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