Online Encyclopedia

FRANCIS RICHARD STOCKTON (1834–1902)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 938 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FRANCIS RICHARD STOCKTON (1834–1902)  ,
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American novelist, was born in
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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the 5th of
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April 1834 . He had a high school
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education; became a skilled wood engraver; wrote for the Philadelphia
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Morning
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Post, the New York Hearth and Home, Scribner's Monthly and St Nicholas, of which he became assistant editor in 1873; and about 188o he gave up editorial
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work for
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independent authorship . Thereafter he lived in Nutley; New Jersey, in Convent, New Jersey, and of ter 1899 in the
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Shenandoah Valley, near Charles
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Town, West Virginia . He died in Washington, D.C. on the loth of April 1902 . His fanciful stories for children made him very popular; among them are The Ting-a-Ling Stories (187o), Roundabout Rambles in Lands of Fact and Fancy (1872), What Might Have Been Expected (1874), Tales Out of School (1875), A Jolly Fellowship (188o), The Floating Prince and Other Fairy Tales (1881), The Story of Viteau (1884), Personally Conducted (1889), and Captain
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Chap (1897) . His amusing and
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original Rudder Grange (1879), a series of sketches rather than a novel, established his reputation with older readers and is his best long work . His
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peculiar talent was for the short story; and the best examples are the title stories of the volumes The Lady or the Tiger ? (1884), one of the most popular of American stories, The Christmas
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Wreck (1886), The Bee Man of Orn (1887), (also in the latter
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volume" A Tale of Negative Gravity "and" The Remarkable Wreck of the Thomas Hyke "), and the novelette The Casting Away of Mrs Leeks and Mrs Aleshine (1886), with its sequel The Dusantes (1888) . Among his other
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works of fiction are The
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Late Mrs Null (1886), The Hundredth Man (1887), AmosKilbright: his Adscititious Experiences, with Other Stories (1888), The
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Great War
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Syndicate (1889), The Merry Chanter (189o), Ardis Claverden (1890), The Rudder Grangers Abroad, and Other Stories (1891), The House of Martha (1891), The Squirrel
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Inn (1891), The Watchmaker's Wife and Other Stories (1893), Pomona's Travels (1894), The Adventures of Captain Horn (1895), with its sequel, Mrs Cliff's Yacht (1896), The Great Stone of
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Sardis (1898), Kate Bonnet (1902), and The Captain's Toll-
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Gate (with a memoir by Mrs Stockton, and a bibliography, 1903) .

End of Article: FRANCIS RICHARD STOCKTON (1834–1902)
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