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Glanville, Ernest, 1855-1925

LC control no.n 86836018
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingGlanville, Ernest, 1855-1925
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Variant(s)Glanville, Ernest, 1856-1925
Found innuc86-57723: His The lost regiment [MI] 1905 (hdg. on NjP rept.: Glanville, Ernest, 1856- ; usage: Ernest Glanville)
NUC pre-56 (hdgs.: Glanville, Ernest, 1856- ; Glanville, Ernest, 1856-1925; usage: Ernest Glanville)
His South African border life, 2012: title page (Ernest Glanville) page 5, etc. (born 1855; died September 6, 1925)
Wikipedia, April 21, 2016 (Ernest Glanville; South African author, known especially for his short stories which are widely read and taught in South Africa; born May 5, 1855 in Wynberg; died September 6, 1925 in Rondebosch; he also wrote seventeen historical novels; he was educated at St. Andrew's College, Grahamstown, from January 1869 to May 1871; his schooling was interrupted when he and his father transported the first printing press from Grahamstown to Griqualand West by ox wagon in 1870 and began publishing a newspaper in Kimberley; in addition to his literary works, he worked in journalism for the Cape Argus and other newspapers, and collaborated with Dr. MacGowan on the 1905 Jubilee Hymn; he was married to Emma Priscilla Powell)
Project Muse (joint project of Johns Hopkins University Press and Milton S. Eisenhower Library) website, April 21, 2016 (from "The early empire fiction of Ernest Glanville : on the border" by Gerald Monsman: Over his lifetime Ernest Glanville (1855-1925) wrote some seventeen novels and romances, four collections of shorter fiction, many newspaper articles, several travel guides and at least one promotional brochure advertising farmland in the Karoo)
Ancestry.com, April 21, 2016 (Ernest Glanville; born in South Africa on May 2, 1855; married Emma Priscilla Powell and had 4 children; died September 6, 1925)