LC control no. | n 50050924 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
LC classification | PR5219.R26 |
Personal name heading | Reid, Mayne, 1818-1883 |
Variant(s) | Reid, Thomas Mayne, 1818-1883 Maĭn-Rid, 1818-1883 Rid, Maĭn-, 1818-1883 Mayne-Reid, Captain, 1818-1883 Rids, T. M., 1818-1883 Red, Mayin, 1818-1883 Rid, Tomas Maĭn, 1818-1883 Rīd, Māyn, 1818-1883 Rīdo, Emu, 1818-1883 M. R., 1818-1883 R., M., 1818-1883 מין־ריד, 1818־1883 ריד, מאין ריד, מיין ריד, מיין, 1818־1883 ריד, מין, 1818־1883 ריד, מין, 1883־1818 Poor Scholar, 1818-1883 Ecolier, 1818-1883 |
Located | Ross-on-Wye (England) |
Birth date | 1818-04-04 |
Death date | 1883-10-22 |
Place of birth | Ballyroney (Ireland) |
Place of death | London (England) |
Profession or occupation | Writer Journalist |
Special note | Machine-derived non-Latin script reference project. Non-Latin script references not evaluated. |
Found in | nuc90-27586: His Kvarterone, jeb, Piedzīvojumi ... 1984 (hdg. on MB rept.: Reid, Mayne, 1818-1883; usage: T.M. Rids) His Maryan, 1909 or 1910: t.p. (Mayin Red) OCLC, June 10, 2008 (hdg.: Reid, Mayne, 1818-1883; usage: Mayne Reid; Thomas Mayne Reid; Maĭn Rid; Main-Rid; Tomas Maĭn Rid; T.M. Rids; Capitain Mayne Reid; Māyn Rīd; Emu Rīdo) Wikipedia, July 21, 2015 (Thomas Mayne Reid (April 4, 1818--October 22, 1883), was a Scots-Irish American novelist. "Captain" Reid wrote many adventure novels akin to those written by Frederick Marryat and Robert Louis Stevenson; born in Ballyroney, a small hamlet near Katesbridge, County Down, in the north of Ireland; In late 1842 Reid arrived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he began his literary career writing both prose and poetry for the Pittsburgh Morning Chronicle under the pen-name The Poor Scholar; In early 1843, Reid moved to Philadelphia, where he remained for three years. During this time he worked as a journalist and from time to time had poetry published in Godey's Lady's Book, Graham's Magazine, the Ladies National Magazine, and similar publications, using the same pseudonym he had employed in Pittsburgh; When the Mexican-American War began in the spring of 1846, Reid was working as a correspondent for the New York Herald in Newport, Rhode Island (which would later become the setting for yet another novel). At this time he began using the pen-name Ecolier, in addition to the Poor Scholar; On November 23, 1846, Reid joined the First New York Volunteer Infantry as a second lieutenant; On May 5, 1848 Reid resigned his commission and in July he returned to New York with his regiment; moved to London, and in 1850 published his first novel; The Rifle Rangers; 1867 moved to Newport , Rhode Island and then went back to New York; returned to England on October 22, 1870, and lived at Ross on Wye, Herefordshire; Reid died in London, at the age of 65) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Mayne_Reid> Amerika'da çöl avcıları, 2022: title page verso (M.R.) |
Associated language | eng |