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         Doyle Charles Altamont:     more books (19)
  1. The Doyle diary: The last great Conan Doyle mystery: With a Holmesian investigation into the strange and curious case of Charles Altamont Doyle by Michael Baker, 1978
  2. Coelebs the younger in search of a wife; or, The drawingroom troubles of Moody Robinson esquire by Charles Altamont. Doyle, 2010-08-10
  3. Men who have risen: a book for boys by Charles Altamont Doyle, 2010-09-09
  4. The Long Holidays: Or Learning Without Lessons (1861) by Harriot Anne Ford, 2010-02-17
  5. The queens of society. By Grace and Philip Wharton. Illustrated by Charles Altamont Doyle and the brothers Dalziel by Grace Wharton, John Cockburn Thomson, 2010-08-20
  6. Remollescences of a Medical Student. With an Anthropophology of the Author and a Physician's Holiday ... With eighty illustrations by J. Smart and C. Doyle by James Archibald. Crucelli, Father [pseud.]. Doyle, Charles Altamont. Smar Sidey, 1886
  7. The Queens Of Society by Grace Wharton, Philip Wharton, 2007-01-17
  8. The Long Holidays: Or Learning Without Lessons (1861) by Harriot Anne Ford, 2010-09-10
  9. Men Who Have Risen: A Book For Boys (1861) by James Hogg, 2010-09-10
  10. The Long Holidays: Or Learning Without Lessons (1861) by Harriot Anne Ford, 2010-09-10
  11. Men Who Have Risen: A Book For Boys (1861) by James Hogg, 2010-09-10
  12. A Study in Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle, 1888-01-01
  13. The Queens of Society Illustrated by Charles Altamont Doyle and the Brothers Dalziel (Illustrators) Grace and Philip Wharton, 1860
  14. THE DOYLE DIARY: The Last Great Conan Doyle Mystery by Charles Altamont; Baker, Michael (Sherlockiana). Doyle, 1978-01-01

61. This Domain Is Missing From The Web Server Configuration
Genealogy Index on doyle compiled by the Revd. John G. Slee; John doyle, AKA HB -MariannaCONAN - grandparents; charles altamont doyle-Mary FOLEY - parents;
http://sherlockian.com/links/link031.html
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62. The Maas Gallery Ltd. Home Page
Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema John Brett Sir Edward BurneJones Frederick Cayley-RobinsonSir Frank Dicksee charles altamont doyle Richard doyle Herbert James
http://www.artnet.com/ag/galleryhomepage.asp?gid=688

63. Book Details
Book Details Code = 7839, Author doyle, charles altamont and Baker,Michael. Title The doyle Diary, The Last Great Conan doyle
http://www.8-legs.net/cgi-bin/bookdet.pl?code=7839

64. Catalog List
7839, doyle, charles altamont and Baker, Michael, The doyle Diary, The Last GreatConan doyle Mystery, with a Holmesian Investigation into the Strange and
http://www.8-legs.net/cgi-bin/categorylist.pl?catalog=Autobiography

65. Free-TermPapers.com - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Arthur Conan doyle was born on the 22nd of May 1859 in Picardy Place, Edinburgh.The second child of charles altamont and Mary Foley, he was thought t have
http://www.free-termpapers.com/tp/7/bqg262.shtml
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66. FairyTale - A True Story
His father, charles altamont doyle, was a civil servant, but also an artist and illustratorwhose work included many depictions of fairies, angels, spirits and
http://www.fairytalemovie.com/doyle.html
Doyle trained to be a physician and received his medical degree from the University of Edinburgh. It was during this period that he read the writings of Darwin and Huxley, which continued to distance him from his religious faith. He eventually broke with the church and became an agnostic.
He began practicing medicine in the Portsmouth suburb of Southsea in 1882, but was neither satisfied nor particularly successful, and began to try his hand at writing. (His first stories actually date from 1879, long before the invention of the famous detective.) By this time Doyle had formally broken with the church and become an agnostic. Perhaps he was searching for something that he could believe in, for it was during the late 1880's that he embarked on two interests that eventually shaped his life.
In 1887, he created a character who seemed to make a near-religion of cold logic. Sherlock Holmes, consulting detective, one of a number of fictional heroes whom Doyle launched, first appeared that year in "A Study In Scarlet," but his skyrocket success truly came with the publication of a series of stories in the Strand Magazine, beginning with "A Scandal In Bohemia" in July, 1891. Doyle began his journey down the road to international acclaim, prosperity and literary immortality.
Also during the late 1880's Doyle became interested in psychic phenomena. As a member of the Portsmouth Literary and Scientific Society, he conducted experiments with an architect friend in the psychic transmission of diagrams, and became convinced that it was possible to "convey my thoughts without words." He also began attending "table turnings," a form of seance, including sittings with the most famous psychic medium of the day, Daniel Dunglas Home. This was the beginning of his curiosity in the areas of study that, a quarter century later, became an all-consuming devotion to Spiritualism, the belief in the survival of the spirit separate from the body, and the possibility of contact between the spirit world and the "physical" world.

67. McSpotlight: Press Cutting
The author lived at Liberton Bank House in Edinburgh with his mother during the1860s while his father, charles altamont doyle, was institutionalised because
http://www.mcspotlight.org/media/press/mcds/theindependent300501.html
McLibel Issues McDonald's Campaigns ... Mailing List
By Chris Gray The Independent UK
Conan Doyle fans detect victory in the case of the childhood home
Fans of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle are on the verge of winning a battle to stop McDonald's building an outlet next to his childhood home. 30 May 2001 The author lived at Liberton Bank House in Edinburgh with his mother during the 1860s while his father, Charles Altamont Doyle, was institutionalised because he had epilepsy. The Sherlock Holmes Society hope the cottage, which is derelict and stands next to a post-war shopping centre, can be turned into a small museum. They believe it will never be restored if the McDonald's outlet is built. Planning officers at the City of Edinburgh Council are supporting them and have recommended councillors turn down the application when they meet today. Alan Henderson, the head of planning, says the takeaway would harm the setting of the cottage and the character of the area. The cottage, which was also the home of the women's rights campaigner Mark Burton for 50 years, has been listed since McDonald's made its original application in July 1999. Mr Henderson said guidance from Historic Scotland on listed buildings stated that "no building of similar or greater bulk should be erected close to the main subject of listing". Heather Owen, spokeswoman for the Sherlock Holmes Society of London, said the recommendation was "excellent news". She said Doyle lived in the cottage for five years, until he was nine years old, and the period had a deep influence on him.

68. DAVID POITRAS, BOOKSELLER
A curious charming 1889 sketchbook of Arthur's father, charles altamont doyle,an artist, who in 1888 furnished 6 drawings for the Ward Lock edition of A
http://users.iam-net.com/ddvjp/page68.html
SHERLOCK HOLMES ANDERSON, James MURDER SHE WROTE. Star Angela Lansbury is featured on a collage cover of cast stills. 16mo. Wrappers.
ANTHOLOGY ALL ABOUT GIRLS Sherlock Holmes Greatest Enigma . 100 pages. Illustrated by b/w cartoons. Pretty blonde GGA cover by Bill Wenzel. 16mo. Wrappers. Not listed in DeWaal.
BAKER, Michael - A Study In Scarlet.
BANGS, John Kendrick -
THE PURSUIT OF THE HOUSE-BOAT NY;Harper;1897 (E-T on Copywrite page indicates May 1917 printing) A Sherlock Holmes Pastiche. Beginning in Chapter ll, " The Stranger Unravels a Mystery and Reveals Himself , " is a burlesque. 204 pages. Illustrated by Peter Newell. Dedicated to A.C. Doyle. 12mo. Red cloth. Fore-Edges untrimmed. Gilt lettering on Upper Cover. Spine lettering fading, else Very Good.
CALENDAR SHERLOCK HOLMES CALENDAR 1978
DOYLE, A.C.
series. Contains A Study In Scarlet The Sign Of The Four , plus eight short stories, only two which involve Mr. Holmes. Each story is paged. P.O.S. lightly pencilled in. Post 8vo. Green simulated-leather paper laid on Brown

69. Holmes On The Printed Page
reissued the story, this time as a stand-alone paperback. Conan doyle’sown father, charles altamont doyle, provided six drawings.
http://www.holmesonscreen.com/Drawmeapicture.htm

70. Liberton Bank House
This allowed Arthur to get away from the unhelpful influence of hisalcoholic , depressive father, charles altamont doyle. Mary
http://www.colinsymes.u-net.com/Libertonbank.html
Liberton Bank House A little further along the burn, going north from Gilmerton Road, stands Liberton Bank House. Built in about 1780, it was bought in 1844 by Mary Burton, the sister of a leading Edinburgh lawyer, John Hill Burton. She was a friend of the Conan Doyle family, and invited the young Arthur Conan Doyle, later author of the celebrated Sherlock Holmes stories, to lodge there with her while he attended nearby Newington Academy in the 1860's. This allowed Arthur to get away from the unhelpful influence of his alcoholic , depressive father, Charles Altamont Doyle. Mary Burton continued to live in Liberton Bank House until her death in 1898. After the departure from the house of its last owner in the 1980's, the house has run into dereliction, and became the focus of a local planning dispute after a proposal by the fastfood chain MacDonalds, to demolish it to build a hamburger restaurant. It has been proposed that the house should be protected, and something made of its links with Arthur Conan Doyle, being the only one of his Edinburgh boyhood homes still in existence. Good News…June 2001.. the planning application has been refused by the City Council, although MacDonalds are likely to appeal to the First Minister to seek to push it through. Vigilance is still necessary…

71. About 208
doyle (18241883), called The Fairy Tree. doyle was the second son of the caricaturistJohn doyle and elder brother to charles altamont doyle, father of
http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/wyrick/test/lmfabo.htm
Dr. Leila S. May
Office: T 276 * * * Office Hours: MW 3:30-6:00; and by appointment
Office Tel: 5-4172 * * * E-mail: leila@unity.ncsu.edu
Section Leaders
Hugh Fisher ( hughfisher@hotmail.com ), Mary Hennessy ( mhennessy@aol.com ), Beth Whittington ( EWHITTINGTON1@nc.rr.com Teachers open the doors. You walk in. This course will introduce you to a broad cross-section of fictional genres. We will read short stories, novellas and novels and become acquainted with satire, travel narrative, fairy tales, mythology, fictional biography, epistolary fiction, gothic fiction, realism, magic realism, and science fiction, among others. Many of our texts are in one way or another "re-visions"i.e., narratives that reinterpret, or revise other narratives, sometimes within the same text. In order to make explicit the ways in which the same story can undergo multiple transformations depending upon one's focus, we will begin with Margaret Atwood's short story "Happy Endings." We will then move back to the eighteenth century with a look at Swift's Gulliver's Travels and some recent fictional responses to it. We will next linger in a more leisurely fashion in the nineteenth century (otherwise known as "the Age of the Novel"). There we will explore the nineteen-year-old Shelley's

72. New Page 22
In 1893, he married Constance Aimée Monica doyle, daughter of theartist charles altamont doyle and sister of Arthur Conan doyle.
http://www.strandmag.com/raffles.htm
THE STRAND MAGAZINE www.strandmag.com
Articles
Raffles: The Gentleman Thief by Richard Bleiler T hroughout the late nineteenth century and the first decade of the twentieth century detective and mystery fiction were dominated by one character as never before or since. Sherlock Holmes, perhaps the most successful fictional character in the history of literature, very quickly made his creator, the unknown Scottish physician Arthur Conan Doyle, an internationally famous and best selling author. It was not long before other writers of the time realized that there was a ready market for parodies and pastiches of Conan Doyle’s work and that a living could be earned by using his formula. One author, however (who, interestingly was part of Conan Doyle’s family, having married Conan Doyle’s sister Constance in 1893), went about this in a different way. E.W. Hornung achieved considerable success by inverting Arthur Conan Doyle’s formulas with his stories about the gentleman thief A.J. Raffles. Raffles, the perpetual houseguest, mingles with the upper class but is, in fact, a jewel thief—a master cracksman who makes his living by stealing from his wealthy acquaintances. His adventures are detailed by his friend (his Watson), Bunny Manders, a struggling journalist who first met the young Raffles while they were at school together. The first of Raffles’ adventures, "The Ides of March," appeared in the June 1898 edition of

73. The Hindu : Quizzing Holmes
2. The character of Sherlock Holmes was modelled on a. Dr. Joseph Bell;b. Dr. Bryan; C. Walter; c. charles altamont doyle; d. Harry Houdini;.
http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/yw/2002/05/18/stories/2002051800050200.htm
Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Saturday, May 18, 2002 Group Publications Business Line The Sportstar Frontline The Hindu
About Us

Contact Us
Young World Published on Saturdays Features: Magazine Literary Review Life Metro Plus ... Young World Quizzing Holmes Swapna Dutta On May 22, Baker Street's celebrated detective would have marked another year. How much do you know about him? 1. In which story did Sherlock Holmes appear for the first time? The sign of Four; b. The Valley of Fear; c. A Study in Scarlet; d. A Scandal in Bohemia; 2. The character of Sherlock Holmes was modelled on: a. Dr. Joseph Bell; b. Dr. Bryan; C. Walter; c. Charles Altamont Doyle; d. Harry Houdini; 3. What was Dr. Watson's first name? a. James; b. John; c. Jeremy; d. Joseph; 4. In which of the Sherlock Holmes stories does the oft-quoted phrase "Elementary, my dear Watson" appear?

74. Canyon Lights - Museum Slides - National Gallery Of Ireland
No. 119). VAN DONGEN, Kees (18771968), Stella in flowered hat (Cat. No.4355).doyle, charles altamont (1832-93), Bank Holiday (Cat. No.18, 992).
http://www.canyonlights.com/museum/natlgalleryofireland.htm
NATIONAL GALLERY OF IRELAND - COLOR SLIDES These slides are $5.00 each, minimum order 20
A printer-friendly version of this page is located here
Follow this link to download the above slide lists as a PDF document. IRISH SCHOOL ASHFORD, William (c1746-1824) A View of Dublin Bay (Cat. No.517)
A View of Dublin from Chapelizod (Cat No 4138)
An Idyllic Landscape (Cat. No.4484) BARRETT, The Elder, George (1728/32-84) Ullswater, Cumberland (Cat. No. 7736) BARRY, James (1741-1806) The Death of Adonis (Cat. No.1393)
Self-portrait as Timanthes (Cat. No.971) BARRY, Redmond (18th-19th Century) Ross Castle, Louth Leane, Co. Kerry (Cat. No. 7238) BARTON, Rose (1856-1929) Going to the Levee at Dublin Castle (Cat. No.2989) BURKE, Augustus (1838-91) A Connemara Girl (Cat. No.1212) BURTON, Frederic William (1816-1900) Hellelil and Hildebrand or the Meeting on the Turret Stairs (Cat. No. 7953) BUTLER Mildred Ann (1858-1941) A Preliminary Investigation (Cat. No.7952)
Shades of Evening (Cat. No. 7953)
Lilac Phlox (Cat. No.7954)

75. University Of Minnesota Libraries: Elmer L. Andersen Library: Special Collection
architecture. To begin with, doyle's father, charles altamont doyle (1832– 1893), was an architect in the Scottish Office of Works. Very
http://special.lib.umn.edu/rare/exhibit/holmesgardens.html
Better Holmes and Gardens:
Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle
and Architectural Design "Down Under"
Based on Stories and Characters From the Doyle/Holmes Canon
May-July 2000
University of Minnesota, Wilson Library
Created by
Professor Derham Groves
and the
University of Melbourne
Curated by Tim Johnson Edited and designed by Tim Johnson Contents Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Among the Architects, by Derham Groves Selections of Student Work Slide 1 House for Jonas Oldacre Designed by Tarna Schmidt Slide 2 House for Irene Adler Designed by Katie Shinkfield ... About the Sherlock Holmes Collections at the University of Minnesota Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Among the Architects Derham Groves 'I thought it as well,' said Holmes, as we climbed the stile, 'that this fellow should think we had come here as architects … It may stop his gossip.' 'The Speckled Band' (1892) Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of the world's first consulting detective, Sherlock Holmes, was certainly aware of – if not influenced by – architecture. To begin with, Doyle's father, Charles Altamont Doyle (1832 – 1893), was an architect in the Scottish Office of Works. Very little is known about Charles' architectural career, but he is credited with designing the fountain at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh, and one of the windows in Glasgow Cathedral. Unfortunately, he was an alcoholic, and spent his last years in several institutions. A book of sketches Charles did at one of these places, ironically named Sunnyside, (which was published in 1978) indicates that he was a skilled draughtsman with a vivid imagination. While Sir Arthur was much closer to his mother than his father, Charles was nonetheless a figure of influence: For example, the 1888 edition of the first Sherlock Holmes story

76. RARE PACIFIC BOOKS
1978, oblong 4to, facsimili of the sketchbookdiary of charles altamont doyle (ArthurConan doyle's father) while institutionalized for mental illness, 91 pp
http://www.pacificbooks.com/detail.php3?action=detail&key=2446

77. England, Conan Doyle
fiction,. Sherlock Holmes. Arthur Conan doyle was the third child andelder son of ten siblings to charles and Mary altamont doyle. He
http://literature.school.dk/frame_EnglandConanDoyle.htm
Conan Doyle
The creator of the most celebrated
detective in the history of fiction, Sherlock Holmes Arthur Conan Doyle was the third child and elder son of ten siblings to Charles and Mary Altamont Doyle. He was educated in medicine at the University of Edinburgh (Scotland). In 1880 he served as surgeon on the Greenland whaler "Hope" of Peterhead, and in 1881-1882 served as surgeon on the steamer "Mayumba" to West Africa. In 1891 he specialized as an eye doctor, at the same time publishing the first six "Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" in The Strand Magazine in London. In 1885 he had married Louise Hawkins, and in 1889 their first child Mary Louise was born. In 1887 his novel A Study in Scarlet appeared in Beeton's Christmas Annual, and introduced readers to Sherlock Holmes, a detective who, with his ingenious skill of deductive reasoning, was based on Dr Joseph Bell, one of Doyle's university professors. Narrated by Holmes's companion, Dr John Watson, it is a tale of a transatlantic revenge-killing. A sequel, The Sign of the Four , was published in 1890. The following year, Doyle began a cycle of Holmes tales in the Strand magazine, the first time that any writer had used a pair of recurring characters to link a series of stories. He moved to London, intending to practise as an eye specialist, but soon opted to pursue his literary career full time.

78. The National Library Of Ireland - Collections - Prints & Drawings
PD 3012TX4), 20th Century Irish Illustrators and Artists Works of illustrators suchas PJ Lynch, Donald Teskey, René Bull, and charles altamont doyle, son of
http://www.nli.ie/co_print.htm

Important notice: Curtailment of service 2001-2002 during reorganisation - click for details
Introduction The Main Collections Illustrations and Images of Ireland: a selected bibliography ... Contact us Introduction
Lily/Miss Battersby
(PD 2012TX44)
There are up to 100,000 works in the Prints and Drawings collection, the majority of them originating with the RDS Library and the collection of Dr. Jaspar Joly. The Library continues to acquire both modern and antiquarian material to develop the collection and to support existing holdings. The Main Collections
The Joly Collection contains 70,000 individual prints, several thousand albums and extensive holdings of drawings and watercolours; it forms three quarters of the entire collection.
(PD 3181TX113) Joly Topographical prints and drawings trace the changing landscapes of Ireland and Europe. There are works by artists such as Samuel Brocas, Thomas Sautell Roberts, James Malton, Jonathan Fisher and Francis and Daniel Grose. There are over 2,000 works covering Ireland alone. Illustrations, watercolours and engravings in the collection record political, economic and social history.

79. Faerie
Both Conan doyle's father, charles altamont doyle, and his uncle, Richard Dicky doyle, were accomplished and noted painters of fairy scenes.
http://www.magonia.demon.co.uk/arc/00/faerie.html
From Magonia 71, June 2000 THE LIMNERS OF FAERIE
THE VICTORIAN FAIRY CULT AND ITS LEGACY
David Sivier Since the dawn of the New Ufology in Keel's Operation Trojan Horse and Vallee's Passport to Magonia , the equation between the humanoids of the flying saucers and the elves of folklore has become something of a truism. So accepted is it that the Fortean Times's long-running cartoonist, Hunt Emerson, could mischievously suggest in his Phenomenonix strip that the ufonauts were indeed really fairies, flying about in fake spaceships in order to avoid the humiliation of dressing up in butterfly wings and gossamer as part of their repertoire of haunting, without drawing upon himself the wrath of angry readers outraged at having a cherished belief mocked. (1) The similarities between the UFO phenomenon and the European, and even extra-European, fairy cult is so strong, especially in the subtexts of sexuality, abduction, rape, and the substitution of otherworldly changelings for human babies, that this magazine's own Peter Rogerson entitled his revisionist history of abductions, beginning in issue 46, "Fairyland's Hunters". After Keel and Vallee, many, though not all books on ufology examine the connection between the Wee Folk of tradition and their high-technological cousins. The relationship between the two is increasingly examined from the other side as well, as recent books on fairy lore, such as Janet Bord's

80. Gaslight Digest Wednesday, November 25 1998 Volume 01 : Number 022
And yet it feels right on time for us. (That's the way people write in the NY,of course.) The article also discusses charles altamont doyle's (father of AC
http://gaslight.mtroyal.ab.ca/gaslight/archive/98nov25.htm
Gaslight Digest Wednesday, November 25 1998 Volume 01 : Number 022

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