David Christie Murray

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David Christie Murray
File:David Christie Murray 001.jpg
Born (1847-04-13)13 April 1847
High Street, West Bromwich, Staffordshire, England
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
London, England
Resting place Hampstead[1]
Nationality English
Occupation
  • Journalist
  • writer

David Christie Murray (13 April 1847 – 1 August 1907) was an English journalist and writer.[2]

Life

Murray was born in High Street, West Bromwich, Staffordshire, one of six sons and five daughters of William Murray and Mary Withers; he was educated in West Bromwich and Spon Lane.[1] At the age of twelve he entered his fathers printing business. At eighteen he was sent to London for further training in the printing business, but, following a failed attempt at romance, he instead joined the army. He became a private with the 4th Royal Irish Dragoon Guards.[3] After being bought out of the service by a Great Aunt, he became a journalist. Initially he wrote leaders for the Wednesbury Advertiser, then worked for the Birmingham Morning News reporting on police cases. In 1871 he was married to Sophie Harris, with whom he had a daughter that died young. He had four children out of wedlock.[1]

Murray covered the Russo-Turkish War during 1877–1878, then left journalism to write fiction.[4] He spent a year touring England for a series of articles published in The Mayfair Magazine.[5] Around 1879 he was married to his second wife, Alice, and the couple had a son, Archibald.[1] That year A life's atonement was published in Chamber's Journal, followed by Joseph's coat in 1880. His 1882 By the gate of Les was serialised in Cornhill Magazine and Aunt Rachel (1886) in The English Illustrated Magazine.[4] From 1881–1886 he lived in Belgium and France, and from 1889–1896 stayed in Nice, France. Murray was well travelled, and had success as a lecturer.[1] In 1889 he performed a lecture tour in Australia, then in 1890 he assisted productions in Australia of the theatrical company of Harry St. Maur.[2] In 1884–1885 he lectured in Canada and the United States.[1]

He died in London after a long period of illness.[1]

Bibliography

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  • A life's atonement[4] (1879)
  • Joseph's coat[4] (1880)
  • Val Strange[4] (1881)
  • Coals of fire[4] (1881)
  • Hearts[4] (1882)
  • By the gate of Les[4] (1882)
  • Aunt Rachel[4] (1886)
  • The way of the World[4] (1883)
  • Old Blazer's hero[4] (1887)
  • A novelist's notebook[1] (1887)
  • A bit of human nature[6] (1889)
  • Cynic fortune[6] (1889)
  • A dangerous catspaw[4] (1889) with Henry Herman
  • First person singular[6] (1889)
  • Model father[6] (1889)
  • One traveller returns[6] (1889) with Henry Herman
  • Rainbow gold[6] (1889)
  • Schwartz[6] (1889)
  • The weaker vessel[6] (1889)
  • Wild Darrie[4] (1889) with Henry Herman
  • The Bishop's Bible[6] (1890) with Henry Herman
  • Paul Jones's alias[6] (1890) with Henry Herman
  • He fell among thieves (1891), 2 volumes
  • Only a shadow (1891)
  • Bob Martin's little girl[2] (1892)
  • A wasted crime[6] (1893)
  • Time's revenge[7] (1893)
  • In direst peril[7] (1894)
  • The making of a novelist, an experiment in autobiography[1] (1894)
  • The martyred fool[2] (1895)
  • The investigations of John Pym[6] (1895)
  • Mount Despair and other stories[2] (1895)
  • A rising star[6] (1895)
  • A Capful o' Nails (1896)
  • My contemporaries in fiction[7] (1897)
  • A rogue's conscience[2] (1897)
  • The Cockney Columbus[2] (1898)
  • A race for millions[7] (1898)
  • Tales in prose and verse[7] (1898)
  • Recollections[2] (1908)

References

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External links