Bracebridge Hemyng
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bracebridge Hemyng | |
|---|---|
| Born | 5 March 1841 London, England |
| Died | 18 September 1901 (aged 60) London, England |
| Occupation | Author |
Bracebridge Hemyng (1841–1901) was an English writer.
Education
He was educated at Eton, then, following his father's footsteps, he entered the Middle Temple and was Called to the Bar in 1862.[9][10]
Career
Legacy
His legacy has been described in the following words by The Literary Encyclopedia:[15]
Bracebridge Hemyng was the most successful writer of boys' stories in the later Victorian era. His great creation was Jack Harkaway, a mostly clean-living, always hard-hitting, true British schoolboy hero, whose adventures were chronicled in well over thirty serials. Harkaway visited most parts of the world – America, Greece, Malaya, China, South Africa – in some of the latter stories with his son Dick. The character became the archetype of the boys' serial hero, and most of those that followed him are in some ways his imitators. Hemyng wrote the first Harkaway story in 1871, and continued with the strand almost up to his death in 1901. Although he wrote many other one-off serials, Harkaway and his heritage were his greatest