Liston Garthwaite

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
James Grant Liston Garthwaite

1833 (1833)
Died21 December 1918 (aged 8485)
Occupationseducator, author and translator
Yearsactive1857–1888
Liston Garthwaite
black and white picture of the head of a bearded man
Born
James Grant Liston Garthwaite

1833 (1833)
Died21 December 1918 (aged 8485)
Occupationseducator, author and translator
Years active1857–1888
Known forheadmaster of schools in India
Notable workBraille compatible for thirteen Indian languages

James Grant Liston Garthwaite (1833 – 21 December 1918) was a British educator, author and translator who worked in British India in the nineteenth century.[1]

From 1857 Garthwaite served as the headmaster of various schools in India and later as deputy school inspector. From 1869 he became school inspector.

Garthwaite prepared several textbooks and collected and published petitions in Kannada and Malayalam for the Government. In 1884 Garthwaite was awarded a Fellowship by the University of Madras. He was awarded the British title Kaisar-i-Hind Medal.[2]

After his retirement in 1888, Garthwaite worked with missionaries to make Braille compatible for thirteen Indian languages.[1] In 1900, after several trips to South Australia, he moved there permanently to live in Norwood, South Australia.

Garthwaite died on 21 December 1918 in Glenelg, South Australia.[1]

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI