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Whiteley Turner (born 1866 at Higgin Chamber, Yorkshire, England; died 20 February 1921) was a mill worker, shopkeeper and author. At the age of eight he was sent to work at Peel House Mills. Four years later he moved to Solomon Priestley's woollen mill. There, he lost his right arm in an industrial accident, when his sleeve was caught in a carding machine and the limb was wrenched off at the shoulder.〔 As a result he lost his job.〔 He was subsequently able to attend Luddenden National School as a free scholar.〔 and then began selling newspapers and tea, which he delivered to his customers on foot.〔〔 He kept a shop at Mount Tabor.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=BBC1's 'Countryfile' features Whiteley Turner's 'A Springtime Saunter' )〕 In 1895, he began to write articles describing his local walks for the Halifax Courier.〔 From 1904 to 1907, the newspaper serialised his ''A Spring-Time Saunter'', about a four-day ramble from his home at Mount Tabor, over the Pennine Moors, to Haworth,〔 taking in such features as Fly Flat Reservoir, Castle Carr and Brontë Waterfalls. By popular demand,〔 this was published in revised form as a book, ''A Spring-Time Saunter: Round and About Bronte Land'', illustrated by Arthur Comfort, in 1913.〔 The book includes first-hand recollections from people who knew the Brontë family.〔〔 There were several editions. The first, a subscribers' edition, had 2,000 copies.〔 The second had 1,000, and the third, in 1915, 3,000.〔 However, the latter initially failed to sell, due to the outbreak of World War I.〔 Eventually, copies were circulated to wounded soldiers from Yorkshire, paid for by the Courier Comforts Fund, and the edition sold out.〔 A further, paperback, edition was published in 1986. The book was described by the Courier in 2007 as "a local publishing legend".〔 Turner is buried in Wesleyan chapel yard at Mount Tabor.〔 == Bibliogprahy == * * * 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Whiteley Turner」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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