6,264 research outputs found
Culloden [music] : piano solo /
A. & Co. 788 (Publisher number). Cover title.; At head of title list on caption: Arrangements for piano by Arthur Middleton.; Printed in England.; Plate no.: A. & Co. 788.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an4828951; N, MUSM 142235.Arrangements for piano. Cullode
Arthur Middleton Papers - Accession 668
The papers relate to the life and career of Arthur Middleton (1742-1787) of Charleston, SC who was a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, state legislator, Revolutionary leader, and member of the Continental Congress. The collection contains correspondence and memoranda regarding both public and military affairs in Charleston and Philadelphia, and such issues as the Currency, the national debt, motions made in Congress, naval and army defenses. Notes in code about the deliberations concerning the Declaration of Independence.https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/manuscriptcollection_findingaids/1642/thumbnail.jp
Arthur Middleton / [engraved by] J.W. Orr.
Subject: Bust portrait of Arthur Middleton, in color, on sheet with printed biographical information
English fantasia. no.2 [music] /
A. & Co. 945 (Publisher number). Cover title.; Introducing : Come into the garden, Maud--Scenes that are brightest--Englishman--God save the King!; At head of title list on cover: Arrangements for piano by Arthur Middleton.; Plate no.: A. & Co. 945.; Printed in England.; Also available online http://nla.gov.au/nla.mus-an4828942; N,-.Arrangements for piano. English fantasia, no.
Correspondence: Laura Kephart and Arthur Stupka
This 1936 correspondence, between Laura Kephart (Mrs. Horace Kephart) and Arthur Stupka, concerns a possible Kephart Memorial. Horace Kephart (1862-1931) was a noted naturalist, woodsman, journalist, and author and promoter of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Arthur Stupka (1905-1999) was the first park naturalist to work at the Great Smoky Mountains National Park
Arthur William Upfield: a biography
This dissertation is an exhaustive account of the life and work of Arthur William Upfield (1890-1964). It is presented as a critical biography and narrates the life of the writer, in his socio-cultural milieu, from birth. It also positions Upfield as a writer who dealt with issues of Aboriginality at a time when this was a singularly polemical subject. My work is informed by the theory of Zygmunt Bauman and others and is posited in the context of late-modern biography theory.
English-born, Upfield arrived in Australia in 1911 and took work in the bush, serving overseas with the Australian army at the outbreak of World War I and marrying an Australian army nurse in Egypt. Returning with his wife and son to Australia in 1921 he intermittently carried his swag until he was employed patrolling the Western Australian number 1 rabbit-proof fence for three years to 1931. By that time he had published four novels, including two crime novels featuring his fictional creation, the part-Aboriginal, part-European, Detective-Inspector Napoleon Bonaparte ('Bony'), arguably the first fully-developed character in Australian popular fiction.
Leaving the fence, Upfield settled with his family in Perth and wrote full-time until joining the Melbourne Herald in 1933. Retrenched, he resumed career writing to be further interrupted by a war-time intelligence posting in 1939. In 1943 the first Bony mysteries were published in America, where Upfield's critical success was maintained until his death. In 1945 he left his wife for Jessica Uren, to whom he remained devoted.
Upfield's in all twenty-nine Bony novels, many of which have been translated across eleven languages, afforded him notable success both at home and abroad, in good part due to his descriptive gifts and the uniqueness of his fictional character, the part-Aboriginal Bony
Dr. Arthur Pindle, Spelman College, April, 2012
This video is a conversation with Dr. Arthur Pindle. Dr. Pindle talks about his book, "Bayou St. John". Daniel Le, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer
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