William Bayne (1858–1922)
Appearance
William Bayne | |
---|---|
Born | Edinburgh, Scotland, U.K. | 13 April 1858
Died | 17 November 1922 Fife, Scotland, U.K. | (aged 64)
Occupation | Writer, art historian, biographer |
Nationality | Scottish |
Genre | Non-fiction, biography, art history |
William Bayne (1858–1922) was a writer and a lecturer at Dundee Training College.[1] He was born on 13 April 1858 at Lawhead, Cameron in Fife. His father was Thomas Bayne, a shoemaker, and his mother Ann Robertson. He died unmarried at Radernie, Cameron on 17 November 1922, aged 64.
Publications
- James Thomson, Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson and Ferrier, 1898, ("Famous Scots Series").
- Poems, by James Thomson, ed. by William Bayne, London : Walter Scott Publishing Co.,[2] [1900], (Series: The Canterbury poets).
- Sir David Wilkie R. A., (Illustrated with twenty plates, etc.), London : Walter Scott Publishing Co., 1903, (Series: The makers of British art).
Sources
- Births and deaths information available at the General Register Office for Scotland, Scotlands People Centre in Edinburgh, and also at http://scotlandspeople.gov.uk
- British Library catalogue: http://www.bl.uk
- http://openlibrary.org
- http://worldcat.org
References
- ^ The Dundee Training College subsequently became the Dundee College of Education, then the Northern College in 1987, and finally it merged with the University of Dundee in 2001. Cf http://www.dundee.ac.uk/general/campusguide/gardyneroad.htm.
- ^ Cf. The Walter Scott Publishing Company: A Bibliography (Pittsburgh Series in Bibliography) by John R. Turner, which has the following account of this company: "In 1882, Walter Scott, a successful businessman with little formal education, found himself the surprised owner of a nearly bankrupt publishing company. Scott had agreed to act as mortgagor for the growing Tyne Publishing Company, but it soon became apparent that Tyne's programme of expansion was too ambitious - the company was hopelessly overcommitted. Scott appointed David Gordon, a dynamic Scotsman, as manager, and the Walter Scott Publishing House was born. Gordon began to improve the list by adding series: the Canterbury Poets Series, the Camelot Classics Series, the Great Writers Series, and the Contemporary Science Series. The company later published Tolstoy and Ibsen translations, as well as works by Bernard Shaw, Robert Blatchford and George Moore. The Walter Scott Publishing Company: A Bibliography lists the total output of the firm, from its founding until its liquidation in 1931."