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Coningsby Dawson

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Allegiance
  
Canada

Name
  
Coningsby Dawson

Parents
  
William James Dawson

Service/branch
  
Canadian Armed Forces

Rank
  
Lieutenant

Role
  
Novelist

Education
  
Merton College, Oxford

Coningsby Dawson
Born
  
February 26, 1883 High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England (
1883-02-26
)

Died
  
1959, Los Angeles, California, United States

Books
  
The Glory of the Trenches, Carry On, The Garden Without, Christmas outside of Eden, Out to Win the Story of America i

Christmas Outside Of Eden | Coningsby Dawson | Myths, Legends & Fairy Tales | Talking Book


Coningsby Dawson (26 February 1883–10 August 1959) was an Anglo-American novelist and soldier, Canadian Field Artillery, born at High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England.

Contents

Education

Dawson attended Merton College, Oxford, matriculating in 1902 and taking a second class degree in Modern History in 1905. He spent a year taking a theological course at Union Seminary but decided on a career as a writer.

Career

In the same year he went to America, where he did special work for English newspapers on Canadian subjects, traveling widely during the period. He lived at Taunton, Massachusetts, from 1906 to 1910, when he became literary adviser to the George H. Doran Publishing Company.

In a house in Taunton, Massachusetts, he wrote poems, short stories, and three novels: Garden Without Walls (1913), an immediate success, followed by The Raft and Slaves of Freedom.

Military service

In 1914, he went to Ottawa, saw Sir Sam Hughes, and was offered a commission in the Canadian Field Artillery on the completion of his training at the Royal Military College of Canada, at Kingston, Ontario. "His long training at Kingston had been very severe. It included besides the various classes which he attended a great deal of hard exercise, long rides or foot marches over frozen roads before breakfast, and so forth."

In July 1916 he was selected, with twenty-four other officers, for immediate service in France. His younger brothers enlisted in the Naval Patrol, then being recruited in Canada by Commander Armstrong.

Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson joined the Canadian Army at the front in 1916, and continued in service until the end of World War I. He served in the Somme battlefield at Albert, at Thiepval, at Courcelette, and at the taking of the Regina trench.

Civilian career

After having been wounded he came twice to the United States (1917, 1918) on lecture tours. In 1918, he investigated for the British Ministry of Information, American military preparedness in France.

The Project Gutenberg EBook #14086 of Carry On: Letters in Wartime, by Lieutenant Coningsby Dawson, Novelist and Soldier, Canadian Field Artillery 1917 includes:

  • "By the time this reaches you I'll be in the line again, but for the present I'm undergoing a special course of training. You can't hear the most distant sound of guns, and if it wasn't for the pressure of study, similar to that at Kingston, one would be very rested." February 4, 1917.
  • In 1919, he went to England to study European reconstruction problems, and subsequently lectured on the subject of the United States. He also visited and reported on the devastated regions of Central and Eastern Europe at the request of Herbert Hoover.

    He also edited, with his father W. J. Dawson, The Reader's Library, and Best Short Stories (1923).

    Partial list of Works

  • The Worker and Other Poems (1906)
  • The House of Weeping Women (1908)
  • Murder Point (1910)
  • The Road to Avalon (1911)
  • The Garden Without Walls (1913)
  • Florence on a Certain Night and other Poems (1914)
  • The Raft (1914)
  • The Unknown Country (1915)
  • Slaves of Freedom (1916)
  • The Seventh Christmas (1917, 1921)
  • Carry On: Letters in Wartime’ (1917
  • The Glory of the Trenches (1918)
  • Out to Win (1918)
  • Living Bayonets (1919)
  • The Test of Scarlet (1919)
  • The Little House (1920)
  • It Might Have Happened to You (1921)
  • The Kingdom Round the Corner (1921, 1923)
  • The Vanishing Point (1922)
  • Christmas Outside Eden (1922)
  • The Moon Through Glass (1934)
  • Inspiration Valley (1935)
  • References

    Coningsby Dawson Wikipedia