Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Crosbie Garstin

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Crosbie Garstin

Spouse(s)
  
Lilian Barkworth

Notable work
  
Penhale trilogy


Full Name
  
Crosbie Albert Norman Garstin

Born
  
1887
Penzance, Cornwall, UK

Known for
  
Novelist, poet and travel-writer

Died
  
April 19, 1930, Salcombe, United Kingdom

Books
  
The Owls' House, West Wind, High Noon

Crosbie garstin at cornwall stallion showcase 2013


Crosbie Garstin (1887 – 19 April 1930) was a poet, best-selling novelist and the eldest son of the Newlyn School painter Norman Garstin. He is said to have been untameable as a child, and to have died in mysterious circumstances after a boating accident in the Salcombe estuary. He is known for the Penhale trilogy, a novel based in 18th-century Cornwall.

Contents

Personal life

Crosbie was born in Mount Vernon, Newlyn, Cornwall to Norman Garstin and Louisa ‘Dochie’ née Jones. He was the eldest of three children; Denys (later Denis) (1890 – 1918) and Alethea (1894 – 1978). He was educated at Brandon House, Cheltenham, Elstow School, Bedford and in Germany. He was head-boy of his school due to sporting prowess in rugby union and swimming.

As a young man he travelled and worked as a bronco buster in Montana, United States and as a lumberjack in Canada. He also travelled to China, Hawaii, Japan and Morocco. On returning home his father, fed-up with Crosbie's inability to get suitable qualifications and hold down a job, sent him to South Africa. From 1912, he ran a cattle ranch in Bechuanaland, and acted as a bush ranger to the Tati Concessions. With the outbreak of World War I he came back to Britain and in October 1914 joined B Squadron of the King Edward's Light Horse as a private. The cavalry regiment, which was open to colonials, was initially based in Watford and in the following spring, Bishop's Stortford. The regiment left for France on 21 April 1915 and Garstin was promoted to lance corporal shortly before leaving. He was commissioned on the battlefield as a 2nd lieutenant on 14 September 1915, and joined C Squadron, which was attached to the 47th (London) Division at Nœux-les-Mines and was involved in the Battle of Loos and on the Italian Front. In 1916, he was posted to Dublin as an Intelligence Officer during the rebellion there. [Louis Bolze, Publishers' Introduction to reprint edition of Crosbie Garstin, The Sunshine Settlers (1918, Books of Rhodesia edn. Bulawayo, 1971), p.ii.] As well as writing poetry he made contributions to Punch (magazine) which were well received.

Garstin disappeared when returning from a party to a friend's yacht Osprey in the Salcombe estuary on 19 April 1930. The rowing boat capsized and his body was never found despite Garstin being a strong swimmer and other two occupants of the boat surviving. He left an estate of gross value £3,424, and £1,549 net. His widow, Lillian (née Barkworth) was mayor of Penzance in 1962–63.

Works

  • Up the Line to Death – contributor to the poetry anthology
  • Vagabond Verses (1917)
  • The Mud Larks (1918)
  • The Sunshine Settlers (1918)
  • The Mud Larks Again (1919)
  • The Black Knight – with Mrs Alfred Sidgwick (1920)
  • The Ballad of the Royal Ann (1922)
  • The Coasts of Romance (1922)
  • The Owls’ House – Penhale trilogy, book 1 (1923)
  • Samuel Kelly, an Eighteenth Century Seaman – editor (1925)
  • High Noon – Penhale trilogy, book 2 (1925)
  • The West Wind – Penhale trilogy, book 3 (1926)
  • The Dragon and the Lotus (1928)
  • Houp-la! (1929)
  • China Seas (1930) – was made into a film (1935) directed by Tay Garnett and starring Clark Gable and Jean Harlow
  • References

    Crosbie Garstin Wikipedia