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John Ferguson Nisbet

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Nationality
  
British

Occupation
  
Journalist


Name
  
John Nisbet

Role
  
Journalist

Born
  
1851
Cadder, Scotland

Died
  
1899, London, United Kingdom

Books
  
Marriage and heredity, The Insanity of Genius a, The Human Machine

John Ferguson Nisbet (1851 – 1 April 1899), was a Scottish journalist, primarily known as dramatic critic for The Times and as a writer.

Nisbet was born in 1851, the son of John Nisbet, Westerhill, Cadder, near Glasgow. He was schooled in Scotland, and attended Glasgow University prior to starting a career in journalism. Initially at the Glasgow Citizen, then Western Morning News in Plymouth, before starting with the Times. He started there in the press gallery, and subsequently, in 1882, became their dramatic critic. He also wrote articles and undertook editorial work simultaneously for some of the weekly publications in London of that time.

Nisbet's writing style was described as a vigorous and compact style, that was frequently touched by the elegance and grace that come of a close acquaintance with the masters of French, Italian, and Spanish literature. As a dramatist he wrote Dorothy Gray, and it was produced at the Princess's Theatre, London, on 10 April 1888

Nisbet married Isabella Frances Fairweather in 1875. He died in London on 1 April 1899, following a longer term lung infection, and was survived by his wife and two children.

Works

  • Marriage and Heredity
  • Insanity of Genius
  • References

    John Ferguson Nisbet Wikipedia