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Leo Walmsley

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Name
  
Leo Walmsley

Role
  
Writer

Movies
  
Turn of the Tide


Leo Walmsley httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Died
  
1966, Fowey, United Kingdom

Books
  
...Three fevers, Love in the Sun, Fishermen at war

People also search for
  
Norman Walker, J. O. C. Orton, L. du Garde Peach, David Lean, Ian Dalrymple

Leo walmsley in fowey 1965


Leo Walmsley (1892 – 1966) was an English writer.

Contents

He was born at 7 Clifton Place, Shipley in the county of West Yorkshire in 1892, and two years later his family moved to Robin Hood's Bay on the coast of present-day North Yorkshire, where he was schooled at the old Wesleyan chapel & the Scarborough Municipal School. He was the son of the painter Ulric Walmsley. In 1912 the young Leo secured the post of curator-caretaker of the Robin Hood's Bay Marine Laboratory at five shillings a week.

During World War I he served as an observer with the Royal Flying Corps in East Africa, was mentioned in dispatches four times and was awarded the Military Cross. After a plane crash he was sent home, and eventually pursued a literary career. He settled at Pont Pill near Polruan in Cornwall, where he became friendly with the writer Daphne du Maurier.

He was married three times. First in 1919 to Elsie Susanna Preston, whom he divorced in 1932, then in 1933 to Margaret Bell Little and following their divorce in about 1946, finally to Stephanie Gubbins in 1955.

Many of his books are mainly autobiographical, the best known being his Bramblewick series set in Robin Hood's Bay – Foreigners, Three Fevers, Phantom Lobster and Sally Lunn, the second of which was filmed as Turn of the Tide (1935).

He died in Fowey, Cornwall, on 8 June 1966 and the house he lived in (21 Passage Street) was named Bramblewick after his book series.

Lakeland revival leo walmsley


Biographies

  • 1991 – The Honey Gatherers – Peter J. Woods
  • 1995 – Autumn Gold – Stephanie Walmsley (his widow)
  • 2001 – Shells and Bright Stones – Nona Stead (ed.)
  • References

    Leo Walmsley Wikipedia