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Ralph Payne-Gallwey

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"Letters to young Shooters". Caricature by Spy published in Vanity Fair in 1893.

Sir Ralph William Frankland Payne-Gallwey, 3rd Baronet (1848–1916) was an English engineer, historian, ballistics expert, and artist.

Life

The son of Sir William Payne-Gallwey, 2nd Baronet, and his wife Emily Anne, a daughter of Sir Robert Frankland-Russell, 7th Baronet, the young Payne-Gallwey was educated at Eton College. In 1881, he inherited from his father the Thirkleby Hall estate in the North Riding of Yorkshire.

He married Edith Alice Usborne. Their son William Payne-Gallwey was a soldier and first-class cricketer who was killed in action during the First World War. As a result of that, Payne-Gallwey decided to sell his Yorkshire estate.

Works

Payne-Gallwey began by writing books on sport. Early works included The Book of Duck Decoys (1886) and Letters to Young Shooters (1892). His The Crossbow appeared in 1903, and his High Pheasants in Theory and Practice in 1913. In later life, he also turned to history and current affairs, with The Mystery of Maria Stella, Lady Newborough (1907), A History of the George Worn on the Scaffold by Charles I (1908) and The War, A Criticism (June, 1915). This was an appeal for conscription to be brought in, to greatly increase the size of the British Army. The also compiled an unpublished manuscript on archery, including tables of flight distances, illustrations and photographs of bows, and information on Turkish and Chinese archery.

Publications

  • The Crossbow, Mediaeval and Modern, Military and Sporting; its Construction, History and Management, with a Treatise on the Balista and Catapult of the Ancients (London: Longmand Green & Co., 1903; reprinted by Holland of London, 1958; new edition by Skyhorse Publishing, 2007)
  • The Fowler in Ireland, or Notes on the Haunts and Habits of Wildfowl and Seafowl: Including Instructions in the Art of Shooting and Capturing Them
  • The Book of Duck Decoys: Their Construction, Management, and History (London: John van Voorst, 1886)
  • Letters to Young Shooters (1892)
  • The Mystery of Maria Stella, Lady Newborough (London: Edward Arnold, 1907)
  • A History of the George Worn on the Scaffold by Charles I (London: Edward Arnold, 1908)
  • High Pheasants in Theory and Practice (London and New York: Longmans, Green & Co., 1913)
  • The War, A Criticism (London: Spottiswoode & Co., 1915)

Notes

  1. ^ John Robinson, Felling the Ancient Oaks (Aurum Press, 2011, ISBN 978-1845136703),
  2. Andrew Renshaw, Wisden on the Great War: The Lives of Cricket's Fallen 1914-1918 (A. & C. Black, 2014), p. 90 ISBN 978-1-4088-3236-3
  3. Ralph Payne-Gallwey (2012). The Book of the Crossbow: With an Additional Section on Catapults and Other Siege Engines. Courier Corporation. ISBN 978-0-486-13926-5.
  4. R. F. Payne-Gallwey, The War: a criticism, June 1915, full text, accessed 9 February 2023
  5. "Archery Manuscript by Yorkshire Landowner Comes to Auction". Tennants Auctioneers. 9 March 2020. Retrieved 19 July 2024.

External links

Baronetage of the United Kingdom
Preceded byWilliam Payne-Gallwey Baronet
(of Hampton Hill)
1881–1916
Succeeded byJohn Frankland Payne-Gallwey


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