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Francis Richard Stockton biography, including 9 pages of information on the life of Francis Richard Stockton. ... Dictionary of Literary Biography on Francis Richard Stockton...
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Name: Francis Richard Stockton ... Variant Name: Frank R. Stockton, John Lewees, Paul Fort, Frank Stockton, Francis Stockton, Frank Richard Stockton ... Biography of Francis Richard Stockton; 3,611 words, approx. 12 pages;
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FRANCIS RICHARD STOCKTON (1834-1902), American novelist, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on the 5th of April 1834. He had a high school education; became a skilled wood engraver; wrote for the Philadelphia Morning Post, the New York Hearth and Home, Scribner's Monthly and St Nicholas, of which he became...
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Stockton, Francis Richard - (Frank R. Stockton), 1834—1902, American humorist and story writer, b. Philadelphia. He wrote several children's books including Ting-a-Ling (1870) and The Floating... ... Yahoo! Education > Reference > Encyclopedia > Stockton, Francis Richard...
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Encyclopedia article about Stockton, Francis Richard. Information about Stockton, Francis Richard in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... Stockton, Francis Richard (Frank R. Stockton), 1834–1902, American humorist and story writer, b. Philadelphia.
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The Encyclopedia Britannica is free at the JCSM Study Center! ... STOCKTON, FRANCIS RICHARD (18341902) , American novelist, was born in Philadelphia, ... YORK, RICHARD, DUKE...
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Stockton, Francis (Frank) Richard; Born: April 5, 1834, in Blockley, Pennsylvania ; Died: April 20, 1902, in Washington D.C. ; Vocations: Children’s Book Author, Editor, Illustrator, Novelist, Short Story Writer ; ... Francis (Frank) Richard Stockton was born in Blockley, Pennsylvania, a township of Philadelphia,
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Author: Francis Richard Stockton ... Frank R. Stockton (Cyclopedia of World Authors) ... Frank R. Stockton (Mystery and Detective Fiction)
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Although Stockton had already published a novel and some other stories and would continue to publish for many years, "The Lady or the Tiger?" remained his most famous story. Originally he wrote the story, which he called "In the King's Arena," to provoke discussion at a literary party.
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Frank R. Stockton - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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