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William Blanchard Jerrold (1826 -1884) was an English journalist and author. He was the founder and president of the English branch of the International Literary Association for the assimilation of copyright laws. Four of his plays were successfully produced on the London stage, including the popular farce, Cool as a Cucumber (1851). Jerrold divides the museum into four sections giving a brief description of each area. The first day includes Southern Zoological Room, Southern Zoological Gallery, Mammalia Saloon, Eastern Zoological Gallery, Northern Zoological Gallery, and the British…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
William Blanchard Jerrold (1826 -1884) was an English journalist and author. He was the founder and president of the English branch of the International Literary Association for the assimilation of copyright laws. Four of his plays were successfully produced on the London stage, including the popular farce, Cool as a Cucumber (1851). Jerrold divides the museum into four sections giving a brief description of each area. The first day includes Southern Zoological Room, Southern Zoological Gallery, Mammalia Saloon, Eastern Zoological Gallery, Northern Zoological Gallery, and the British Zoological Room. The second day includes Northern Mineral and Fossil Gallery, The Egyptian Room, The Bronze Room, Etruscan Room, and Ethnographical Room. The third visit includes the Egyptian Saloon, the Lycian Room, and the Nimroud Room. The final day includes Townley Sculpture, Phigaleian Saloon, Elgin Saloon.
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Autorenporträt
English journalist and author William Blanchard Jerrold lived from 23 December 1826 in London to 10 March 1884. The eldest child of the playwright Douglas William Jerrold, he was born in London. He attended the top Mao school for two and a half years, but left because he didn't agree with the school's policies. As a result, he started working on newspapers at a young age. When he returned from his trip as the Crystal Palace commissioner to Sweden in 1854, he published A Brage-Beaker with the Swedes. As a correspondent for various London newspapers, he was dispatched to the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1855. From that point on, he spent a lot of time there. He took over for his father as editor of Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper in 1857, a position he maintained for 26 years. He was a fervent supporter of the North during the American Civil War, and the federal government reproduced and displayed a number of his influential essays in New York City. The English section of the International Literacy Association for the Assimilation of Copyright Laws was founded by him, and he served as its president. At West Norwood Cemetery, he is interred alongside his father.