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Richard Harding Davis

Richard Harding Davis (April 18, 1864 – April 11, 1916) was an American journalist and writer of fiction and drama, known foremost as the first American war correspondent to cover the Spanish–American War, the Second Boer War, and World War I.[1] His writing greatly assisted the political career of Theodore Roosevelt. He also played a major role in the evolution of the American magazine. His influence extended to the world of fashion, and he is credited with making the clean-shaven look popular among men at the turn of the 20th century.[2]

Richard Harding Davis
Davis in 1890
Born(1864-04-18)April 18, 1864
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedApril 11, 1916(1916-04-11) (aged 51)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Resting placeLeverington Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation
  • Writer
  • war correspondent
  • journalist
NationalityAmerican
Period19th and early 20th century
GenreHistory, romantic novels, short stories
SubjectAfrica, War, Cuba, Europe
Spouse
  • Cecil Clark (m. 1899–1912; divorce)
  • Bessie McCoy (1912–1916; his death)
Children1
Signature

Biography edit

Davis was born on April 18, 1864, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1][2] His mother Rebecca Harding Davis was a prominent writer in her day. His father, Lemuel Clarke Davis, was himself a journalist and edited the Philadelphia Public Ledger.[2] As a young man, Davis attended the Episcopal Academy. In 1882, after an unhappy year at Swarthmore College, Davis transferred to Lehigh University, where his uncle, H. Wilson Harding, was a professor.[3] While at Lehigh, Davis published his first book, The Adventures of My Freshman (1884), a collection of short stories. Many of the stories had originally appeared in the student magazine the Lehigh Burr.[4] In 1885, Davis transferred to Johns Hopkins University.[5]

After college, his father helped him gain his first position as a journalist at the Philadelphia Record, but he was soon dismissed. After another brief position at the Philadelphia Press, Davis accepted a better-paying position at the New York Evening Sun where he gained attention for his flamboyant style and his writing on controversial subjects such as abortion, suicide and execution.[2] He first attracted attention in May to June 1889, by reporting on the devastation of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, following the destructive flood. He added to his reputation by reporting on other noteworthy events such as the first electrocution of a criminal (the execution of William Kemmler in 1890).

Davis became a managing editor of Harper's Weekly, and was one of the world's leading war correspondents at the time of the Second Boer War in South Africa. As an American, he had the opportunity to see the war first-hand from both the British and Boer perspectives. Davis also worked as a reporter for the New York Herald, The Times, and Scribner's Magazine.

He was popular among a number of leading writers of his time, and is considered the model for illustrator Charles Dana Gibson's dashing "Gibson man", the male equivalent of his famous Gibson Girl. He is mentioned early in Sinclair Lewis' book Dodsworth as the example of an exciting, adventure-seeking legitimate hero.

Davis had success with his 1897 novel Soldiers of Fortune, which he turned into a play[6] written by Augustus Thomas. His novel was filmed twice, in 1914 and in 1919 by Allan Dwan. The 1914 version starring Dustin Farnum was shot in the Cuban locations that Davis used in his novel, and Davis was present during the filming.[7]

During the Spanish–American War, Davis was on a United States Navy warship when he witnessed the shelling of Matanzas, Cuba, a part of the Battle of Santiago de Cuba. His story made headlines, but as a result, the Navy prohibited reporters from being aboard any American naval vessel for the rest of the war.

 
Davis with Theodore Roosevelt in Tampa, Florida, 1898

Davis was a good friend of Theodore Roosevelt, and he helped create the legend surrounding the Rough Riders, of which he was made an honorary member. Some [who?] have even gone so far to accuse Davis of involvement in William Randolph Hearst's alleged plot to have started the war between Spain and the United States in order to boost newspaper sales; however, Davis refused to work for Hearst after a dispute over fictionalizing one of his articles.

 
Bessie and Hope Davis

Despite his alleged association with yellow journalism, his writings of life and travel in Central America, Venezuela, the Caribbean, Rhodesia and South Africa during the Second Boer War were widely published. He was one of many war correspondents who covered the Russo-Japanese War from the perspective of the Japanese forces.[8]

Davis later reported on the Salonika front of the First World War, where he was arrested by the Germans as a spy, but released.

Personal life edit

Davis was married twice, first to Cecil Clark, an artist, in 1899, and, following their 1912 divorce, to Bessie McCoy, an actress and vaudeville performer, who is remembered for her signature "Yama Yama Man" routine. Davis and Bessie had a daughter, Hope.[2]

Davis died of a heart attack on April 11, 1916, while on the telephone. It was seven days before his 52nd birthday.[1] He was interred at Leverington Cemetery in Philadelphia.[9] His friend and fellow author John Fox, Jr. was surprised by his sudden death, writing, "He was so intensely alive that I cannot think of him as dead—and I do not. He is just away on another of those trips and it really seems queer that I shall not hear him tell about it."[10] His wife Bessie would also die young, at age 42 in 1931 from intestinal problems.

Legacy edit

A plaque denoting his boyhood home can be seen at 21st and Chancellor Streets in Philadelphia.

Davis's Gallegher and Other Stories became the series Gallegher, starring Roger Mobley, Edmond O'Brien, and Harvey Korman on Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color on NBC.

Partial list of works edit

 
Three Gringos in Central America and Venezuela: poster by Edward Penfield
 
First edition cover of Vera the Medium, 1908
  • Stories for Boys (1891)
  • Cinderella and Other Stories (1891)
  • Gallegher, and Other Stories (1891)
  • The West from a Car Window (1892)
  • Van Bibber and Others (1892)
  • The Rulers of the Mediterranean (1893)
  • The Exiles, and Other Stories (1894)
  • Our English Cousins (1894)
  • About Paris (1895)
  • The Princess Aline (1895)
  • Three Gringos in Central America and Venezuela (1896)
  • Soldiers of Fortune (1897)
  • Cuba in War Time (1897)
  • Dr. Jameson's Raiders vs. the Johannesburg Reformers (1897)
  • A Year From a Reporter's Note-Book (1898)
  • The King's Jackal (1898)
  • The Cuban & Porto Rican Campaigns (1899)
  • The Lion and the Unicorn (1899)
  • With Both Armies (1900), on the Second Boer War
  • In the Fog (1901)[11]
  • Ranson's Folly (1902)[12]
  • Captain Macklin: His Memoirs (1902)
  • The Bar Sinister (1903)
  • The Dictator (1904)
  • Real Soldiers of Fortune (1906) – an early biography of Winston Churchill (1874–1965), Major Frederick Russell Burnham, D.S.O., (1861–1947), Chief of Scouts, General Henry Douglas McIver (1841–1907), James Harden-Hickey (1854–1898), Captain Philo McGiffen (1860–1897), William Walker (1824–1860)
  • The Congo and coasts of Africa (1907)
  • The Scarlet Car (1906)
  • Vera, the Medium (1908)
  • The White Mice (1909)
  • Once Upon A Time (1910)
  • Notes of a War Correspondent (1910)
  • The Nature Faker (1910)
  • The Red Cross Girl (1912)
  • The Lost Road and Other Stories (1913)
  • Peace Manoeuvres; a Play in One Act (1914)
  • The Boy Scout (1914)
  • With the Allies (1914)
  • With the French in France and Salonika (1916)
  • The Man Who Could Not Lose (1916)
  • The Deserter (1917)

Filmography edit

  • Ranson's Folly [it], directed by Edwin S. Porter (1910, short film, based on the novel Ranson's Folly)
  • Her First Appearance [it], directed by Ashley Miller (1910, short film, based on the short story Her First Appearance)
  • Gallegher [it], directed by Ashley Miller (1910, short film, based on the novel Gallegher)
  • The Winning of Miss Langdon, directed by Edwin S. Porter (1910, short film, based on the short story A Peace Manoeuvres)
  • The Romance of Hefty Burke (1910, short film, based on the short story The Romance in the Life of Hefty Burke)
  • An Eventful Evening [it] (1911, short film, based on the short story Miss Civilization)
  • The Disreputable Mr. Raegen [it] (1911, short film, based on the short story My Disreputable Friend Mr. Raegen)
  • How the Hungry Man Was Fed (1911, short film, based on the short story The Hungry Man Was Fed)
  • Van Bibber's Experiment [it], directed by Ashley Miller (1911, short film, based on the short story Van Bibber's Burglar)
  • The Crucial Test [it] (1911, short film, based on the short story A Derelict)
  • How Sir Andrew Lost His Vote [it], directed by Ashley Miller (1911, short film, based on the novel In the Fog)
  • Eleanor Cuyler [it] (1912, short film, based on the novel Eleanor Cuyler)
  • Soldiers of Fortune [it], directed by William F. Haddock (1914, based on the novel Soldiers of Fortune)
  • The Man Who Could Not Lose, directed by Carlyle Blackwell (1914, based on the novel The Man Who Could Not Lose)
  • The Last Chapter, directed by William Desmond Taylor (1914, based on the short story An Unfinished Story)
  • The Lost House, directed by Christy Cabanne (1915, short film, based on the short story The Lost House)
  • Captain Macklin, directed by John B. O'Brien (1915, based on the novel Captain Macklin: His Memoirs)
  • The Dictator, directed by Oscar Eagle (1915, based on the play The Dictator)
  • The Galloper [it], directed by Donald MacKenzie [it] (1915, based on the play The Galloper)
  • Ranson's Folly, directed by Richard Ridgely (1915, based on the novel Ranson's Folly)
  • Playing Dead [it], directed by Sidney Drew (1915, based on the novel Playing Dead)
  • The Buried Treasure of Cobre [it], directed by Frank Beal (1916, short film, based on the novel The Buried Treasure of Cobre)
  • Somewhere in France, directed by Charles Giblyn (1916, based on the novel Somewhere in France)
  • Vera, the Medium, directed by Broncho Billy Anderson (1917, based on the novel Vera, the Medium)
  • The Boy Who Cried Wolf, directed by Edward H. Griffith (1917, based on the short story The Boy Who Cried Wolf)
  • Billy and the Big Stick, directed by Edward H. Griffith (1917, based on the short story Billy and the Big Stick)
  • Gallegher, directed by Ben Turbett (1917, short film, based on the novel Gallegher)
  • The Scarlet Car, directed by Joseph De Grasse (1917, based on the novel The Scarlet Car)
  • The Trap, directed by Frank Reicher (1919, based on the play The Trap)
  • Soldiers of Fortune, directed by Allan Dwan (1919, based on the novel Soldiers of Fortune)
  • The Men of Zanzibar, directed by Rowland V. Lee (1922, based on the short story The Men of Zanzibar)
  • Restless Souls, directed by Robert Ensminger (1922, based on the novel Playing Dead)
  • The Dictator, directed by James Cruze (1922, based on the play The Dictator)
  • The Scarlet Car, directed by Stuart Paton (1923, based on the novel The Scarlet Car)
  • The Exiles, directed by Edmund Mortimer (1923, based on the novel The Exiles)
  • Stephen Steps Out, directed by Joseph Henabery (1923, based on the novel The Grand Cross of the Crescent)
  • Cupid's Fireman, directed by William A. Wellman (1923, based on the short story Andy M'Gee's Chorus Girl)
  • 24 short films starring Earle Foxe (1924–1927, based on the "Van Bibber" short stories)
  • Honor Among Men, directed by Denison Clift (1924, based on the novel The King's Jackal)
  • White Mice, directed by Edward H. Griffith (1926, based on the novel The White Mice)
  • Ranson's Folly, directed by Sidney Olcott (1926, based on the novel Ranson's Folly)
  • Almost Human, directed by Frank Urson (1927, based on the novel The Bar Sinister)
  • Let 'Er Go Gallegher, directed by Elmer Clifton (1928, based on the novel Gallegher)
  • Driftwood, directed by Christy Cabanne (1928, based on the short story Driftwood)
  • Fugitives, directed by William Beaudine (1929, based on the novel The Exiles)
  • It's a Dog's Life, directed by Herman Hoffman [fr] (1955, based on the novel The Bar Sinister)
  • Gallegher [fr] (1965–1967, Disney TV series, 10 episodes, based on the novel Gallegher)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "R H. Davis, Novelist, Dies At Telephone. Found by Wife in Library at Home, Suddenly Stricken with Heart Disease. Hardships Of War Blamed. Had Recently Returned from Reporting Severe Campaign in Serbia. His Career and Works". The New York Times. April 13, 1916. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. (1998)
  3. ^ Davis, Charles Belmont (1917). The Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 15. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
  4. ^ Davis, Charles Belmont (1917). The Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 18. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
  5. ^ Davis, Charles Belmont (1917). The Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 32. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
  6. ^ "Richard Harding Davis, With Both Armies, 1902". Pinetreeweb.com. August 29, 2002. Retrieved February 2, 2012.
  7. ^ p.132 Hulme, Peter Cuba's Wild East: A Literary Geography of Oriente, Liverpool University Press, 2011
  8. ^ Mitchel P. Roth, James Stuart Olson (1997). Historical Dictionary of War Journalism. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 267–268. ISBN 9780313291715. Retrieved February 2, 2012.
  9. ^ "Leverington Cemetery preservation, a family mission for owners with deep Roxborough roots". www.roxboroughpa.com. Roxborough Development Corporation. Retrieved January 22, 2023.
  10. ^ York, Bill. John Fox, Jr., Appalachian Author. Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Company, 2012: 10. ISBN 0-7864-1372-7
  11. ^ "LC Catalog - No Connections Available". catalog.loc.gov. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  12. ^ "Review of Ranson's Folly by Richard Harding Davis". The Athenaeum (3939): 529. April 25, 1903.

Further reading edit

  • Bleiler, Everett (1948). The Checklist of Fantastic Literature. Chicago: Shasta Publishers. p. 32.
  • Lubow, Arthur. The Reporter Who Would Be King: A Biography of Richard Harding Davis (Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1992). ISBN 0-684-19404-X;
  • Osborn, Scott Compton. (1953) Richard Harding Davis: The Development of a Journalist, Dissertation thesis, University of Kentucky. OCLC 44083545. [reprinted by Twayne Publishers, Boston, 1978. ISBN 9780805771923; OCLC 3965741
  • Downey, Fairfax Davis. Richard Harding Davis: His Day. New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1933.
  • Miner, Lewis S. Front Lines and Headlines: The Story of Richard Harding Davis. New York: J. Messner, 1959.
  • Quinby, Henry Cole. Richard Harding Davis: A Bibliography. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co., 1924.

External links edit

Works
  • Works by Richard Harding Davis at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Richard Harding Davis at Internet Archive
  • Works by Richard Harding Davis at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Works by Richard Harding Davis at Online Books Page
  • Collected Journalism of Richard Harding Davis at The Archive of American Journalism
  • "Rheims during the Bombardment" from Scribner's Magazine, January 1915 at World War One Gallery
Papers
  • Finding Aid to Richard Harding Davis Miscellaneous Correspondence and Other Documents, 1887-1916, Special Collections, Linderman Library, Lehigh University
  • Finding Aid for the Papers of Richard Harding Davis, 1863-1916, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library
Encyclopedia

richard, harding, davis, april, 1864, april, 1916, american, journalist, writer, fiction, drama, known, foremost, first, american, correspondent, cover, spanish, american, second, boer, world, writing, greatly, assisted, political, career, theodore, roosevelt,. Richard Harding Davis April 18 1864 April 11 1916 was an American journalist and writer of fiction and drama known foremost as the first American war correspondent to cover the Spanish American War the Second Boer War and World War I 1 His writing greatly assisted the political career of Theodore Roosevelt He also played a major role in the evolution of the American magazine His influence extended to the world of fashion and he is credited with making the clean shaven look popular among men at the turn of the 20th century 2 Richard Harding DavisDavis in 1890Born 1864 04 18 April 18 1864Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedApril 11 1916 1916 04 11 aged 51 New York City New York U S Resting placeLeverington Cemetery Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S OccupationWriter war correspondent journalistNationalityAmericanPeriod19th and early 20th centuryGenreHistory romantic novels short storiesSubjectAfrica War Cuba EuropeSpouseCecil Clark m 1899 1912 divorce Bessie McCoy 1912 1916 his death Children1Signature Contents 1 Biography 2 Personal life 3 Legacy 4 Partial list of works 5 Filmography 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography editDavis was born on April 18 1864 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1 2 His mother Rebecca Harding Davis was a prominent writer in her day His father Lemuel Clarke Davis was himself a journalist and edited the Philadelphia Public Ledger 2 As a young man Davis attended the Episcopal Academy In 1882 after an unhappy year at Swarthmore College Davis transferred to Lehigh University where his uncle H Wilson Harding was a professor 3 While at Lehigh Davis published his first book The Adventures of My Freshman 1884 a collection of short stories Many of the stories had originally appeared in the student magazine the Lehigh Burr 4 In 1885 Davis transferred to Johns Hopkins University 5 After college his father helped him gain his first position as a journalist at the Philadelphia Record but he was soon dismissed After another brief position at the Philadelphia Press Davis accepted a better paying position at the New York Evening Sun where he gained attention for his flamboyant style and his writing on controversial subjects such as abortion suicide and execution 2 He first attracted attention in May to June 1889 by reporting on the devastation of Johnstown Pennsylvania following the destructive flood He added to his reputation by reporting on other noteworthy events such as the first electrocution of a criminal the execution of William Kemmler in 1890 Davis became a managing editor of Harper s Weekly and was one of the world s leading war correspondents at the time of the Second Boer War in South Africa As an American he had the opportunity to see the war first hand from both the British and Boer perspectives Davis also worked as a reporter for the New York Herald The Times and Scribner s Magazine He was popular among a number of leading writers of his time and is considered the model for illustrator Charles Dana Gibson s dashing Gibson man the male equivalent of his famous Gibson Girl He is mentioned early in Sinclair Lewis book Dodsworth as the example of an exciting adventure seeking legitimate hero Davis had success with his 1897 novel Soldiers of Fortune which he turned into a play 6 written by Augustus Thomas His novel was filmed twice in 1914 and in 1919 by Allan Dwan The 1914 version starring Dustin Farnum was shot in the Cuban locations that Davis used in his novel and Davis was present during the filming 7 During the Spanish American War Davis was on a United States Navy warship when he witnessed the shelling of Matanzas Cuba a part of the Battle of Santiago de Cuba His story made headlines but as a result the Navy prohibited reporters from being aboard any American naval vessel for the rest of the war nbsp Davis with Theodore Roosevelt in Tampa Florida 1898 Davis was a good friend of Theodore Roosevelt and he helped create the legend surrounding the Rough Riders of which he was made an honorary member Some who have even gone so far to accuse Davis of involvement in William Randolph Hearst s alleged plot to have started the war between Spain and the United States in order to boost newspaper sales however Davis refused to work for Hearst after a dispute over fictionalizing one of his articles nbsp Bessie and Hope Davis Despite his alleged association with yellow journalism his writings of life and travel in Central America Venezuela the Caribbean Rhodesia and South Africa during the Second Boer War were widely published He was one of many war correspondents who covered the Russo Japanese War from the perspective of the Japanese forces 8 Davis later reported on the Salonika front of the First World War where he was arrested by the Germans as a spy but released Personal life editDavis was married twice first to Cecil Clark an artist in 1899 and following their 1912 divorce to Bessie McCoy an actress and vaudeville performer who is remembered for her signature Yama Yama Man routine Davis and Bessie had a daughter Hope 2 Davis died of a heart attack on April 11 1916 while on the telephone It was seven days before his 52nd birthday 1 He was interred at Leverington Cemetery in Philadelphia 9 His friend and fellow author John Fox Jr was surprised by his sudden death writing He was so intensely alive that I cannot think of him as dead and I do not He is just away on another of those trips and it really seems queer that I shall not hear him tell about it 10 His wife Bessie would also die young at age 42 in 1931 from intestinal problems Legacy editA plaque denoting his boyhood home can be seen at 21st and Chancellor Streets in Philadelphia Davis s Gallegher and Other Stories became the series Gallegher starring Roger Mobley Edmond O Brien and Harvey Korman on Walt Disney s Wonderful World of Color on NBC Partial list of works edit nbsp Three Gringos in Central America and Venezuela poster by Edward Penfield nbsp First edition cover of Vera the Medium 1908 Stories for Boys 1891 Cinderella and Other Stories 1891 Gallegher and Other Stories 1891 The West from a Car Window 1892 Van Bibber and Others 1892 The Rulers of the Mediterranean 1893 The Exiles and Other Stories 1894 Our English Cousins 1894 About Paris 1895 The Princess Aline 1895 Three Gringos in Central America and Venezuela 1896 Soldiers of Fortune 1897 Cuba in War Time 1897 Dr Jameson s Raiders vs the Johannesburg Reformers 1897 A Year From a Reporter s Note Book 1898 The King s Jackal 1898 The Cuban amp Porto Rican Campaigns 1899 The Lion and the Unicorn 1899 With Both Armies 1900 on the Second Boer War In the Fog 1901 11 Ranson s Folly 1902 12 Captain Macklin His Memoirs 1902 The Bar Sinister 1903 The Dictator 1904 Real Soldiers of Fortune 1906 an early biography of Winston Churchill 1874 1965 Major Frederick Russell Burnham D S O 1861 1947 Chief of Scouts General Henry Douglas McIver 1841 1907 James Harden Hickey 1854 1898 Captain Philo McGiffen 1860 1897 William Walker 1824 1860 The Congo and coasts of Africa 1907 The Scarlet Car 1906 Vera the Medium 1908 The White Mice 1909 Once Upon A Time 1910 Notes of a War Correspondent 1910 The Nature Faker 1910 The Red Cross Girl 1912 The Lost Road and Other Stories 1913 Peace Manoeuvres a Play in One Act 1914 The Boy Scout 1914 With the Allies 1914 With the French in France and Salonika 1916 The Man Who Could Not Lose 1916 The Deserter 1917 Filmography editRanson s Folly it directed by Edwin S Porter 1910 short film based on the novel Ranson s Folly Her First Appearance it directed by Ashley Miller 1910 short film based on the short story Her First Appearance Gallegher it directed by Ashley Miller 1910 short film based on the novel Gallegher The Winning of Miss Langdon directed by Edwin S Porter 1910 short film based on the short story A Peace Manoeuvres The Romance of Hefty Burke 1910 short film based on the short story The Romance in the Life of Hefty Burke An Eventful Evening it 1911 short film based on the short story Miss Civilization The Disreputable Mr Raegen it 1911 short film based on the short story My Disreputable Friend Mr Raegen How the Hungry Man Was Fed 1911 short film based on the short story The Hungry Man Was Fed Van Bibber s Experiment it directed by Ashley Miller 1911 short film based on the short story Van Bibber s Burglar The Crucial Test it 1911 short film based on the short story A Derelict How Sir Andrew Lost His Vote it directed by Ashley Miller 1911 short film based on the novel In the Fog Eleanor Cuyler it 1912 short film based on the novel Eleanor Cuyler Soldiers of Fortune it directed by William F Haddock 1914 based on the novel Soldiers of Fortune The Man Who Could Not Lose directed by Carlyle Blackwell 1914 based on the novel The Man Who Could Not Lose The Last Chapter directed by William Desmond Taylor 1914 based on the short story An Unfinished Story The Lost House directed by Christy Cabanne 1915 short film based on the short story The Lost House Captain Macklin directed by John B O Brien 1915 based on the novel Captain Macklin His Memoirs The Dictator directed by Oscar Eagle 1915 based on the play The Dictator The Galloper it directed by Donald MacKenzie it 1915 based on the play The Galloper Ranson s Folly directed by Richard Ridgely 1915 based on the novel Ranson s Folly Playing Dead it directed by Sidney Drew 1915 based on the novel Playing Dead The Buried Treasure of Cobre it directed by Frank Beal 1916 short film based on the novel The Buried Treasure of Cobre Somewhere in France directed by Charles Giblyn 1916 based on the novel Somewhere in France Vera the Medium directed by Broncho Billy Anderson 1917 based on the novel Vera the Medium The Boy Who Cried Wolf directed by Edward H Griffith 1917 based on the short story The Boy Who Cried Wolf Billy and the Big Stick directed by Edward H Griffith 1917 based on the short story Billy and the Big Stick Gallegher directed by Ben Turbett 1917 short film based on the novel Gallegher The Scarlet Car directed by Joseph De Grasse 1917 based on the novel The Scarlet Car The Trap directed by Frank Reicher 1919 based on the play The Trap Soldiers of Fortune directed by Allan Dwan 1919 based on the novel Soldiers of Fortune The Men of Zanzibar directed by Rowland V Lee 1922 based on the short story The Men of Zanzibar Restless Souls directed by Robert Ensminger 1922 based on the novel Playing Dead The Dictator directed by James Cruze 1922 based on the play The Dictator The Scarlet Car directed by Stuart Paton 1923 based on the novel The Scarlet Car The Exiles directed by Edmund Mortimer 1923 based on the novel The Exiles Stephen Steps Out directed by Joseph Henabery 1923 based on the novel The Grand Cross of the Crescent Cupid s Fireman directed by William A Wellman 1923 based on the short story Andy M Gee s Chorus Girl 24 short films starring Earle Foxe 1924 1927 based on the Van Bibber short stories Honor Among Men directed by Denison Clift 1924 based on the novel The King s Jackal White Mice directed by Edward H Griffith 1926 based on the novel The White Mice Ranson s Folly directed by Sidney Olcott 1926 based on the novel Ranson s Folly Almost Human directed by Frank Urson 1927 based on the novel The Bar Sinister Let Er Go Gallegher directed by Elmer Clifton 1928 based on the novel Gallegher Driftwood directed by Christy Cabanne 1928 based on the short story Driftwood Fugitives directed by William Beaudine 1929 based on the novel The Exiles It s a Dog s Life directed by Herman Hoffman fr 1955 based on the novel The Bar Sinister Gallegher fr 1965 1967 Disney TV series 10 episodes based on the novel Gallegher References edit a b c R H Davis Novelist Dies At Telephone Found by Wife in Library at Home Suddenly Stricken with Heart Disease Hardships Of War Blamed Had Recently Returned from Reporting Severe Campaign in Serbia His Career and Works The New York Times April 13 1916 Retrieved July 31 2014 a b c d e Encyclopedia of World Biography 2nd ed 1998 Davis Charles Belmont 1917 The Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 15 Retrieved February 2 2015 Davis Charles Belmont 1917 The Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 18 Retrieved February 2 2015 Davis Charles Belmont 1917 The Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 32 Retrieved February 2 2015 Richard Harding Davis With Both Armies 1902 Pinetreeweb com August 29 2002 Retrieved February 2 2012 p 132 Hulme Peter Cuba s Wild East A Literary Geography of Oriente Liverpool University Press 2011 Mitchel P Roth James Stuart Olson 1997 Historical Dictionary of War Journalism Greenwood Publishing Group pp 267 268 ISBN 9780313291715 Retrieved February 2 2012 Leverington Cemetery preservation a family mission for owners with deep Roxborough roots www roxboroughpa com Roxborough Development Corporation Retrieved January 22 2023 York Bill John Fox Jr Appalachian Author Jefferson NC McFarland and Company 2012 10 ISBN 0 7864 1372 7 LC Catalog No Connections Available catalog loc gov Retrieved February 10 2023 Review of Ranson s Folly by Richard Harding Davis The Athenaeum 3939 529 April 25 1903 Further reading editBleiler Everett 1948 The Checklist of Fantastic Literature Chicago Shasta Publishers p 32 Lubow Arthur The Reporter Who Would Be King A Biography of Richard Harding Davis Biography New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1992 ISBN 0 684 19404 X Osborn Scott Compton 1953 Richard Harding Davis The Development of a Journalist Dissertation thesis University of Kentucky OCLC 44083545 reprinted by Twayne Publishers Boston 1978 ISBN 9780805771923 OCLC 3965741 Downey Fairfax Davis Richard Harding Davis His Day New York C Scribner s Sons 1933 Miner Lewis S Front Lines and Headlines The Story of Richard Harding Davis New York J Messner 1959 Quinby Henry Cole Richard Harding Davis A Bibliography New York E P Dutton amp Co 1924 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Harding Davis nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Richard Harding Davis Works Works by Richard Harding Davis at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Richard Harding Davis at Internet Archive Works by Richard Harding Davis at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Works by Richard Harding Davis at Online Books Page Collected Journalism of Richard Harding Davis at The Archive of American Journalism Rheims during the Bombardment from Scribner s Magazine January 1915 at World War One Gallery Papers Finding Aid to Richard Harding Davis Miscellaneous Correspondence and Other Documents 1887 1916 Special Collections Linderman Library Lehigh University Finding Aid for the Papers of Richard Harding Davis 1863 1916 Special Collections University of Virginia Library Encyclopedia Richard Harding Davis 1863 1916 britannica Richard Harding Davis 1863 1916 encyclopedia com Richard Harding Davis 1863 1916 The Free Dictionary Richard Harding Davis 1863 1916 encyclopedia The Free Dictionary Richard Harding Davis 1863 1916 The Literature Network Jalic Inc Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Harding Davis amp oldid 1219939606, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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