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sir arthur conan doyle
In
1855, Charles Altamont and Mary Foley Doyle were married. Four years later,
on May 22, 1859, Mary gave birth to Arthur Conan Doyle in Edinburgh, Scotland.
He was one of ten children, of which seven survived to adulthood.
The Doyle family were Catholic with roots in Ireland. Arthur's father
was a civil servant most of his life, working for the Edinburgh Office
of Works. Arthur's mother ran a boarding house.
Arthur entered Hodder Prep, a Jesuit-run school, in 1868. Two years later,
he moved to Stonyhurst public school, another Jesuit-run educational institution.
At Stonyhurst, he was noted for his untidiness and his determination to
go his own way. His nature responded to kindness and rebelled against
threats. Arthur spent a good portion of his time in the headmaster's office.
The only suggestion of a literary nature during this time was a year spent
as editor of the Stonyhurst school magazine.
In 1874, Arthur took and passed his university matriculation exam. Before
entering Edinburgh University in 1876, he spent a year at a Jesuit school
in Austria brushing up on his German. A lack of money during school required
him to take outside jobs to earn money for tuition. During the summer
of 1878, he worked with a doctor in general practice.
The year 1880 saw Arthur working for a Birmingham doctor as a dispenser.
In his spare time he read widely in spiritualism and metaphysical literature.
The spiritualist movement eventually came to rule his life. He signed
on as a surgeon on an Arctic whaling ship for seven months. He became
the captain's companion, breaking up fights among the seamen. He learned
to be a skilled harpooner. This experience toughened him up physically
and mentally.
Arthur received his Masters in Biology in 1881. In 1883, a short story
entitled "Habakuk Jephson's Statement" was published. It was
based on the mystery of the Marie Celeste. The story was convincing enough
to be officially denied.
Arthur received his M.D. in 1885. Upon graduating, he travelled by cargo
steamer to Africa. His London relatives decided to send him their ailing
friends so he could have his own practice. However, he had to be Catholic
like them. Telling his relatives he was agnostic stifled all help from
them in his career. Upon his return from Africa, Arthur went into practice
with Dr. Budd in Plymouth, England.
Arthur's mother, whom he was always close to and whom he referred to as
"The Ma'am", advised him to break his association with Budd
because the man was a quack and would ruin his reputation. Budd offered
to pay Doyle to go into private practice. He moved to Southsea, Hampshire
where he set up as a GP.
Arthur wrote adventure stories to earn extra money. He rented Bush Villa
in Southsea, which became his residence as well as his practice. His younger
brother became his housekeeper and his companion. A falling out with Budd
ended any hope of future money. Arthur's mother delved into her savings
to help her son. Business was slow for the first six months. Arthur joined
football, bowling, political, literary, and cricket clubs in his leisure
time. Business began to pick up. He could keep a servant and support his
brother.
In 1885, his brother left for public school. In the same year, Arthur
married Louise Hawkins. She remained a background figure throughout the
marriage. The Doyles were married for fifteen years before Louise died
in 1900 of tuberculosis. Two children were born into this union; a boy
and a girl.
Shortly after the marriage, Dr. Doyle began practicing medicine as an
eye specialist. His first Sherlock Holmes story was published in 1887.
Sherlock Holmes was based on Edgar Allan Poe's detective C. Auguste Dupin
and Eugene Francois Vidoq, a former criminal who became chief of the Surete,
Paris' police force. Holmes' physical appearance was that of Dr. Joseph
Bell, Doyle's teacher from the University of Edinburgh. His surname came
from Oliver Wendell Holmes, an American poet admired by Doyle.
Arthur's first historical novel was published in 1889. He was living in
London in 1890 and practicing as an occultist. By 1891, he had become
a full time writer. In 1892, the first collection of Sherlock Holmes stories
was published. A total of five collections of Holmes stories have been
published.
Charles Altamont Doyle, Arthur's father, died in 1893 in the nursing home
he had been committed to in 1879. In the same year as his father's death,
Doyle decided to kill off Sherlock Holmes. Doyle was tired of writing
short stories. He wanted to be remembered for his historical novels rather
than his detective. So, in 1894, Arthur Conan Doyle officially killed
off Sherlock Holmes, one of the greatest literary detectives ever to live.
During the South African War, from 1899-1902, Doyle served as senior physician
at a field hospital for a short time. In 1900, he ran unsuccessfully for
Parliament for the first time. He was knighted in 1902, making him Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle. In 1903, at the request of his government and by public
demand, Sherlock Holmes was resurrected for a story involving a secret
mission for the government during a time of war.
In 1906, Doyle ran unsuccessfully for Parliament a second time. The year
1907 found Arthur marrying for the second time. Jean Leckie was to bless
Doyle with three children and a devotion to his spiritualist movement.
Doyle formed a local volunteer regiment in 1914, in which he served as
a private. This regiment was later to become an official body. In the
period leading up to World War One, he was an unofficial statesman and
advocate, championing the cause for several men unfairly convicted in
criminal trials. He campaigned for lifesaving equipment and body armour
for the navy. He advocated a need for a channel tunnel during this time
as well; a dream that took three quarters of a century to be realized.
1917 was to be the last year a Sherlock Holmes story was published. By
1920, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was one of the highest paid writers in the
world. After the death of his son in World War One, Doyle immersed himself
in spiritual studies. Spiritualism became his religion. In 1921, Arthur's
mother, Mary Foley Doyle, passed away. Eight years later, Doyle suffered
from a heart attack. On July 7, 1930, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle died from
heart disease at his home in Windlesham, Sussex, England. He was originally
buried in the garden of his home, but was later moved to the village churchyard
at Minstead.
Doyle was a devoted sportsman throughout his life. As an author, he wrote
plays, verse, memoirs, short stories, historical novels, and supernatural
and speculative fiction. Many later writers have been inspired to continue
the Sherlock Holmes adventures. These stories were the first to popularize
the detective as a deducer of facts. Writers today owe many of the stereotypes
of the great detective and the ideas of the fair mystery story to Sir
Arthur Conan Doyle.
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