Henry Halliday Sparling

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Henry_Halliday_Sparling

Henry Halliday Sparling (1860 – 9 September 1924) was a British journalist and socialist activist. Sparling became a socialist in 1878, and soon began lecturing on the topic. He began writing for Progress in 1884, and joined the Socialist League, serving on its executive, including a stint as secretary, and assisting William Morris with editing Commonweal from 1885 to 1890. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Henry Halliday Sparling
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rdf:langString Secretary of the Socialist League
xsd:integer 1885
rdf:langString Henry Halliday Sparling (1860 – 9 September 1924) was a British journalist and socialist activist. Sparling became a socialist in 1878, and soon began lecturing on the topic. He began writing for Progress in 1884, and joined the Socialist League, serving on its executive, including a stint as secretary, and assisting William Morris with editing Commonweal from 1885 to 1890. Sparling disassociated himself from the Socialist League along with Morris, as it became dominated by anarchists, and instead found work as a sub-editor for the People's Press, moving to the Worker's Cry in 1891. That year, he joined the Fabian Society, and served on its executive from 1892 until 1894, during this period also writing the "Fabian Notes" column for the . In this period, he was also secretary to William Morris' Kelmscott Press, for whom he corrected Caxton's text of The History of Godefrey of Boloyne and of the Conquest of Iherusalem for the press. In 1894, Sparling moved to Paris as a correspondent for the and also the Clarion, returning to London in 1910. He later moved to California, then returned to Paris in the early 1920s. In 1924, his book The Kelmscott Press and William Morris was published, and he died later in the year.
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