George Greenwood
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Sir George Greenwood (1850–1928), born George Granville Greenwood, was the second son of John Greenwood, Q.C. Educated at Eton, he was in the "select" for the Newcastle scholarship and then matriculated to Trinity College, Cambridge. As a foundation scholar, he took his degree with a first class in the classical tripos in 1873. Having been called to the Bar by the Middle Temple in 1876, he joined the Western Circuit. He married in 1878 Laura, daughter of Dr. Cumberbatch and had one son and three daughters.
He contested Peterborough in 1876 and Central Hull in 1900. In 1906 he won Peterborough for the Liberal Party and held it till December 1915, when forced by rheumatism to retire. He was knighted in 1916.
He was an ardent supporter of all measures for the protection of animals, and was on the Council of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, and was President of many similar societies. While he was in Parliament his consistent vigilance and practical knowledge were of great service. He was an outspoken advocate for the independence of India at a time when the Indian cause lacked effective voices within England.
Greenwood was also one of the most persistent and effective fighters in the Shakespeare authorship question, and published many books on the subject. He was a frequent correspondent to The Times, both on Shakespearean subjects and on the protection of animals.
[edit] Publications
Greenwood is the author of twelve books and numerous articles on the authorship question, all published 1908-1924. A prolific and entertaining writer, he engaged in a series of well-known public debates, carried on in books and in public forums of exchange such as newspapers and literary journals, with Sir Sidney Lee, the leading Shakespearean biographer of his generation. Although the most effective anti-Stratfordian of the early decades of the 20th century, Greenwood refused to endorse an alternative author of the Shakespearean canon, preferring instead to remain agnostic on the identity of the author while steadfastly maintaining that the traditional view of authorship was ultimately indefensible. In 1922 he joined with J. Thomas Looney to establish The Shakespeare Fellowship, the organization which subsequently carried forward public discussion of the authorship question up to the 1940's.
His major publications include:
- The Shakespeare Problem Restated (1908)
- In re Shakespeare: Beeching vs Greenwood (1909)
- The Vindicators of Shakespeare (1911)
- Is There a Shakespeare Problem? (1916)
- Letters to The Nation and the Literary Guide (1915-1916)
- Shakespeare's Law and Latin (1916)
- Shakespeare's Law (1920)
- Shakspere's Handwriting (1920)
- Ben Johnson and Shakespeare (1921)
- Baconian Essays (Introduction and two essays) (1922)
- Lee, Shakespeare and a Tertium Quid (1923)
- Shakespeare's Signature and "Sir Thomas More" (1924).
[edit] External links
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