Clay Perry
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Clay Perry (Clair Willard Perry) was an American writer and outdoorsman. Born in 1887 in Waupaca, Wisconsin, he moved to western Massachusetts as a young man. A novelist, short story writer, and journalist, in the 1930s he worked for the Federal Writers' Project. He is best known as an amateur caver and as a writer on the caves of New England and the northeastern United States. He is credited with coining the term spelunker in the 1940s. He was also the author of a light verse on Israel Bissell, whose ride in April 1775 to warn the colonies of the Battles of Lexington and Concord was overshadowed in historical lore by that of Paul Revere. He died in 1961 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.
[edit] See also
- Justin Clay Perry, an American jazz, pop, and Latin pianist/arranger