Dallas Lore Sharp
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dallas Lore Sharp (1870-1929) was an American author and university professor, born at Haleyville, Cumberland Co., N. J. He graduated at Brown University in 1895, served as a Methodist Episcopal minister for four years, and graduated at the Boston University School of Theology in 1899. He was assistant librarian (1899-1902), assistant professor of English (1902-09), and thereafter professor at Boston University. As a writer he became known through his charming magazine articles on native birds and small mammals and for his books, which include:
- Wild Life Near Home (1901)
- A Watcher in the Woods (1903)
- Roof and Meadow (1904)
- The Lay of the Land (1908)
- The Face of the Fields (1911)
- The Fall of the Year (1911)
- Winter (1912)
- The Spring of the Year (1912)
- Summer (1913)
- Beyond the Pasture Bars (1914)
- The Whole Year Round (1915)
[edit] External links
- Works by Dallas Lore Sharp at Project Gutenberg
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.