William Henry Boulton (author)

To be distinguished from William Henry Boulton (1812–1874) Canadian politician.

W. H. Boulton (1869–1964) was an English writer on assyriology, transport history and religious subjects.

William Henry Boulton was born on 11 April 1869 in Clerkenwell, Middlesex, to Joseph Boulton, a brassfounder[1] and Ann Maria Elwood. He married Charlotte Harding on 15 August 1891 in Hackney, Middlesex. They settled in Ilford and had 5 children. Following the death of his first wife he remarried, to Alice Ionia Westmoreland on 14 May 1921 at West Ham, Essex. W.H. Boulton died on 27 November 1964 in Birmingham at the age of 95 years.

For most of his life W.H. Boulton was employed as an auditor.[2][3] His interest in assyriology was that of a gifted amateur. He became a regular author for Sampson Low, Marston & Company Ltd. on the Ancient Near East. A secondary interest was transport; on this subject his major work was The pageant of transport through the ages (1931).

W.H. Boulton was also active in the Christadelphian church, and, along with Henry Sulley, was a frequent contributor of archaeology articles in The Christadelphian magazine during the editorship of C.C. Walker. Following Boulton's retirement he relocated from London to Birmingham and assisted Walker's successor as editor John Carter.

His son, A. H. Boulton (1904–1981), was a regular contributor to The Testimony magazine.[4]

Works

Historical:

Transport:

Religious:

References

  1. Census table
  2. 1901 Census; "Ilford. Audit Clerk"
  3. 1911 Census; Romford Essex
  4. for example the article Jude and the Book of Enoch The Testimony, July 1932
  5. Anthony Burton The British Museum: a history 2003 "allotted 223 pages of description to the collections....15 pages to how the museum was run"
  6. Eric Gidal Poetic exhibitions: romantic aesthetics and the pleasures of the British Museum - Page 2001 p.211-213, 267
  7. archive.org microform
  8. Open Library 4Mb pdf searchable
  9. review in Expository Times 1924
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