Samuel Walkey (10 July 1871 – 29 March 1953) was an English bank inspector, who used his spare time when travelling to write, and became a prolific author of boy's adventure fiction. Walkey wrote at least sixteen novels and hundreds of magazine stories. He contributed stories to magazines for more than 40 years.
Early life
Samuel Walkey was born on 10 July 1871[1] at Kilkhampton, Cornwall, England. He was the son of Joshua Walkey (27 October 1828 – 1884), a draper.
Walkey entered the Devon and Cornwall Bank[2] as a clerk at 16.[3] He was a hard worker[2] and was soon promoted.[3] The 1891 census found Walkey boarding with the White family at 26 Fore Street, in Torpoint, across the river from Plymouth.
Adult life
Sometime in the 1890s he became a bank-inspector and had to travel all over the West Country.[2] Walkey was already a bank-inspector when he married Kathleen Agnes White (27 March 1873 – 15 June 1949),[1][4] the daughter of draper Seymore White, whom Walkey was boarding with in Torpoint for the 1881 census. The couple were married at St. James's Church in Torpoint on 6 September 1897.[5]
The couple had three children:
Joyce Morwenna (26 July 1898 – 3 February 1988),[6] who was the executor of her father's will.
Howarth Seymour (13 May 1900 – 20 August 1970),[1][7] who pursued a Naval Career, passing the exam for the Osborne Naval College at age 14.[8] and being appointed Rear Admiral in 1956.
John Christopher (18 October 1903 – 6 October 1989),[9] who joined the Royal Engineers, held various command positions, including Engineer-in-Chief at the War Office, before retiring with the rank of Major General in 1957.[10][note 1][11]
Walkey was appointed branch manager of the Devon and Cornwall Bank in Penzance in 1901.[2] The Devon and Cornwall Bank was acquired by Lloyds in 1906.[12] In 1908 Walkey was promoted to be manager of the new Lloyds bank at Newton Abbot, and the 1911 census found him visiting his widowed mother at his brother-in-law's house in Manchester, still a bank manager with Lloyds. He was still at Newton Abbott as he was crediting to help resolve a dispute between Lloyds and the Urban District Council over highway encroachment by the bank.[13]
Walkey left Newton Abbot in 1921.[14] In 1924, a press notice about a will for which he was executor says that he is with Lloyds Bank at Salisbury,[15] In the 1939 register Walkey records his profession as Staff Controller Lloyds Bank, retired.
Writing
Lofts states that Walkey took up writing boy's stories to while away his evenings alone. Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch, a fellow Cornishman, saw his writing and introduced him to Max Pemberton, until recently the editor of Chums in 1895.[3] Adcock states that his wife encouraged him to start writing,[16] but Walkey had his first serial in Chums two years before he got married.
Walkey wrote both boys' adventure fiction for a juvenile audience, and stirring romance fiction for an adult audience.[2] However, by a huge measure, the bulk of his output was juvenile fiction. Adcock states that Walkey wrote two adult-oriented adventure novels for Cassell's,[16] whereas Kemp and Mitchell state that Walkey published sixteen volumes of adventure fiction between 1897 and 1935.[17]
In many cases Walkey published his stories as serials first, and then as novels. For example, in April 1901 Cassell and Co. were advertising that With Redskins on the Warpath was starting in Chums (calling it a splendid new serial).[18] By October 1901 Cassell and Co were selling it as a book.[19]
Books
The following list of books is from the collated library catalogues on the Jisc Library Hub Discover site.[20] No titles by Walker were available on Project Gutenberg on 12 May 2020. Only three of his books are available in online versions, as noted below.
Books by Walkey
No
Year
Title
Illustrator
Publisher
Pages
Notes
2
1897
In quest of Sheba's treasure : a perilous adventure by land and sea
Paul Hardy was frequently an illustrator for Walkey after he illustrated Rogues of the Fiery Cross. This was Walkey's second serial story, and the second novel he published. It appeared in Chums in the 1896 – 1897 volume and it was a huge success. It was illustrated by Hardy, as was almost all of Walkey's subsequent work in Chums.[3] The story was almost immediately published as a book by Cassell & Co., London in 1897 with sixteen full-page illustrations (courtesy of the British Library,[22] as shown below:
I caught him by the collar
One caught me roughly by the throat
He drew a knife
His sword came swinging down
Turn over- he cried
A ship lay in the lagoon
The two hurtled up and down
He wore a ceaseless grin
They burst up the stairs
He drew a pistol and pulled the trigger
He flung his rapier round and round
He stabbed the second man
The Dutchman fought with desperate fury
The heavy wood dropped backwards
My fathers hands were tight upon his throat
The ship came nearer and nearer
Magazine stories
The following list shows Walkey's publications in Magazines from November 1907, some twelve years after his first known serial in 1895. Walkey averaged just under ten stories a year from 1908 to 1917, so a full list would probably list another one hundred stories. Most of the stories are juvenile fiction, but some of the stories are intended for an adult audience.
Stories by Walkey from November 1907 as listed in Steve Holland's British Juvenile Story Papers and Pocket Libraries Index[27]
No
Year
Magazine
Title of Story
Type
Date (of 1st pt.)
1
1907
Chums
Trapped by the Enemy: A Story of the Indian Frontier
Short Story
20 Nov 1907
2
1908
Chums
Comrades in Peril
Serial Story
08 Jan 1908
3
1908
Chums
The Finnish Terror: A Complete Tale of Wild Peril in the Forest of Finland
Short Story
17 Jun 1908
4
1908
The Story-teller
The Shadow of the Guillotine
Novella
Jun 1908
5
1908
Chums
The Ghost of the Haunted Abbey
Short Story
08 Jul 1908
6
1908
Chums
Chased by Wolves
Short Story
12 Aug 1908
7
1909
The Story-teller
When Terror Reigned
Short Story
Jan 1909
8
1909
The New Magazine (UK)
A Mission of Shame
Short Story
Dec 1909
9
1910
The New Magazine (UK)
The Executioner from Paris
Short Story
Feb 1910
10
1910
The Story-teller
Sir Comely's Adventure
Short Story
Aug 1910
11
1911
The Story-teller
Where Love Is Deathless
Short Story
Jan 1911
12
1911
The Story-teller
The Day of Reckoning
Novelette
Feb 1911
13
1911
The New Magazine (UK)
Sweet Rose of England
Short Story
Apr 1911
14
1911
The New Magazine (UK)
Dan of the Irish Brigade
Short Story
Sep 1911
15
1911
Chums
The Lion of Koom-Panda
Short Story
25 Oct 1911
16
1911
The New Magazine (UK)
The Enemy in the House
Short Story
Oct 1911
17
1911
Chums
Hurrah! For Merry Sherwood
Serial Story
08 Nov 1911
18
1912
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
The Land of His Fathers
Short Story
Apr 1912
19
1912
Chums
Hugo the Terrible
Short Story
18 May 1912
20
1912
Chums
The Sea-Dogs of England
Short Story
01 Jun 1912
21
1912
Chums
The Mystery Men of the Reign of Terror
Short Story
08 Jun 1912
22
1912
Chums
On the War-Trail
Novelette
08 Jun 1912
23
1912
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
All the World Loves a Lover
Novella
Jun 1912
24
1912
The New Magazine (UK)
The Outcast
Novelette
Aug 1912
25
1912
Chums
The Bloodhounds of Spain
Short Story
14 Sep 1912
26
1912
Chums
When the Redskins Were Out
Short Story
19 Oct 1912
27
1912
Chums
One of Nelson's Heroes
Short Story
26 Oct 1912
28
1912
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
Thadee and Clon of the Irish Brigade
Short Story
Oct 1912
29
1913
Chums
Crossbones Island
Serial Story
04 Jan 1913
30
1913
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
The Last of Her Race
Short Story
May 1913
31
1913
Chums
Marooned on Drowned Island
Short Story
21 Jun 1913
32
1913
The New Magazine (UK)
Blood Money
Short Story
Aug 1913
33
1913
Chums
The Two Jack-a-Lanterns
Short Story
13 Sep 1913
34
1913
Chums
The Adventure of the Chateau Noir
Short Story
20 Sep 1913
35
1913
Chums
A Night of Peril
Short Story
27 Sep 1913
36
1913
Chums
The Fight in the Snow
Short Story
04 Oct 1913
37
1913
Chums
The Traitor Aristocrat
Short Story
11 Oct 1913
38
1913
Chums
An Adventure with Captain Barleycorn
Short Story
18 Oct 1913
39
1913
The Story-teller
The Great Adventure
Novella
Oct 1913
40
1913
Chums
Exiles in Peril
Short Story
13 Dec 1913
41
1913
The Story-teller
The Prisoner of War
Short Story
Dec 1913
42
1914
Chums
The War-Whoop of the Redskins
Serial Story
21 Mar 1914
43
1914
The Story-teller
The Firebrand of La Vendée
Short Story
Aug 1914
44
1914
Chums
Captain Swing
Serial Story
12 Sep 1914
45
1915
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
The Red Dawn
Short Story
Apr 1915
46
1915
Chums
A Blow for Britain
Short Story
1 May 1915
47
1915
Chums
For Drake and Merrie England
Serial Story
19 Jun 1915
48
1915
Chums
The Spanish Pirate
Short Story
28 Aug 1915
49
1915
The New Magazine (UK)
The Honour of Benbow Brooke
Short Story
Aug 1915
50
1916
Chums
In Quest of a Kingdom
Serial Story
15 Jan 1916
51
1916
The Story-teller
Where the Heart Leads
Novella
Jan 1916
52
1916
The New Magazine (UK)
The Little Methodist
Short Story
Feb 1916
53
1916
Chums
Rimington's Bungalow
Short Story
29 Apr 1916
54
1916
Chums
On the Trail of the Head-Hunters
Short Story
6 May 1916
55
1916
Chums
The Dwarfs of the Enchanted Mountains
Short Story
13 May 1916
56
1916
Chums
The Ape-Men of the Pool
Short Story
20 May 1916
57
1916
Chums
Hoist with His Own Petard
Short Story
27 May 1916
58
1916
Chums
A Great Adventure
Short Story
03 Jun 1916
59
1916
Chums
Under the Black Flag
Serial Story
16 Sep 1916
60
1917
Chums
The Fugitives
Short Story
24 Feb 1917
61
1917
The Story-teller
The House of Ghosts
Short Story
Feb 1917
62
1917
The New Magazine (UK)
The Sword of Mahomet
Short Story
May 1917
63
1917
Chums
The Secret of the Cordillera
Short Story
16 Jun 1917
64
1917
Chums
The Ravine of Death!
Short Story
23 Jun 1917
65
1917
Chums
The Giant Sloth
Short Story
30 Jun 1917
66
1917
Chums
Wild Riders of the Plains
Short Story
07 Jul 1917
67
1917
Chums
Trapped in a Lost City!
Short Story
14 Jul 1917
68
1917
Chums
The Temple of Mystery and Terror
Short Story
21 Jul 1917
69
1917
Chums
Spanish Reef
Short Story
20 Oct 1917
70
1917
Chums
Christmas Chivalry
Short Story
08 Dec 1917
71
1918
Chums
When the Guillotine Reigned
Serial Story
12 Jan 1918
72
1918
Chums
Dead Men Tell No Tales
Short Story
27 Apr 1918
73
1918
Chums
The Pirates of Skeleton Island
Serial Story
20 Jul 1918
74
1918
Chums
On the Trail of the Master-Spy
Short Story
14 Sep 1918
75
1918
Chums
The Chateau of Mystery
Short Story
21 Sep 1918
76
1918
Chums
Traitors and Wolves
Short Story
28 Sep 1918
77
1918
Chums
Forty Thieves
Short Story
05 Oct 1918
78
1918
Chums
The Death Knell!
Short Story
12 Oct 1918
79
1918
Chums
A Duel to the Death
Short Story
19 Oct 1918
80
1918
The New Magazine (UK)
In the Cloisters
Short Story
Oct 1918
81
1918
The New Magazine (UK)
The Rat
Novella
Nov 1918
82
1919
Chums
The Pearl Stealers
Short Story
04 Jan 1919
83
1919
Chums
On the Trail of the Sea Wolf
Short Story
25 Jan 1919
84
1919
Chums
King of the Outlaws
Serial Story
08 Mar 1919
85
1919
Chums
Phantom Jack
Serial Story
31 May 1919
86
1920
Chums
The Night Rovers
Serial Story
24 Jan 1920
87
1920
Chums
The Queen's Champion
Novelette
15 May 1920
88
1920
Chums
Sea Kings and Sea Wolves
Serial Story
18 Sep 1920
89
1921
Chums
Nearly Guillotined!
Short Story
13 Aug 1921
90
1921
Chums
The Adventures of Jack-a-Lantern
Serial Story
17 Sep 1921
91
1921
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
Pendragon of Pendragon
Short Story
Nov 1921
92
1921
The New Magazine (UK)
The Keys of Heaven
Short Story
Dec 1921
93
1922
Chums
Redskins on the War-Trail
Short Story
18 Mar 1922
94
1922
Cassell's Magazine of Fiction
The Wolf
Novelette
Mar 1922
95
1922
Chums
Dead Men's Cave
Short Story
29 Apr 1922
96
1922
Chums
The Pirates of Cathay
Short Story
22 Jul 1922
97
1922
The New Magazine (UK)
Wild Justice
Novelette
Jul 1922
98
1922
Chums
When the Vikings Came
Serial Story
16 Sep 1922
99
1922
The Corner Magazine
Thirty Pieces of Silver
Short Story
Oct 1922
100
1923
Chums
Island of Flames
Short Story
13 Jan 1923
101
1923
Chums
The Ghost Tower
Short Story
19 May 1923
102
1923
Chums
The White Shark
Short Story
28 Jul 1923
103
1923
Chums
Captives in El Dorado
Serial Story
15 Sep 1923
104
1923
Chums
The Night Riders
Short Story
29 Dec 1923
105
1924
Chums
Kidnapped and Marooned
Serial Story
22 Mar 1924
106
1924
Chums
Sea-Wolves of the Main
Short Story
02 Aug 1924
107
1924
Chums
The Sword of Tallifer Trueblade
Serial Story
14 Sep 1924
108
1924
Chums
The Robber Baron
Short Story
28 Dec 1924
109
1925
Chums
Flame-Beard's Treasure
Serial Story
08 Mar 1925
110
1925
Chums
The Bloodhound from Paris
Short Story
07 Jun 1925
111
1925
Chums
Dungeon and Rack
Short Story
06 Sep 1925
112
1926
Chums
Powder-Monkey Jack
Serial Story
14 Feb 1926
113
1926
Chums
Pirate Sink-or-Burn
Short Story
12 Sep 1926
114
1927
Chums
Marooned
Short Story
30 Jan 1927
115
1927
The Story-teller
The Secret Château
Short Story
Mar 1927
116
1927
The New Magazine (UK)
The Angel of the Prison
Short Story
May 1927
117
1928
Chums
The Return of “Jack-a-Lantern”
Short Story
08 Mar 1928
118
1928
Chums
The Night of the Swords
Short Story
15 Mar 1928
119
1928
Chums
The Lost Ones of the Lonely Chateau
Short Story
22 Mar 1928
120
1928
Chums
The Vengeance of the Blue Light
Short Story
29 Mar 1928
121
1928
Chums
The Executioner from Rouen
Short Story
05 Apr 1928
122
1928
Chums
The Outwitting of the Bloodhound
Short Story
12 Apr 1928
123
1928
Chums
The Secret Castle
Short Story
19 Apr 1928
124
1928
Chums
To Rescue the King
Short Story
26 Apr 1928
125
1928
Aldine Adventure Library
The Pirates of El Dorado
Novel
#16 1928
126
1929
The Story-teller
The Raven
Short Story
Apr 1929
127
1929
Cassell's Magazine
The Dancer and the Guillotine
Short Story
May 1929
128
1929
The Story-teller
The Lonely Inn
Short Story
Oct 1929
129
1929
Chums
Rogues of the “Roaring Glory”
Serial Story
03 Dec 1929
130
1930
The New Magazine (UK)
Red Dawn
Short Story
Apr 1930
131
1931
Chums
Drake Goes West!
Serial Story
27 Oct 1931
132
1934
Chums
Nelson's Peril
Short Story
19 Jul 1934
133
1935
Chums
Near the Shadow of the Guillotine
Short Story
19 Feb 1935
134
1935
Chums
Bowmen of Sherwood
Short Story
19 Apr 1935
135
1935
Chums
Redskins on the War Trail!
Short Story
19 Jun 1935
136
1935
Chums
Marooned on Rover Island
Short Story
19 Jul 1935
137
1936
Chums Annual
Captain Crossbones’ Treasure
Short Story
1937 Annual
138
1936
Chums Annual
The Decoy Ship
Short Story
1938 Annual
139
1936
Chums Annual
In Quest of Black Solomon
Short Story
1939 Annual
140
1936
Chums Annual
Red Falcon's Last Fight
Short Story
1940 Annual
141
1936
Chums Annual
The Three Sea Wolves
Short Story
1941 Annual
142
1936
Chums Annual
Three Skulls Island
Short Story
1942 Annual
143
1939
Chums Annual
The Treasure of Pirates’ Island
Novella
1943 Annual
Later life
Walkey's promotions at Lloyds had taken him from the West Country, but he returned there when he retired,[3] settling at Westcliffe Road in Dawlish, Devonshire, England. Kathleen died first, on 15 June 1949.[4] Walkey himself followed four years later, dying on 29 March 1953 in Teignmouth, Devonshire.[28]
Assessment
Turner states that Chums was chiefly remembered (when he was writing in 1948) for the pirate stories of Walkey and others. He notes that Walkey contributed his fast-moving tales of villainy for more than thirty years.[29] Cullingford noted that writers like Walkey had a large and devoted following.[30]The Cornishman noted that his stories were read with zest by the boys of England.[2]
Thomas told how on a visit to a boarding school, he had asked the boys if they had ever heard of Walkey; A shout went up – "Rather!". Thomas said that his own reputation was increased merely because he could tell boys a little bit about Walkey.[31] Perhaps Walkey is best assessed by his impact. Geoffrey Trease wrote that Walkey's Hurrah for Merry Sherwood! was his favourite story, and that it was therefore not surprising that the first boys' story he wrote was Bows against the Barons (1934).[32] Trease's boyhood impression of the French Revolution were all gained from a Walkey story about the reign of terror. He re-read the story and concluded that Walkey wrote quite well.[33] In a tongue-in-cheek review of Yo Ho! for the Spanish Main, Herbert advised boys not to buy the book as it would take away their appetite for cube root and the least common denominator and the pluperfect tense. He maintained that Mr. Walkey and his publisher were not sedate enough companions for the young not a sedate enough companion for the young.[31]
Notes
^John was evacuated from the Empire Windrush just before she sank in 1954.
^Available on-line at the British Library. This book was part of the standard stock of Boots Circulating Libraries in 1903.
^Adult Fiction. Three versions of this book are available online at the Hathi Trust, and one of these versions is also available at the Internet Archive . This book was part of the standard stock of Boots Circulating Libraries in 1903.
^ ab"Birth, Marriages, & Deaths: Deaths". Western Morning News (Friday 17 June 1949): 4. 17 June 1949.
^St. James's Church. "Marriages solemnized in St Jame's in the Parish of Torpoint in the County of Cornwall in 1897". Cornwall, England, Parish Registers, 1538-2010. Torpoint: Parish of Torpoint. p. 37.
^A. & C. Black Ltd. (1991). "Walkey, Maj. Gen. John Christoper". Who Was Who: Volume VIII 1980-1990: A Companion to Who's Who Containing the Biographies of Those Who Died During the Decade 1981-1990. Vol. III. New York: St Martin's Press. p. 785.
^"Troopship sinks while in tow". Northern Whig (Tuesday 30 March 1954): 1. 30 March 1954.
^"Devon and Cornwall Bank: Amalgamated with Lloyds". Cornishman (Thursday 01 February 1906): 1. 1 February 1906.
^"Newton Urban". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette (Tuesday 17 January 1911): 6. 17 January 1911.
^"West of England News". Western Morning News (Monday 08 August 1921): 3. 8 August 1921.
^"Admiral's Will". Western Morning News (Tuesday 19 August 1924): 4. 19 August 1924.
^Kemp, Sandra; Mitchell, Charlotte; Trotter, David (1997). "Wynne, May". Edwardian Fiction: An Oxford Companion. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 425–426.
^"Chums". Croydon's Weekly Standard (Saturday 27 April 1901): 6. 27 April 1901.
^"Christmas Gift Books". The Sphere (Saturday 19 October 1901): 2. 19 October 1901.
^ abBoots Book-lovers Library (1903). "Works of Fiction". Modern English Literature: A selection of the best known works circulated by Books Book-lovers Library with which is embodies a guide to popular works of fiction. Nottingham: Boots Book-lovers Library. p. 456.
^Turner, E. S (2012). "VI: Not so Callow". Boys will be Boys: The Story of Sweeny Todd, Deadwood Dick, Sexton Blake, Billy Bunter, Dick Barton et al. London: Faber and Faber. pp. unpaginated e-book.