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This page may be referred to as:
www.birmingham.gov.uk/doyle
Elementary, my dear reader (or Conan Doyle in Birmingham)
Arthur (later Sir Arthur) Conan Doyle, author of the Sherlock Holmes Mysteries
and more, lived and worked in Aston (now part of Birmingham, but then a
separate town) for several months each year, from about Spring 1879 to
early 1882. He was 19 at the beginning of that period, taking up a
temporary medical assistantship, as a dispensing assistant (what we might
call an assistant chemist or pharmacist) while studying at Edinburgh
University. His employer and landlord in Birmingham was Dr Hoare, and
Doyle developed a close friendship with his family, whom he visited more
than once subsequently. Family members (but not Dr Hoare, who had died in
1898) joined such noted guests as J.M. Barrie, Jerome K. Jerome and Bram
Stoker at Doyle's wedding at St Margaret's in Westminster in 1907.
Doyle wrote in his "Memories and Adventures" (p 28-9) of 1924 that:
"Hoare was a fine fellow, stout, square, red-faced bushy - whiskered and
dark-eyed. His wife was also very kindly and gifted woman, and my position
in the house was soon rather that of a son than of an assistant"
Hoare was almost certainly the inspiration for Dr Horton on Doyle's "The
Stark-Munro Letters". It seems that Doyle wrote stories - sadly lost to us
- for Dr Hoare's children. During his first stay in Birmingham, Doyle
published both his first story, 'The Mystery of Sasassa Valley', in
Chambers's Journal (6 September 1879) and his first non-fiction work,
'Gelseminum as a Poison', in the British Medical Journal (20 September
1879). The latter describes how he experimented up on himself with the
drug, in the name of medical research. Dr Hoare also wrote for the BMJ.
He spent some time away from Birmingham, working as ship's doctor on a
Greenland Whaler from March - October 1880, and on a ship touring the West
Coast of Africa, ending in January 1882. On his return, he wrote about the
second of these trips, for the British Journal of Photography, as well as
stories such as "Bones" and "The Actor's Duel", and an article for the
medical journal, "The Lancet" about his diagnosis and cure of the disease
Leucocythaemia.
Despite such learned work, Doyle was not all
serious, and was cautioned by the Aston Police for sending out fake
invitations to a Mayor's Ball, as a practical joke. He also indulged his
musical talents, buying a violin from a shop in, it is believed, Sherlock
Street. It is thought that he took inspiration for the name of "The Hound
of the Baskervilles" from John Baskerville.
He left Birmingham
when he graduated as a doctor, adding the letters MB, CM(Edin.) after his
name. Little of the Aston he knew survives. There was a clock at Aston
Cross, but not the one which stands on the traffic island today. He would,
of course, have known of, and perhaps visited, nearby Aston Hall and the
adjacent Church. Another detective writer, and Holmes acadmeic, Raymond
Knox, lived in the Vicarage, when his father was Vicar at the church some
ten years after Doyle's departure.
Doyle's time here is
commemorated by a blue plaque on the front of the modern building which
now stands on the site of his former home, at 63, Aston Road North,
currently the offices of "Just for Starters" near the northern end of
Aston Bridge flyover, opposite the Police Depot. The current location of
an earlier plaque, unveiled on the site in the 1950s, is not known. Please
tell us if you can help find it!
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