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facts about frederick selous.html

42 Facts About Frederick Selous

facts about frederick selous.html1.

Frederick Selous was pre-eminent within a group of big game hunters that included Abel Chapman and Arthur Henry Neumann.

2.

Frederick Selous was the older brother of the ornithologist and writer Edmund Selous.

3.

Frederick Courteney Selous was born on 31 December 1851 at Regent's Park, London, as one of the five children of an upper middle class family, the third-generation descendant of a Huguenot immigrant.

4.

Frederick Selous's father, Frederick Lokes Slous, was Chairman of the London Stock Exchange, and his mother, Ann Holgate Sherborn, was a published poet.

5.

From a young age, Frederick Selous was drawn by stories of explorers and their adventures.

6.

One account is related by his schoolmaster at Northamptonshire when Frederick Selous was 10 years old:.

7.

On 15 January 1867,15-year-old Frederick Selous was one of the survivors of the Regent's Park skating disaster, when the ice covering the local lake broke with around 200 skaters on it, leaving 40 dead by drowning and freezing.

8.

Frederick Selous escaped by crawling on broken ice slabs to the shore.

9.

Frederick Selous was educated at Bruce Castle School, Tottenham, then at Rugby, and finally abroad in Germany and Austria.

10.

Frederick Selous's parents hoped that he would become a doctor.

11.

Frederick Selous's imagination was strongly fuelled by the literature of African exploration and hunting, Dr David Livingstone, and William Charles Baldwin in particular.

12.

Frederick Selous's travels added greatly to the knowledge of the country now known as Zimbabwe.

13.

In 1890, Frederick Selous entered the service of the British South Africa Company, at the request of magnate Cecil Rhodes, acting as a guide to the pioneer expedition to Mashonaland.

14.

Frederick Selous then went east to Manica, concluding arrangements that brought the country there under British control.

15.

Frederick Selous returned to Africa to take part in the First Matabele War of 1893 and was wounded during the advance on Bulawayo.

16.

Frederick Selous returned to England, and married Mary Maddy in 1894.

17.

Frederick Selous has set a magnificent example to all ranks, and the value of his services with his battalion cannot be over-estimated.

18.

On 4 January 1917, Frederick Selous was fighting in the bush war on the banks of the Rufiji River against German colonial Schutztruppen, which outnumbered his troops five to one.

19.

Frederick Selous was shot in the head by a German sniper and was killed instantly.

20.

Frederick Selous led a singularly adventurous and fascinating life, with just the right alternations between the wilderness and civilization.

21.

Frederick Selous helped spread the borders of his people's land.

22.

Frederick Selous added much to the sum of human knowledge and interest.

23.

Frederick Selous closed his life exactly as such a life ought to be closed, by dying in battle for his country while rendering her valiant and effective service.

24.

Frederick Selous is remembered for his powerful ties, such as those with Theodore Roosevelt and Cecil Rhodes, as well as for his military achievements and the books that he left behind.

25.

On 2 May 1902, Frederick Selous was elected Associate Member of the Boone and Crockett Club, a wildlife conservation organization founded by Theodore Roosevelt and George Bird Grinnell in 1887.

26.

Contrary to popular belief, Frederick Selous did not lead Roosevelt's 1909 expedition to British East Africa, the Congo, and Egypt.

27.

Mr Frederick Selous is the last of the big game hunters of Southern Africa; the last of the mighty hunters whose experience lay in the greatest hunting ground which this world has seen since civilized man has appeared herein.

28.

In 1909, Selous co-founded the Shikar Club, a big-game hunters' association, with two other British Army Captains, Charles Edward Radclyffe and P B Vanderbyl, and regularly met at the Savoy Hotel in London.

29.

Frederick Selous was a rifleman icon and a valued expert in firearms.

30.

Many of the Frederick Selous trophies entered into museums and international taxidermy and natural-history collections, notably that of the Natural History Museum in London.

31.

Frederick Selous is mentioned widely in foremost taxidermist Rowland Wards catalogs for world's largest animal specimens hunted, where Selous is ranked in many trophy categories, including rhinoceros, elephant and many ungulates.

32.

Frederick Selous was awarded the Royal Geographical Society's Founder's Medal in 1893 "in recognition of twenty years' exploration and surveys in South Africa".

33.

Frederick Selous noticed over time how the impact of European hunters was leading to a significant reduction in the amount of game available in Africa.

34.

The Frederick Selous Game Reserve in southeastern Tanzania is a hunting reserve named in his honor.

35.

Frederick Selous was widely remembered in real tales of war, exploration, and big game hunting as a balanced blend between gentleman officer and epic wild man.

36.

Frederick Selous excelled in cricket, rugby, cycling, swimming, and tennis.

37.

Frederick Selous was an accomplished rider, and he waged war and hunted much on horses.

38.

In social intercourse, Frederick Selous had a presence that was apt to make other people look insignificant.

39.

Frederick Selous had a rooted objection to wearing a cork helmet.

40.

Frederick Selous was as straight as a guardsman, with a broad deep chest, with a beautiful healthy look in his face.

41.

Frederick Selous wrote the foreword to Africa's most popular man-eater story: The man-eaters of Tsavo and other East African Adventures by Lieut.

42.

Besides the works mentioned, Frederick Selous made numerous contributions to The Geographical Journal, the Field, and other journals.