Samuel Walkey 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.
I caught him by the collar
One caught me roughly by the throat
He drew a knife
His sword came swinging down
Newton Abbot is a market town and civil parish on the River Teign in the Teignbridge District of Devon, England. Its population was 24,029 in 2011, and was estimated at 26,655 in 2019. It grew rapidly in the Victorian era as the home of the South Devon Railway locomotive works. This later became a major steam engine shed, retained to service British Railways diesel locomotives until 1981. It now houses the Brunel industrial estate. The town has a race course nearby, the most westerly in England, and a country park, Decoy. It is twinned with Besigheim in Germany and Ay in France.
View over central Newton Abbot taken from Wolborough Hill, July 2005
Newton Abbot railway station
Newton's Place, formerly St Leonard's Church: Town Council's headquarters since 2021.
Photochrom of St Leonard's Tower, 1895