This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Bernard Waters (1852–1911), also known as Benjamin Waters, was an American sportsman, professional dog trainer, field trial judge, conservationist, editor, reporter and author who wrote a number of books about sporting dogs under the pen name "Kingrail" around the turn of the 19th/20th centuries.[1]
Mr. Waters was a member of the handicap committee at the 1900 Grand American trap shoot and was employed as an editor by Forest and Stream Publishing Company (forerunner of Field & Stream magazine), which was located at 318 Broadway in New York City.
Publications
editBooks
edit- Modern Training, Handling and Kennel Management, Chicago, The Blakely Printing Co., 1889, 373p
- The American Book of the Dog, Chicago and New York, Rand, McNally and Company, 1891, 702 p
- Training and Handling of the Dog, Boston, Little Brown, 1894, 332p
- Modern Training and Handling, Boston, J. Loring Thayer Publishing Co, 1894, 332p.
- Fetch and Carry, a Treatise on Retrieving, New York, Forest and Stream Publishing Company, 1895, 124p.
- Training the Hunting Dog for the Field and Field Trials, New York, Forest and Stream Publishing Company, 1st edition 1901, 2nd edition 1908, 281p.
Periodicals
edit- Outing Magazine
- Field Trials of Setters and Pointers. Outing, September 1902, Vol. XXXX, No. 6 pp. 728–732
- The New York Dog Show. The Sporting Classes. Outing, April, 1903, Vol. XLII, No. 1, p. 130-131
- Sporting Life
- Wildwood's Magazine
References
edit- ^ "Forest and Stream". Forest and Stream Publishing Company. August 3, 1911 – via Google Books.
External links
edit- Complete text of "The American Book of the Dog" on Internet Archive
- Complete text of "Modern Training and Handling" at GoogleBooks