Career
"Jack" was an English writer and folklorist. After leaving school he spent three months in a broker’s office and then joined the Middlesbrough Evening Telegraph (later the Evening Gazette). At twenty-one he became a freelance writer, specialising in country sports and horse racing.
From childhood, he had been interested in horses, racing and hunting and he gained practical experience of horses in a three-year spell at a training stable in Cleveland, in addition to his two days a week of hunting.
After the war he became a racing judge at Sedgefield and remained a licensed Turf official until shortly before his death. At the same time, he became secretary of the Cleveland Bay Horse Society, a post he held for twenty years, later becoming the Society’s president
He also owned, rode and raced his own horses. He was the author of 112 books on the history of horse racing, Yorkshire folklore and the Cleveland Bay.
He also wrote regularly for the Darlington and Stockton Times (for 54 years) and for Yorkshire Life.
He died at his home, Low House, Westerdale, Whitby, on 1 January 1976.