About the Author
A. H. Godfrey was an early-twentieth-century British sporting editor associated with The Field Illustrated, a sister publication to the long-running British sporting weekly The Field. The Field, founded in 1853, was the leading sporting and country-life periodical of late-Victorian and Edwardian Britain, and the illustrated companion editions for which Godfrey worked carried photographic and engraved coverage of hunting, shooting, fishing, equestrian sport, and country pursuits to readers in Britain and the British colonies.
The Field Illustrated volumes from the 1910s and early 1920s catalogued in major research libraries today reflect the rhythms of the British sporting calendar β point-to-point meetings, county hunts, regattas, country shows, and the great race meetings at Ascot, Goodwood, and Doncaster. As editor, Godfrey shaped the visual and editorial presentation of this sporting world during the years immediately before, during, and after the First World War β a period of considerable upheaval in the British rural and sporting establishment.
Like many editorial figures of his era and field, Godfrey left a smaller documentary footprint than the prominent journalists and bylined writers of the same period. His contribution survives chiefly in the bound editions of The Field Illustrated preserved in sporting libraries, country-house collections, and research archives, where they continue to serve as primary visual sources for historians of Edwardian and inter-war British sporting culture.
Readers interested in the broader context of his work will find natural companions in the contemporary writings of Alfred E. T. Watson at the Badminton Magazine and the wider corpus of British sporting journalism from the same decades.
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