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The Field is a British monthly magazine about country matters and field sports. It was started as a weekly magazine in 1853, [2] and has remained in print since then; Robert Smith Surtees was among the founders. [3] In the nineteenth century, it was known as Field: The Country Gentleman's Newspaper.
Chester Burton Atkins (June 20, 1924 – June 30, 2001), also known as "Mister Guitar" and "the Country Gentleman", was an American musician who, along with Owen Bradley and Bob Ferguson, helped create the Nashville sound, the country music style which expanded its appeal to adult pop music fans. He was primarily a guitarist, but he also played ...
In 1945, Ted Kesting, an associate editor of Country Gentleman magazine, was hired as editorial director and brought from Philadelphia to Minneapolis. His assignment was to expand and modernize Sports Afield. Only 26 years of age, he was the youngest editor of a major national publication in the United States. Kesting soon signed up more writers.
The Country Gentleman (1852–1955) was an American agricultural magazine founded in 1852 in Albany, New York, by Luther Tucker. [1]Since the founder, Luther Tucker, had started Genesee Farmer in 1831, which merged with The Cultivator, which was merged into The Country Gentleman, the claim has been made that it was as old as The Genesee Farmer.
According to contemporaneous accounts, a cattleman named Dick McNulty and Chalk Beeson (owner of the Long Branch Saloon), convinced Allison and his cowboys to surrender their guns. Charlie Siringo , a cowboy at the time, but later a well-known Pinkerton detective , had witnessed the incident and left a written account.
Founding member (and the only one who was with the group from the beginning until the end), Charlie Waller played exclusively the acoustic guitar. There were other members of the group, who contributed with guitar playing from time to time, especially for the songs where banjo was omitted, or when the group needed to overdub an extra acoustic guitar.
Early Rebel Recordings: 1962–1971 is a compilation album by the progressive bluegrass band Country Gentlemen.A collection of 110 songs, 5 of them previously unreleased, divided on 4 CD's, the album includes various lineups of the early Country Gentlemen.
The Country Gentleman, July 29, 1922 (Lady in a Car) The Country Gentleman, August 26, 1922 (Boys Crossing Fence) The Country Gentleman, September 2, 1922 (Look Out, Vicious Bull) The Country Gentleman, September 30, 1922 (Boy with Apples Caught on Barbed Wire) The Country Gentleman, October 28, 1922 (Girl Looking for Future Husband in Mirror)