308 
A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 
[JACKSON 
at Rugby. On May 5, 1854, be was gazetted as Ensign in the 
90tb Light Infantry, and six months later proceeded with his 
regiment to the Crimea. He afterwards saw service in China 
and in India during the Mutiny. In 1868 he was stationed 
at Gibraltar and was able to devote much time to the study 
of the birds of S.-W. Andalusia and of the opposite coast of 
Barbary. He had, however, at this time, and indeed through- 
out his life, an intense objection to publishing any account 
of his experiences, and it was largely due to the late Lord 
Lilford that he was at last induced to set about his book on 
the ornithology of the Straits of Gibraltar, the first edition 
of which appeared in 1875, and the second enlarged edition 
in 1895. He also published the undermentioned Key List 
of British Birds and a number of papers in the Ibis. He died 
at his house in Cornwall Terrace, Regent’s Park, May 14, 1905. 
1888. British Birds : Key List. London : 1888. 
Collation — 1 vol. 8vo, pp. 58. 
Idem. 2nd edit., revised and enlarged. London : 1892. 
Collation — 1 vol. 8vo, pp. iv + pp. 69, with 2 pi. 
1896. Observations on the Birds of the Islands of Tiree and Coll. (Ann. 
Scott. Nat. Hist. pp. 206-10.) 
1897. Article “ Bustard.” [In the Encyclopaedia of Sport, vol. i. pp. 
160-62.] London : 1897. 4to. 
1903. Notes from Coll. (Ann. Scott. Nat. Hist. pp. 243-4.) 
Jackson (Thomas), 1812-86 
This author, born in 1812, was the son of Rev. Thos. 
Jackson, a prominent Wesleyan. He was educated at St. 
Saviour’s School, Southwark, and St. Mary’s Hall, Oxford, 
graduated B.A. in 1834, M.A. in 1837. He was nominated 
Bishop of Lyttleton, New Zealand, in 1850, and went out 
there, but was never consecrated. He was a Prebendary 
of St. Paul’s from 1850 until his death. He also wrote Our 
Dumb Companions (1864), Our Dumb Neighbours (1870), 
Stories about Animals (1874), and other works. He died at 
the Rectory, Stoke Newington, on March 18, 1886. 
[1870.] Our Leathered Companions ; or, Conversations of a Father with 
his Children about Sea-birds, Song-birds, and other Feathered 
