William Barker Daniel

[2] He did receive an appointment as private chaplain to the Prince of Wales, in 1788, which he is thought to have retained for most of his life.A correspondent in the Gentleman's Magazine of 1802 wrote of him as "fitter to act the character of Nimrod than that of a dignitary in the church of England".At the end of 1833 he died in Garden Row, within the rules of the King's Bench, where he had resided for 20 years.was issued in 1812, and a supplementary volume in 1813, dedicated to the Marquis of Blandford, a miscellaneous collection with a bibliography of angling (from Henry Ellis).Ralph Payne-Gallwey noted the book as one of the earliest accounts of shooting wildfowl from a punt.
field sportsColchesterFelsted SchoolChrist's College, Cambridgeholy ordersChurch of EnglandRichard GilbertPrince of WalesGentleman's MagazineNimrodrules of the King's BenchJoseph Holden StruttHuntingcoursingMarquis of BlandfordanglingHenry EllisDictionary of National Biographypublic domain