Knowledge (XXG)

William R. Bradshaw

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Entering the interior of the world via a Symmes Hole, the protagonists from the world above find an advanced civilization who use spiritual power to do everything from maintain youth to resurrect the dead. In a civil war that erupts following the Atvatabar Goddess's love for a surface man, Lexington
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A member of the Republican party, he served as a party district captain in Flushing. Bradshaw died after a brief illness at his home at 37 Locust Street, Flushing on July 19, 1927, aged 75. He was survived by his wife, two sons and three daughters.
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White, the ruling powers are overthrown and Lexington White becomes the new king of Atvatabar, the Goddess his queen, and rich trade relations with the surface are opened. It was published by
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magazine. He wrote a number of books, most importantly on vivisection, but is remembered mainly for a work of fiction,
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The Goddess of Atvatabar: being the history of the discovery of the interior world, and conquest of Atvatabar
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The Goddess of Atvatabar: being the history of the discovery of the interior world, and conquest of Atvatabar
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from 1896 until his death (residing at 57 St. George's Place, Flushing, during December, 1913).
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Bradshaw contributed regularly to a number of magazines, and served as editor of two of them,
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Bradshaw was born in 1851 in Ireland and moved to the United States in 1883.
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and lecturer who served as president of the New York
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Index

William Richard Bradshaw
Flushing, Queens, New York
Science fiction
The Goddess of Atvatabar
County Down
editor
Anti-Vivisection Society
science fiction
The Goddess of Atvatabar
Flushing
Queens
New York
vivisectionism

Literary Life
The Decorator
Decorator and Furnisher
Field and Stream
Utopian
hollow Earth
John Cleves Symmes, Jr.
J. F. Douthitt
Julian Hawthorne
Cyrus Durand Chapman
The Art Amateur


BRADSHAW, WILLIAM R.
Who's Who in America
archive.org

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