From The
Shakespeare Fellowship News-Letter (American) 1940 - 1943
June-July 1940
- Is Not Oxford Here Another Anchor?
Oct to Dec
1940 - Arthur Golding: The Uncle of
Edward de Vere, And the Intimate Part He Played in the Development
of Shakespeare's Creative Genius (in two parts)
June
1941 - The Secret of Shakespeare's
Irish Sympathies: Once Again Lord Oxford's Own Personality Speaks
Through the Plays
August
1941 - Shakespeare's "Fluellen"
Identified As a Retainer of the Earl of Oxford
Dec
1941 to Oct 1942 - "Shake-speare's"
Own Secret Drama: Discovery of Hidden Facts in the Private Life of
Edward de Vere, Proves Him Author of the Bard's Sonnets (in
six parts)
December
1942 - "Shakespeare's" Unknown
Home On the River Avon Discovered: Edward de Vere's Ownership of a
Famous Warwickshire Literary Retreat Indicates Him as the True "Sweet
Swan of Avon"
February
1943 - He is Dead and Gone, Lady: The
Tragic Comedy of the Birth and Death of "Shakespeare's"
Lost Heir
April
1943 - King
of Shreds and Patches: An Examination of the Alleged Credentials of
Sir Edward Dyer as the "Great Reviser" of the Shakespearean
Works
June
1943 - Creative Calendar: An Illuminating
Shaw-Shakespeare Parallel with Ben Jonson's Testimony
August 1943
- The Real Sir Edward Dyer:
The Facts of His Life versus the Fiction of Alden Brooks
October 1943
- Who Was John Soothern? New Facts Relating
to the Identification of the Mysterious Author of Pandora, 1584
From The Shakespeare Fellowship Quarterly (American) 1944 - 1948
January 1944
- Matinee at the Swan:
A Topical Interlude in Oxford-Shakespeare Research
April 1944
- Newly Discovered Oxford-Shakespeare
Pictorial Evidence
July 1944
- Lord Oxford As Supervising Patron
of Shakespeare's Theatrical Company
October 1944
- New Milestone in Shakespearean
Research: Contemporary Proof that the Poet Earl of Oxford's Literary
Nickname was "Gentle Master William"
January 1945
- "The Sole Author of Renowned
Victorie": Gabriel Harvey Testifies In the Oxford-Shakespeare
Case
April 1945
- Earliest Authenticated "Shakespeare"
Transcript Found With Oxford's Personal Poems: A Solution of the Significant
Proximity of Certain Verses in a Unique Elizabethan Manuscript Anthology
April 1945
- Rare Military Volume Sponsored
by Lord Oxford Issused By "Shakespeare's" First Publisher:
John Harrison the Elder Provides Significant Link Between The Defence
of Militarie Profession And First Questos of the Bard's Poems
July 1945
- The Wayward Water-Bearer Who Wrote
"Shake-speare's" Sonnet 109
October 1945
- "Creature of Their Own Crating":
An Answer to the Present Day School of Shakespearean Biography
January 1946
- Exploding the Ancient Play Cobbler
Fallacy: Contemporary Evidence Proving Shakespeare Himself Chief Victim
of Play Pirates
April 1946
- A Literary Pirate's Attempt to Publish
The Winter's Tale in 1594: Significant Facts Testifying to
the Early Composition of Shakespeare's Comedy of Jealousy
July 1946
- The Playwright Earl Publishes "Hamlet's
Book": Facts Regarding Edward de Vere's Personal Interest In
a Work which Stimulated "Shakespeare's" Creative Genius
October 1946
- Shakespeare's Henry V Can
Be Identified As "Harry of Cornwall" In Henslowe's Diary:
Research Stimulated to Completion by Laurence Olivier's Great Film
Solves a Chronological Mystery
October 1946
- Proof that Shakespeare's Thought
and Imagery Dominate Oxford's Own Statement of Creative Principles:
A Discussion of the Poet Earl's 1573 Letter To the Translator of "Hamlet's
Book"
Spring 1947
- Queen Elizabeth's Master Showman
Shakes a Spear in Her Defense: Revealing Sidelights ona Dramatic Chapter
in the Life History of the Poet Earl of Oxford, Now Reproduced for
the Study of Members of The Shakespeare Fellowship
Autumn 1947
- New Proof that "Henry VIII"
Was Written Before the Spring of 1606
Winter 1947-48
- Dr. John Dover Wilson's "New"
Macbeth Is a Masterpiece Without a Master: But Oxford-Shakespeare
Research Again Fills the Void
Spring 1948
- Rarest Contemporary Description
of "Shakespeare" Proves Poet to Have Been a Nobleman: Vivid
Word-Portrait by Thomas Edwards, Long Declared "Unidentifiable"
by the Stratford experts, Yields Its Secrets Under X-Ray of Oxford
Documentation
Summer 1948
- Oxford vs. Other "Claiments"
of the Edwards Shakespearean Honors, 1593
Autumn 1948
- John Lyly as Both Oxford's and Shakespeare's
"Honest Steward"
Autumn 1948
- "In deed as in nameVere
nobilis for he was W . . (?) . .": Shakespearean Master of Revels
Discusses the Oxford Mystery In Partly Burned Manuscript, Now Fully
Transcribed