Lt. Col. Arthur Campbell-Walker FRGS (1834 – 2 April 1887) was a Scottish soldier, politician and golf player, who taught at the School of Musketry, Fleetwood.
He was appointed as an instructor at the School of Musketry, and became an advocate of armoured trains as means of strengthening the coastal defences of the United Kingdom.
[3] He was captain and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society at the time of publishing Correct Card.
He married secondly in 1883 in Steyning, Sussex, to Adelaide Lucy Katherine Marton Mowbray, widow of General Edward Mowbray R.A. At the time he was reported to be the "accepted" Conservative candidate for Westbury, but he did not take part in the election.
[6] He died in Brighton in 1887, when it was reported that, "He will be remembered as having fought two good battles in the Conservative cause at Grimsby, and his doctors believed that the last of these was most prejudicial to his health, even if it was not directly responsible for his death.