Arthur Gray[1] (28 September 1852[2] –12 April 1940[3]) was an English author, academic, Master of Jesus College, Cambridge from 1912 until his death.
[4] Gray was educated at Blackheath Proprietary School and Jesus College, Cambridge.
[6] In 1917 he founded the Order of the Red Rose, an anti-Semitic group opposed to finance capitalism, with the zoologist George Percival Mudge, and the barrister William John Sanderson.
[7] As a writer, Gray is primarily known for his Gothic ghost short stories collected in 1919 in Tedious Brief Tales of Granta and Gramarye, published under the pseudonym "Ingulphus".
Gray had six sons with his wife Alice Honora Gell (born 1857), whom he married in 1882.