George Denholm Armour

[1][2][3][4][5] During his career he made hundreds of illustrations for The Graphic, Punch and Country Life, most connected with horses and riding.

[2][3] He met Joseph Crawhall III on a hunting and painting holiday, and they both ran a stud farmhouse in Wheathampstead, Hertfordshire, England.

For a short period of time he shared the North Charlotte address with writer to the Signet, Adam West Gifford.

In 1910, he studied military equestrianism at the Spanish Riding School in Vienna, Austria.

[2] It was Armour who requisitioned a transfer of old friend, former Australian jackaroo and Scottish poet, Will H. Ogilvie to assist at Purton Stoke.

By 1920, Armour was living at 'Parkside', a Grade II* listed building in Corsham, west Wiltshire; while being a member of the Savage Club in London.

Caravan at a well in the desert, by G. D. Armour