Samuel Loxton

[2] He worked closely with the Bristol journalist and editor of the Daily Press, George Frederick Stone, with whom he produced a popular series of historical articles for the Observer.

[3] Loxton died on 5 February 1922 following a period of ill health and was buried in Canford Cemetery, Westbury-on-Trym, leaving a widow and two grown up daughters.

[2] Many of Loxton illustrations of Bristol were republished in a contemporary history of the city published in 1909 with George F.

[6] The library have scanned these and made copies of them available on its Flikr site,[7] at resolutions ranging up to c. 200 KB.

The Bristol Record Society produced higher-resolution scans of some of the images (up to 6 MB), taken from Stone's volume.

A 1919 Loxton illustration of Hotwells Halt railway station .