I thought the Selby advertisement very interesting. Didn’t know he had a partner!
It is him - before he and many others headed south for Botswana with Kenya's closure of hunting. Some great old names in the first one.G'day CAustin,
I am curious about that too, maybe it is not the Selby that we know of ?
Maybe I had better find my copy of Brian Herne's 'White Hunters' book, it's a great reference tool
Regards
Rob
It is him - before he and many others headed south for Botswana with Kenya's closure of hunting. Some great old names in the first one.
I posted this on another thread, but this is an early post-WWI travel poster for India printed in the UK. Note you could arrange your own private coach on the train.
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I thought the Selby advertisement very interesting. Didn’t know he had a partner!
See his obit - https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/20/obituaries/harry-selby-dead.htmlFrom what I've read, Selby went to work for Ker & Downey Safaris in Nairobi, which later became Ker, Downey and Selby.
See his obit - https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/20/obituaries/harry-selby-dead.html
Mr. Selby attended local schools, traveling by ox cart, and later the Prince of Wales, a boarding school in Nairobi. After World War II, he worked for Mr. Percival, who recognized his potential as a hunter-guide, and in 1949 he joined East Africa’s foremost safari outfitter, Ker & Downey, based in Nairobi. In 1956, after Mr. Ruark’s book had made him famous, he formed his own safari company, Selby & Holmberg.