The Sketch
From The Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia

The Sketch was a British weekly newspaper founded in 1893, wellknown for being the first newspaper to publish the short stories of Agatha Christie between 1923 and 1924. The paper also featured short stories from other authors such as Algernon Blackwood, Walter de la Mare. The Sketch ceased publication in 1959.
In 1902, the newspaper published a letter written by Arthur Conan Doyle.
By Conan Doyle in The Sketch
1902
- 19.03.1902 : Letter to Fletcher Robinson (letter)
Related articles
1897
- 31.03.1897 : The Omar Khayyam Club (1 illustration)
1898
- 15.06.1898 : The Anglo-American Banquet
- 28.12.1898 : The Late Harold Frederic
1899
- 26.04.1899 : The Children of Well-known Men: Dr. Conan Doyle (3 photos)
- 14.06.1899 : Dr. Doyle as Dramatist
1900
- 07.03.1900 : The Langman Hospital (4 photos)
- 16.05.1900 : The Sketch Arm-Chair Trip to the Seat of War (8 photos)
1901
- 03.04.1901 : Dr. Conan Doyle in Edinburgh
- 03.04.1901 : Dr. Conan Doyle, Author of the Great Boer War (1 photo)
1902
- 08.01.1902 : Dr. Conan Doyle's The Great Boer War, by Robert Machray (1 photo)
1904
- 20.07.1904 : The Literature of the Scottish Borders (report of lecture)
1906
- 14.03.1906 : The Stage from the Stalls (2 photos)
1907
- 16.01.1907 : Sherlock Holmes Attacks Police Methods in Real Life (1 photo)
- 23.01.1907 : The Strongest Argument in Favour of Edalji's Innocence (2 photos)
- 03.07.1907 : The Penalty of Knighthood
- 31.07.1907 : History Made or Making
1909
- 30.06.1909 : The Author-Doctor in the Consulting-Room of the Actor-Doctor (1 photo)
1911
- 10.05.1911 : The Last Galley (review)
1919
- 26.02.1919 : Spiritualistic Monkey-Tricks, by Nevil Maskelyne (2 photos)
1922
- 13.09.1922 : Photographing the Fairies
1923
- 25.04.1923 : On board the SS. Olympic (1 photo)
1924
- 02.01.1924 : Conan Doyle's First Client
1926
- 10.11.1926 : Celebrities in Undress: XXXIII. — Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1 photo)
1938
- 01.06.1938 : What Every Woman Wants to Know (photos)
1948
- 17.03.1948 : Cut-Throat Bridge (1 photo)