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This is a chronological list of the major events in the life and work of English writer and social critic G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936). Geoffrey Keating Chesterton was born on 29 May 1874 in London, England, the youngest son of journalist Charles Henry Chesterton and Marie Louise Beatrice Kelly. In 1876 his father died from a fever contracted from an infection from a newspaper story about the London slums, so they were unable to afford to keep him with them along with their other children Edward and Rose Marie. Thus, the infant Chesterton was sent to live with his uncle Charles P. Bell, an Evangelical Protestant minister and missionary, in the Bedford Park district of London. When Chesterton was 8 years old he met his future wife Frances Blogg (known to Chesterton as "Francesco"), who lived near his uncle's church and was four years older than he. She attended Sunday school at St Saviour's Church and Chesterton would take part alongside her. They first met during a game of hide-and-seek on Easter Sunday and became inseparable. In 1883 the family moved from Bedford Park to Bloomsbury. Chesterton was devastated by the move. The house he shared with his uncle was sold, and for a week they had to stay in a homeless shelter run by a London branch of the Salvation Army while a new house could be found. Uncle Charles' friend, Francis Thompson, came to live with them after he had been released from prison, and he took up residence in their house alongside Fr Frances while Chesterton's mother went on her world tour. In 1884 Frances' father died and her mother moved Frances and her two sisters to Finsbury Park where she married again. Frances and Chesterton lost touch with each other for a time, until they resumed a correspondence in 1887. In 1884 Charles was sent to study at the Jesuit school of Stonyhurst College in Lancashire. He remained there until he was 17, when his family could no longer afford to pay for his schooling. In 1892 Chesterton became a freelance journalist, contributing poetry and short stories to various magazines, including "The Illustrated London News", "Munsey's Magazine" and "The Comic Times", among others. In 1900 he married Frances Blogg, who had recently returned from Australia and they lived together in Holloway with Chesterton's mother and some of her large brood of children. In 1902 Chesterton succumbed to tuberculosis, and was taken to a sanatorium in the Swiss Alps where he nearly died. It was there that he began his first novel, "The Napoleon of Notting Hill". He abandoned it after 100 pages and it was not published until 1904 under the title of "The Girl of the Golden West". Chesterton once referred to this as his one great work of fiction. He returned home to convalesce and Frances cared for him until he recovered. In 1903 their first son, Cecil, was born. In 1909 Chesterton became the editor of "G.K.'s Weekly" where he wrote his weekly column 'The Brown Study' which ran between 1910-1912. cfa1e77820
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