Henry Gardiner Adams (c.1811–1881) was an English druggist and chemist, known as an author and anthologist.[1] He wrote juvenile literature under the pseudonym Nemo.[2]
The Kentish Coronal (1841). Adams contacted Charles Dickens in 1840 about contributing to a Kentish journal, but Dickens declined.[9][10] Arthur Brook (John Chalk Claris) did contribute.[11]
Flowers; their moral, language, and poetry (1844)[12]
The Language and Poetry of Flowers (1853 and later editions, US editions from 1844).[14][15] This anthology was Christian in tone, and aimed at a female audience.[16]
A Cyclopædia of Poetical Quotations (1853)[17][18]
God's Image in Ebony: Being a Series of Biographical Sketches, Facts, Anecdotes, Etc., Demonstrative of the Mental Powers and Intellectual Capacities of the Negro Race (1854), by Frederick William Chesson and Wilson Armistead[20]
Lewis, Catherine M., and Lewis, J. Richard, (eds.) Jim Crow America: A Documentary History. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 2009. ISBN9781610752138 (p.4)
Patricia Allderidge (September 2008). Richard Dadd (1817–1886): Dreams of Fancy: a Loan Exhibition, Including Works from the Bethlem Royal Hospital, 2nd July–11th July, 2008. Andrew Clayton–Payne. p.20. ISBN978-0-9559480-0-8.