221b Baker St, Marylebone, London W1.
221B Baker Street, London W 1
221b Baker Street London NW1 6XE England. Check the link below.
Sherlock Holmes' real name is Sherlock Holmes.
Sherlock Holmes, he is never given a middle name. We can only speculate, and that, I think, is for the better.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, never gave him a middle name, there for it is just Sherlock Holmes.
Sherlock Homes was a man. And, just make sure you know that Sherlock Holmes was not real life detective, only a well thought of character in a book. Any Human on Planet Earth could very well become as clever and mischievous as Sherlock Holmes, if only they would learn to use their full brain capacity....lol, which I'm sure is not possible for the human race.
A fictional character created by the famous writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Sherlock Holmes is a consulting detective/sleuth who solves cases simply with the power of observation and deduction. The reason people are drawn to this particular character is probably because he was the unlikely detective, a cocaine addicted man with an obsession for studying crime.
Study in Scarlet, Sign of Four, and The Hound of the Baskervilles ------ Those are the first 3 Sherlock Holmes novels, but the first 3 overall Conan Doyle novels are: A Study in Scarlet (1887) Micah Clarke (1889) The Mystery of Cloomber (1889)
The Hound of the Baskervilles was one of four full-length Sherlock Holmes novels written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.This book is one in a series of Dective stories featuring Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson. It is written by Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle a Scottish physician and prominent writer.
There are four full-length Sherlock Holmes novels as well as fifty-six short stories, which makes sixty in all. A few of the more well known ones include; The Hound of the Baskervilles, A Study in Scarlet, The Speckled Band, The Redheaded League, The Engineer's Thumb and A Scandal in Bohemia.
There is no manner of address for the Mayor of London other than "Mayor."
Hello. In the best effort I can, I would like to try and answer the question posed of why Sherlock Holmes didn't want his picture taken. In the dialogue exchanged after Lord Blackwood was taken away in cuffs, Sherlock and Watson discuss with the Inspector about how London will sigh a relief over Blackwood being captured. In a bout of selflessness, Holmes offers the Inspector a cigar and congratulates HIM (THE INSPECTOR) as being the sole individual who has accomplished solving the case. As not to take away from that, Holmes tries to cover up his face so that it will hopefully look like the Inspector was with someone who was not important enough (or perhaps was the criminal themselves who did not want their picture taken) to bother having a picture taken with. In otherwords, Holmes was hoping that by blocking his face, those reading the paper would take a quick glance, notice that there was indeed someone else there, but then turn away and devote their full attention to the man whose picture WAS taken --- the Inspector's (with a cigar in hand, mind you). But, as we all know, people are not stupid, and the fact that Watson was also captured in the background will ultimately lend itself to the "masked figure" present - Sherlock Holmes. Plus, it doesn't help when you have an eager report who cannot shut his mouth and blurts in bold letters on the front that Holmes was indeed the one who solved the case. So while Holmes' intention was to divert the reader's (s') attention(s) away from him in the picture and give the Inspector the full credit, the media, as always, seems to ruin things. I hope this has answered your question and that, even more so, you can understand what I mean by it. Best wishes, S.R.
Dr. John H. Watson, MD His full middle name is unknown, though due to his wife at one point addressing him as 'James' it has been theorized that his middle name is Hamish (Scottish for James) but this is mostly looked upon as a typo.