The Philipson-Stow Baronetcy, of Cape Town in the Colony of Cape of Good Hope, and Blackdown House in Lodsworth in the County of Sussex, is a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom.
John Stow | Williams-Wynn baronets | Wynn baronets | West Stow | Stow-on-the-Wold | Naylor-Leyland baronets | Hulse baronets | Gell baronets | Garrard baronets | Crawley-Boevey baronets | Congreve baronets | Codrington baronets | Chadwyck-Healey baronets | Cave-Browne-Cave baronets | Blackett baronets | Acland baronets | Wilmot baronets | Tomas J. Philipson | Sturton by Stow | Stow, Massachusetts | Slingsby baronets | Nugent baronets | Mosley Baronets | Mackworth baronets | Littleton baronets | Grant baronets | Graham Baronets | Gethin baronets | Frederick baronets | Esmonde baronets |
Philipson did not intend to go directly into the ministry, but instead chose to spend time in Dallas to aid in the growth of Reform Judaism there.
Throughout his career Philipson was competing for the wicket-keeper's spot in the English Test side with Gregor MacGregor, which resulted in him playing in only five Test matches for England, which he did on the 1891/2 and 1894/5 tours of Australia.
At the University of Chicago Press, Philipson became known for large-scale scholarly projects such as The Lisle Letters (a six-volume collection of 16th-century correspondence by Arthur Plantagenet, 1st Viscount Lisle), The Works of Giuseppe Verdi, a four-volume translation of the Chinese classic The Journey to the West, and Jean-Paul Sartre’s five-volume The Family Idiot: Gustave Flaubert, 1821-1857.