A Chronological Order of Sherlock Holmes Stories
How best to read the various tales of Sherlock Holmes? The most obvious answer to that question is: the order in which they were written and published, beginning with A Study in Scarlet. However, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the first literary agent for Dr. John H. Watson, did not publish the stories in a strict chronologic order, with many stories told primarily as flashbacks. Therefore, for the reader, either new to these wondrous tales or seeking to read them all again, I present the following option. By following this list, the reader is able to see for themselves the maturation of Holmes and Watson, from relatively young lads with all of London at their fingertips, to the mature gentlemen reflecting upon a lifetime of adventure.
I generally follow the dating laid out by the great Sherlockian editor Leslie S. Klinger in his masterwork, The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes (2005-6), which is itself a consensus of other Sherlockians, who often followed but the vaguest of clues in the stories themselves in order to come to their conclusions. Dr. Watson, for all his excellent qualities, was never his best with dates. For the sake of vanity, this literary agent interjects the timing for those stories which I have been so fortunate as to unearth and publish.
(1852: Watson born)
(1854: Holmes born)
1874: The Gloria Scott
1879: The Musgrave Ritual
1880: The Isle of Devils
1881: A Study in Scarlet
1883: The Speckled Band
1883: The Monstrous Blood
1884: The Gate of Gold
1886: The Beryl Coronet
1887: The Resident Patient
1887: The Reigate Squires
1887: The Five Orange Pips
1888: The Red Leech
1888: The Valley of Fear
1888: The Noble Bachelor
1888: The Yellow Face
1888: The Greek Interpreter
1888: The Sign of Four
1888: Silver Blaze
1888: The Cardboard Box
1889: The Crooked Man
1889: A Scandal in Bohemia
1889: The Man with a Twisted Lip
1889: A Case of Identity
1889: The Fateful Malady
1889: The Boscombe Valley Mystery
1889: The Stockbroker’s Clerk
1889: The Naval Treaty
1889: The Engineer’s Thumb
1889: Hound of the Baskervilles^
1889: The Blue Carbuncle
1890: The Red-Headed League
1890: The Copper Beeches
1890: The Dying Detective
1890: The Spanish Sovereign
1891: The Final Problem
1894: The Empty House
1894: The Second Stain%
1894: The Golden Pince-Nez
1894: The Norwood Builder
1894: The Manufactured Miracle
1895: Wisteria Lodge
1895: The Three Students
1895: The Solitary Cyclist
1895: Black Peter
1895: The Bruce-Partington Plans
1895: The First Star
1896: The Veiled Lodger
1896: The Sussex Vampire
1896: The Missing Three-Quarter
1897: The Abbey Grange
1897: The Devil’s Foot
1898: The Dancing Men
1899: The Retired Colourman
1899: Charles Augustus Milverton
1900: The Six Napoleons
1901: The Priory School
1901: The Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax
1901: Thor Bridge
1902: Shoscombe Old Place
1902: The Three Garridebs
1902: Three Gables
1902: The Illustrious Client
1902: The Red Circle
1903: The Blanched Solider*
1903: The Mazarin Stone
1903: The Creeping Man
1907: The Lion’s Mane*
1909: The Pharaoh’s Curse (The Assassination of Sherlock Holmes)
1909: Threadneedle Street (The Assassination of Sherlock Holmes)
1909: Falling Curtain (The Assassination of Sherlock Holmes)
1914: His Last Bow
1918: The Grand Gift of Sherlock
^ The dating of The Hound of the Baskervilles is the most difficult of the entire Canon, such that Klinger devotes an entire Appendix to the controversy. I have picked the date with what appears to be the most evidence behind it, accepting that it is at best a flimsy theory.
% The dating of The Second Stain is one of the most controversial of the entire Canon. Watson himself deliberately attempts to obscure the date: “It was, then, in a year, and even in a decade, that shall be nameless, that upon one Tuesday afternoon in autumn we found two visitors…”
* Dr. Watson sadly makes no appearance.


