Charles Francis Horne was an American author. He wrote or edited more than one hundred books, mostly multi-volume history works. He was a Professor of English at City College of New York.
Charles Francis Keary was an English scholar and historian. His later work as a novelist influenced the modernist writer James Joyce. However, the English novelist George Gissing read four of Keary's works, including three novels, in the first 31 days of 1896, and found the novel Herbert Vanlennert, "a long, conscientious, uninspired book".
Charles Francis Sheridan was an Anglo-Irish lawyer, politician and writer.
Charles François Lhomond was a French priest, grammarian, and educator who was a native of Chaulnes, Somme.
Charles Franklin Dunbar (1830–1900) was an American economist. He held the first Chair of Political Economy at the Harvard University in 1871.
Rev. Charles Franklin Thwing was an American clergyman and educator.
Charles Frazier is an American novelist. He won the 1997 National Book Award for Fiction for Cold Mountain.
Charles Frederic Goss was an American clergyman and author. His 1900 novel The Redemption of David Corson was a best selling book of that year. He also edited and partly authored a series of volumes on the history of Cincinnati.
Sir Charles Frederick Carter was an English academic known primarily for his role as the founding Vice-Chancellor of Lancaster University.
Charles Frederick Henningsen was a Belgian-American writer, mercenary, filibuster, and munitions expert. He participated in revolutions and civil wars in Spain, Circassia, Hungary, Nicaragua, and the United States.