Atkinson is best known for
Forty Years in a Moorland Parish (1891, second edition the same year). Comparisons have been made with Gilbert White's
Natural History of Selborne, and Hugh Miller's
Scenes and Legends of the North of Scotland. In 1867 Atkinson prepared for the
Philological Society A Glossary of the Dialect of the Hundred of Lonsdale, which was published in the society's
Transactions. It was followed in 1868 by
A Glossary of the Cleveland Dialect, to which, for the
English Dialect Society, he made
Additions in 1876. In 1872 he published the first volume of
The History of Cleveland, Ancient and Modern, London; part of a second volume appeared in 1877, but it was not completed. Other works were: •
The Walks, Talks, Travels, and Exploits of two Schoolboys, London, 1859, new edition 1892. •
Play-hours and Half-holidays; or, Further Experiences of two Schoolboys, London, 1860, new edition 1892. •
Sketches in Natural History; with an Essay on Reason and Instinct, London, 1861; new edition 1865. • ''British Birds' Eggs and Nests popularly described'', London, 1861, new edition 1898. • ''Stanton Grange; or. At a Private Tutor's'', London, 1864. •
Lost; or What came of a Slip from "Honour Bright", London, 1870. •
The Last of the Giant Killers, London, 1891, new edition 1893. •
Scenes in Fairy-land, London, 1892. He edited: •
Cartularium Abbathiæ de Whiteby (Surtees Soc), 1879, 2 vols. •
Quarter Sessions Records (North Riding Record Soc), 1883–92, 9 vols. •
Lonsdale Glossary: Furness Coucher Book (Chetham Soc), 1886–7, 3 vols. •
Cartularium Abbathiæ de Rievalle (Surtees Soc), 1859. He also contributed papers to archaeological societies, and in 1872 assisted
Hensleigh Wedgwood in revising his
Dictionary of English Etymology. ==Family==