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{{short description|Faked photographs of fairies by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths}} | |||
{{featured article}} | |||
The '''Cottingley Fairies''' appear in a series of five photographs taken by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths, two young ]s who lived in ], near ] in England. In 1917, when the first two photographs were taken, Elsie was 16-years-old and Frances was 10. The pictures came to the attention of ], who used them to illustrate an article on ] that he had been commissioned to write for the Christmas 1920 edition of '']''. Conan Doyle, a believer in ], was enthusiastic about the photographs, interpreting them as a clear and visible sign of psychic phenomena. The public reaction, however, was mixed; some accepted that the images were genuine, others were convinced they had been faked. | |||
{{Use British English|date=August 2014}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}} | |||
] | |||
The '''Cottingley Fairies''' appear in a series of five photographs taken by Elsie Wright (1901–1988) and Frances Griffiths (1907–1986), two young cousins who lived in ], near ] in England. In 1917, when the first two photographs were taken, Elsie was 16 years old and Frances was 9. The pictures came to the attention of writer ], who used them to illustrate an article on ] he had been commissioned to write for the Christmas 1920 edition of '']''. Doyle was enthusiastic about the photographs, and interpreted them as clear and visible evidence of supernatural phenomena. Public reaction was mixed; some accepted the images as genuine, others believed that they had been faked. | |||
Public interest in the Cottingly Fairies gradually declined after 1921. Both girls grew up, got married, and lived abroad for a time. The photographs continued to intrigue however, and in 1966, a reporter from the '']'' newspaper traced Elsie, who had by then returned to the UK. In an interview, Elsie appeared to leave open the possibility that she believed she had somehow managed to photograph her thoughts, and the media once again became interested in the story. In the early 1980s, both women admitted that the photographs were faked, using cardboard cut outs of fairies copied from a popular children's book of the time, although Frances continued to claim that the fifth and final photograph was genuine. The photographs, and two of the cameras used to take them, are now on display in the ] in Bradford. | |||
Interest in the Cottingley Fairies gradually declined after 1921. Both girls married and lived abroad for a time after they grew up, and yet the photographs continued to hold the public imagination. In 1966 a reporter from the '']'' newspaper traced Elsie, who had by then returned to the United Kingdom. Elsie left open the possibility that she believed she had photographed her thoughts, and the media once again became interested in the story. | |||
In the early 1980s Elsie and Frances admitted that the photographs were faked, using cardboard cutouts of fairies copied from a popular children's book of the time, but Frances maintained that the fifth and final photograph was genuine. As of 2019 the photographs and the cameras used are in the collections of the ] in ], England. | |||
==1917 photographs== | ==1917 photographs== | ||
] | ] | ||
In the summer of 1917, 10-year-old Frances Griffiths and her mother{{ndash}} both newly arrived from South Africa{{ndash}} were staying with Frances' aunt, Elsie Wright's mother, in the village of ], just outside ], in ]; Elsie was then 16 years old. The two girls often played beside the beck (stream) at the bottom of the garden, much to their mothers' annoyance, because they frequently came back with wet feet and clothes. Frances and Elsie said they only went to the beck to see the fairies, and to prove it, Elsie borrowed her father's camera, a Midg ]. The girls returned about 30 minutes later, "triumphant".<ref>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|pp=97–98}}</ref> | |||
In mid-1917 nine-year-old Frances Griffiths and her mother{{snd}}both newly arrived in England from South Africa{{snd}}were staying with Frances's aunt, Elsie Wright's mother, Polly, in the village of ] in West Yorkshire; Elsie was then 16 years old. The two girls often played together beside the ] at the bottom of the garden, much to their mothers' annoyance, because they frequently came back with wet feet and clothes. Frances and Elsie said they only went to the beck to see the fairies, and to prove it, Elsie borrowed her father's camera, a Midg ]. The girls returned about 30 minutes later, "triumphant".{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|pp=97–98|ps=none}} | |||
Elsie's father, Arthur, was a keen amateur photographer, and had set up his own dark room. The picture on the ] he developed showed Frances behind a bush in the foreground, on which four fairies appeared to be dancing. Knowing his daughter's artistic ability, and that she had spent some time working in a photographer's studio, he dismissed the figures as cardboard cutouts. Two months later the girls borrowed his camera again, and this time returned with a photograph of Elsie sitting on the lawn holding out her hand to a {{convert|1|ft|adj=on | |||
}} tall gnome. Exasperated by what he believed to be "nothing but a prank",<ref name=MagnussonP97/> and convinced the girls must have tampered with his camera in some way, Arthur Wright refused to lend it to them again.<ref>{{Harvnb|Prashad|2008|p=42}}</ref> His wife Polly, however, was convinced that the photographs were authentic.<ref name=MagnussonP97>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|p=97}}</ref> | |||
Elsie's father, Arthur, was a keen amateur photographer, and had set up his own darkroom. The picture on the ] he developed showed Frances behind a bush in the foreground, on which four fairies appeared to be dancing. Knowing his daughter's artistic ability, and that she had spent some time working in a photographer's studio, he dismissed the figures as cardboard cutouts. Two months later the girls borrowed his camera again, and this time returned with a photograph of Elsie sitting on the lawn holding out her hand to a {{convert|1|ft|cm|adj=on|disp=x|-tall (|)}} gnome. Exasperated by what he believed to be "nothing but a prank",{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=97|ps=none}} and convinced that the girls must have tampered with his camera in some way, Arthur Wright refused to lend it to them again.{{sfnp|Prashad|2008|p=42|ps=none}} His wife Polly, however, believed the photographs to be authentic.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=97|ps=none}} | |||
{{Quote box |width=25em |align=right |quoted=true |bgcolor=#FFFFF0 |salign=center |quote=I am learning French, Geometry, Cookery and Algebra at school now. Dad came home from France the other week after being there ten months, and we all think the war will be over in a few days ... I am sending two photos, both of me, one of me in a bathing costume in our back yard, while the other is me with some fairies. Elsie took that one.|source=Letter from Frances Griffiths to a friend in South Africa<ref name=PrashadP40>{{Harvnb|Prashad|2008|p=40}}</ref>}} | |||
{{Quote box |width=25em |align=right |quoted=true |bgcolor=#FFFFF0 |salign=left |quote=I am learning French, Geometry, Cookery and Algebra at school now. Dad came home from France the other week after being there ten months, and we all think the war will be over in a few days ... I am sending two photos, both of me, one of me in a bathing costume in our back yard, while the other is me with some fairies. Elsie took that one.|source=Letter from Frances Griffiths to a friend in South Africa{{sfnp|Prashad|2008|p=40|ps=none}}}} | |||
Towards the end of 1918, Frances sent a letter to Johanna Parvin, a friend in ], ], where she had lived most of her life, enclosing the photograph of her with the fairies. On the back she wrote "It is funny, I never used to see them in Africa. It must be too hot for them there."<ref name=PrashadP40/> | |||
Towards the end of 1918, Frances sent a letter to Johanna Parvin, a friend in ], South Africa, where Frances had lived for most of her life, enclosing the photograph of herself with the fairies. On the back she wrote "It is funny, I never used to see them in Africa. It must be too hot for them there."{{sfnp|Prashad|2008|p=40|ps=none}} | |||
The photographs became public in the summer of 1919, after Elsie's mother attended a meeting of the ] in Bradford. The lecture that night was on "Fairy Life", and at the end of the meeting Polly Wright showed the speaker the two fairy photographs taken by her daughter and niece. As a result, the photographs were displayed at the Society's annual conference in ], held a few months later. There they came to the attention of a leading member of the Society, Edward Gardner.<ref name=MagnussonPP98-99>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|pp=98–99}}</ref> One of the central beliefs in Theosophy is that humanity is undergoing a cycle of evolution, towards increasing "perfection", and Gardner recognised the potential significance of the photographs for the movement: | |||
{{quote|... the fact that two young girls had not only been able to see fairies, which others had done, but had actually for the first time ever been able to materialise them at a density sufficient for their images to be recorded on a photographic plate, meant that it was possible that the next cycle of evolution was underway.<ref name=SmithP382>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=382}}</ref>}} | |||
The photographs became public in mid-1919, after Elsie's mother attended a meeting of the ] in Bradford. The lecture that evening was on "fairy life", and at the end of the meeting Polly Wright showed the two fairy photographs taken by her daughter and niece to the speaker.<ref>{{cite web | title=Episode 229: A Glamour and a Mystery (7.28.2023) | website=Criminal | date=July 28, 2023 | url=https://thisiscriminal.com/episode-229-a-glamour-and-a-mystery-7-28-2023/ | access-date=August 3, 2023}}</ref> As a result, the photographs were displayed at the society's annual conference in ], held a few months later. There they came to the attention of a leading member of the society, Edward Gardner.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|pp=98–99|ps=none}} One of the central ] is that humanity is undergoing a cycle of evolution, towards increasing "perfection", and Gardner recognised the potential significance of the photographs for the movement: | |||
Gardner had the prints "clarified", and new negatives produced, "more conducive to printing",<ref name=MagnussonPP98-99/> for use in the illustrated lectures he gave around the UK.<ref name=SmithP382/> The enhanced photographic prints were available for sale at Gardner's lectures.<ref>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=401}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote| the fact that two young girls had not only been able to see fairies, which others had done, but had actually for the first time ever been able to materialise them at a density sufficient for their images to be recorded on a photographic plate, meant that it was possible that the next cycle of evolution was underway.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=382|ps=none}}}} | |||
==Initial examinations== | ==Initial examinations== | ||
Gardner sent the prints along with the original glass-plate negatives to Harold Snelling, a photography expert. Snelling's opinion was that "the two negatives are entirely genuine, unfaked photographs ... no trace whatsoever of studio work involving card or paper models".{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=99|ps=none}}<!--important to retain the big difference between unretouched and 'showing faries'--> He did not go so far as to say that the photographs showed fairies, stating only that "these are straight forward photographs of whatever was in front of the camera at the time".{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=389|ps=none}} Gardner had the prints "clarified" by Snelling, and new negatives produced, "more conducive to printing",{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|pp=98–99|ps=none}}{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=382|ps=none}} for use in the illustrated lectures he gave around Britain.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=382|ps=none}} Snelling supplied the photographic prints which were available for sale at Gardner's lectures.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=401|ps=none}}<ref name=crawley/> | |||
] | |||
Gardner sent the enhanced prints along with the original glass-plate negatives to Harold Snelling, a photography expert. Snelling's opinion was that "the two negatives are entirely genuine, unfaked photographs ... no trace whatsoever of studio work involving card or paper models".<ref>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|p=99}}</ref> Snelling did not go so far as to say that the photographs were of fairies however, simply that "these are straight forward photographs of whatever was in front of the camera at the time".<ref name=SmithP389>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=389}}</ref> | |||
], the creator of ] and a prominent ], learned of the photographs from the editor of ''Light'', the Spiritualists' publication.<ref name=SmithP383>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=383}}</ref> Conan Doyle had been commissioned by '']'' to write an article on fairies for their Christmas issue, and the fairy photographs "must have seemed like a godsend". He contacted Gardner in June 1920 for the background to the photographs, and subsequently wrote to Elsie and her father, requesting permission from the latter to use them in the article. Arthur Wright, "obviously impressed" that Conan Doyle had become involved in the matter, gave his permission for the photographs to be published, but refused any offer of payment, on the grounds that they should not be "soiled" by financial considerations if they were indeed genuine.<ref>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|pp=99–100}}</ref> | |||
] | ] | ||
Gardner and Conan Doyle decided to seek a second opinion on the authenticity of the pictures from the photographic company ]. Several of the company's experts examined the prints, but although they agreed with Snelling that the pictures "showed no signs of being faked", added that "this could not be taken as conclusive evidence ... that they were authentic photographs of fairies".<ref>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=384}}</ref> Kodak therefore declined to issue a certificate of authenticity.<ref>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|p=101}}</ref> Gardner believed that the Kodak technicians may not have examined the photographs entirely objectively, observing that one had commented "after all, as fairies couldn't be true, the photographs must have been faked somehow".<ref name=SmithP385>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=385}}</ref> The prints were also examined by another photographic company, ], who reported unequivocally that there was "some evidence of faking".<ref name=SmithP385/> Gardner and Conan Doyle, perhaps rather optimistically, interpreted the results of the three expert evaluations as two in favour of the photographs' authenticity and one against.<ref name=SmithP385/> | |||
Author and prominent ] ] learned of the photographs from the editor of the spiritualist publication ''Light''.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=383|ps=none}} Doyle had been commissioned by '']'' to write an article on fairies for their Christmas issue, and the fairy photographs "must have seemed like a godsend" according to broadcaster and historian ]. Doyle contacted Gardner in June 1920 to determine the background to the photographs, and wrote to Elsie and her father to request permission from the latter to use the prints in his article. Arthur Wright was "obviously impressed" that Doyle was involved, and gave his permission for publication, but he refused payment on the grounds that, if genuine, the images should not be "soiled" by money.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|pp=99–100|ps=none}} | |||
The photographs were also examined by the ] ], a pioneering ]er, who declared them to be fakes. Lodge suggested that perhaps a troupe of dancers had ] as fairies, and he expressed some doubt as to their "distinctly 'Parisienne{{'"}} hairstyles.<ref name=MagnussonP100>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|p=100}}</ref>{{clear}} | |||
Gardner and Doyle sought a second expert opinion from the photographic company ]. Several of the company's technicians examined the enhanced prints, and although they agreed with Snelling that the pictures "showed no signs of being faked", they concluded that "this could not be taken as conclusive evidence ... that they were authentic photographs of fairies".{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=384|ps=none}} Kodak declined to issue a certificate of authenticity.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=101|ps=none}} Gardner believed that the Kodak technicians might not have examined the photographs entirely objectively, observing that one had commented "after all, as fairies couldn't be true, the photographs must have been faked somehow".{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=385|ps=none}} The prints were also examined by another photographic company, ], who reported unequivocally that there was "some evidence of faking".{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=385|ps=none}} Gardner and Doyle, perhaps rather optimistically, interpreted the results of the three expert evaluations as two in favour of the photographs' authenticity and one against.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=385|ps=none}} | |||
Doyle also showed the photographs to the ] and pioneering ] ], who believed the photographs to be fake. He suggested that a troupe of dancers had masqueraded as fairies, and expressed doubt as to their "distinctly 'Parisienne{{'"}} hairstyles.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=101|ps=none}} | |||
On 4 October 2018 the first two of the photographs, ''Alice and the Fairies'' and ''Iris and the Gnome,'' were to be sold by Dominic Winter Auctioneers, in ]. The prints, suspected to have been made in 1920 to sell at ] lectures, were expected to bring £700–£1000 each.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Hester |first1=Jessica Leigh |title=For Sale: Legendary Photographic 'Proof' of Fairies and Gnomes |website=] |date=28 September 2018 |url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/cottingley-fairies-photographs-for-sale|access-date=3 October 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181003175451/https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/cottingley-fairies-photographs-for-sale?ct=t(EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_10_2_2018)&mc_cid=d153f00e17&mc_eid=9f3ca0a886 |archive-date=3 October 2018}}</ref> As it turned out, ''Iris with the Gnome'' sold for a ] of £5,400 (plus 24% ] incl. VAT), while ''Alice and the Fairies'' sold for a hammer price of £15,000 (plus 24% buyer's premium incl. VAT).<ref>Dominic Winter Auctioneer website, Sale Results, retrieved 26 March 2019.</ref> | |||
==1920 photographs== | ==1920 photographs== | ||
Doyle was preoccupied with organising an imminent lecture tour of Australia, and in July 1920, sent Gardner to meet the Wright family. By this point, Frances was living with her parents in ],{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=385|ps=none}} but Elsie's father told Gardner that he had been so certain the photographs were fakes that while the girls were away he searched their bedroom and the area around the beck (stream), looking for scraps of pictures or cutouts, but found nothing "incriminating".{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=102|ps=none}} | |||
{{quote|I went off, to Cottingley again, taking the two cameras and plates from London, and met the family and explained to the two girls the simple working of the cameras, giving one each to keep. The cameras were loaded, and my final advice was that they need go up to the glen only on fine days as they had been accustomed to do before and ''tice'' the fairies, as they called their way of attracting them, and see what they could get. I suggested only the most obvious and easy precautions about lighting and distance, for I knew it was essential they should feel free and unhampered and have no burden of responsibility. If nothing came of it all, I told them, they were not to mind a bit.<ref name=Cooper/>}} | |||
] | ] | ||
The weather was unsuitable for photography until 19 August. Francis and Elsie insisted that the fairies would not show themselves if anyone else was watching; Elsie's mother was persuaded to visit her sister's for tea, leaving the girls alone. During her absence the girls took several photographs, two of which appeared to show fairies. In the first, ''Frances and the Leaping Fairy'', Frances is shown in profile with a winged fairy close to her nose. The second photograph, ''Fairy offering Posy of Harebells to Elsie'', shows a fairy either hovering or standing tiptoe on a branch, offering Elsie a flower. Two days later, the girls took their last picture, the ''Fairies and Their Sun-Bath''.<ref>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|pp=102–103}}</ref> | |||
Gardner believed the Wright family to be honest and respectable. To place the matter of the photographs' authenticity beyond doubt, he returned to Cottingley at the end of July with two W. Butcher & Sons Cameo folding plate cameras and 24 secretly marked photographic plates. Frances was invited to stay with the Wright family during the school summer holiday so that she and Elsie could take more pictures of the fairies.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=102|ps=none}} Gardner described his briefing in his 1945 ''Fairies: A Book of Real Fairies'': | |||
The photographic plates were packed in cotton wool and returned to Gardner in London, who sent an "ecstatic" telegram to Conan Doyle, by then in ].<ref name=MagnussonP103/> Conan Doyle wrote back: | |||
{{blockquote|I went off, to Cottingley again, taking the two cameras and plates from London, and met the family and explained to the two girls the simple working of the cameras, giving one each to keep. The cameras were loaded, and my final advice was that they need go up to the glen only on fine days as they had been accustomed to do before and ''tice'' the fairies, as they called their way of attracting them, and see what they could get. I suggested only the most obvious and easy precautions about lighting and distance, for I knew it was essential they should feel free and unhampered and have no burden of responsibility. If nothing came of it all, I told them, they were not to mind a bit.<ref name=Cooper/>}} | |||
{{imagequote|170|My heart was gladdened when out here in far Australia I had your note and the three wonderful pictures which are confirmatory of our published results. When our fairies are admitted other psychic phenomena will find a more ready acceptance ... We have had continued messages at seances for some time that a visible sign was coming through.<ref name=MagnussonP103>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|p=103}}</ref>}}{{clear}} | |||
Until 19 August the weather was unsuitable for photography. Because Frances and Elsie insisted that the fairies would not show themselves if others were watching, Elsie's mother was persuaded to visit her sister's for tea, leaving the girls alone. In her absence the girls took several photographs, two of which appeared to show fairies. In the first, ''Frances and the Leaping Fairy'', Frances is shown in profile with a winged fairy close by her nose. The second, ''Fairy offering Posy of ] to Elsie'', shows a fairy either hovering or tiptoeing on a branch, and offering Elsie a flower. Two days later the girls took the last picture, ''Fairies and Their Sun-Bath''.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|pp=102–103|ps=none}} | |||
The plates were packed in cotton wool and returned to Gardner in London, who sent an "ecstatic" telegram to Doyle, by then in ].{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=103|ps=none}} Doyle wrote back: | |||
{{blockquote|My heart was gladdened when out here in far Australia I had your note and the three wonderful pictures which are confirmatory of our published results. When our fairies are admitted other psychic phenomena will find a more ready acceptance ... We have had continued messages at seances for some time that a visible sign was coming through.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=103|ps=none}}}}{{clear}} | |||
==Publication and reaction== | ==Publication and reaction== | ||
] | |||
Conan Doyle's article for the December 1920 issue of ''The Strand'' featured the two reprinted, better defined prints; the issue sold out within days of publication. To protect the girls' anonymity, Frances and Elsie were given the names Alice and Iris respectively, and the Wright family was called the Carpenters.<ref name=SmithP388>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=388}}</ref> An enthusiastic and committed Spiritualist, Conan Doyle hoped that if the photographs convinced people of the existence of fairies, then the general public might more readily accept the truth of other psychic phenomena.<ref name=Roden>{{citation |last=Roden |first=Barbara |title=The Coming of the Fairies: An Alternative View of the Episode of the Cottingley Fairies |url=http://www.ash-tree.bc.ca/acdsfairies.htm |publisher=The Arthur Conan Doyle Society |accessdate=25 April 2010}}</ref> He ended his article with the words: | |||
] | |||
{{quote|The recognition of their existence will jolt the material twentieth century mind out of its heavy ruts in the mud, and will make it admit that there is a glamour and mystery to life. Having discovered this, the world will not find it so difficult to accept that spiritual message supported by physical facts which has already been put before it.<ref name=Roden/>}} | |||
Doyle's article<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Doyle |first1=A. Conan |title=Fairies Photographed |journal=] |date=December 1920 |volume=60 |issue=12 |pages=462–468 |url=https://archive.org/stream/TheStrandMagazineAnIllustratedMonthly/TheStrandMagazine1920bVol.LxJul-dec#page/n483/mode/2up |access-date=6 July 2021 |ref=doil2012}}</ref> in the December 1920 issue of ''The Strand'' contained two higher-resolution prints of the 1917 photographs, and sold out within days of publication. To protect the girls' anonymity, Frances and Elsie were called Alice and Iris respectively, and the Wright family was referred to as the "Carpenters".{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=388|ps=none}} An enthusiastic and committed spiritualist, Doyle hoped that if the photographs convinced the public of the existence of fairies then they might more readily accept other psychic phenomena.<ref name=Roden>{{cite web |last=Roden |first=Barbara |title=The Coming of the Fairies: An Alternative View of the Episode of the Cottingley Fairies |url=http://www.ash-tree.bc.ca/acdsfairies.htm |publisher=The Arthur Conan Doyle Society |access-date=25 April 2010 |mode=cs2 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100917124859/http://ash-tree.bc.ca/acdsfairies.htm |archive-date=17 September 2010 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> He ended his article with the words: | |||
The initial press reaction to the photographs was "mixed",<ref name=SmithP390/> but in general the response was "embarrassment and puzzlement".<ref name=SmithP391>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=391}}</ref> A leading voice amongst the critics was the historical novelist and poet ], who published a series of articles in ''John O' London's Weekly'', a literary journal, which concluded: "And knowing children, and knowing that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has legs, I decide that the Miss Carpenters have pulled one of them."<ref name=SmithP390/> The Sydney newspaper '']'' on 5 January 1921 expressed a similar view; "For the true explanation of these fairy photographs what is wanted is not a knowledge of occult phenomena but a knowledge of children."<ref name=Cooper/> However, some public figures were sympathetic. ], the educational and social reformer, wrote: "How wonderful that to these dear children such a wonderful gift has been vouchsafed."<ref name=SmithP390/> The novelist ] decided to take the fairy photographs and the girls at face value.<ref name=Cooper>{{citation |last=Cooper |first=Joe |title=Cottingley: At Last the Truth |journal=The Unexplained |year=1982 |issue=117 |pages=2,338–40}}</ref> In a letter to Gardner he wrote:"Look at Alice's face. Look at Iris's face. There is an extraordinary thing called TRUTH which has 10 million faces and forms{{ndash}} it is God's currency and the cleverest coiner or forger can't imitate it." | |||
{{blockquote|The recognition of their existence will jolt the material twentieth-century mind out of its heavy ruts in the mud, and will make it admit that there is a glamour and mystery to life. Having discovered this, the world will not find it so difficult to accept that spiritual message supported by physical facts which have already been put before it.<ref name=Roden/>}} | |||
Early press coverage was "mixed",{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=390|ps=none}} generally a combination of "embarrassment and puzzlement";{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=391|ps=none}} though Japanese scholar Kaori Inuma has noted that there were also open and positive assessments.<ref>“Fairies to Be Photographed!: Press Reactions in ‘Scrapbooks’ to the Cottingley Fairies,” ''Correspondence: Hitotsubashi Journal of Arts and Literature'' 4 (2019), 53-84.</ref> The historical novelist and poet ] published a series of articles in the literary journal ''John O' London's Weekly'', in which he concluded: "And knowing children, and knowing that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has legs, I decide that the Miss Carpenters have pulled one of them."{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=390|ps=none}} The London newspaper '']'' on 5 January 1921 expressed a similar view; "For the true explanation of these fairy photographs what is wanted is not a knowledge of occult phenomena but a knowledge of children."<ref name=Cooper/> Some public figures were more sympathetic. ], the educational and social reformer, wrote: "How wonderful that to these dear children such a wonderful gift has been vouchsafed."{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=390|ps=none}} The novelist ] decided to take the fairy photographs and the girls at face value.<ref name=Cooper>{{cite journal |last=Cooper |first=Joe|title=Cottingley: At Last the Truth |journal=The Unexplained |year=1982 |issue=117 |pages=2, 338–340 |mode=cs2 }}</ref> In a letter to Gardner he wrote: "Look at Alice's face. Look at Iris's face. There is an extraordinary thing called Truth which has 10 million faces and forms – it is God's currency and the cleverest coiner or forger can't imitate it." | |||
], a keen photographer and pioneer of medical X-ray |
], a keen photographer and pioneer of ] in Britain, was a particularly vigorous critic:<ref>{{cite web|title=Major John Hall-Edwards |url=http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/xray |publisher=Birmingham City Council |access-date=23 April 2010 |mode=cs2 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120928204852/http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/xray |archive-date=28 September 2012 |df=dmy }}</ref> | ||
{{ |
{{blockquote|On the evidence I have no hesitation in saying that these photographs could have been "faked". I criticize the attitude of those who declared there is something supernatural in the circumstances attending to the taking of these pictures because, as a medical man, I believe that the inculcation of such absurd ideas into the minds of children will result in later life in manifestations and nervous disorder and mental disturbances.<ref name=Cooper/>}} | ||
Doyle used the later photographs in 1921 to illustrate a second article in ''The Strand'', in which he described other accounts of fairy sightings. The article formed the foundation for his 1922 book ''The Coming of the Fairies''.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=389|ps=none}} As before, the photographs were received with mixed credulity. Sceptics noted that the fairies "looked suspiciously like the traditional fairies of nursery tales" and that they had "very fashionable hairstyles".<ref name=Cooper/> | |||
Conan Doyle used the later photographs to illustrate a second article in ''The Strand'', published in 1921, describing other accounts of alleged fairy sightings. The article served as the foundation for his book ''The Coming of the Fairies'', published in 1922.<ref>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=389}}</ref> As before, the photographs received a mixed reaction. Frequent criticisms were that the fairies "looked suspiciously like the traditional fairies of nursery tales", and that they had "very fashionable hairstyles".<ref name=Cooper/> | |||
==Gardner's final visit== | ==Gardner's final visit== | ||
Gardner made a final visit to Cottingley in August 1921. He again brought cameras and photographic plates for Frances and Elsie, but was accompanied by the occultist ]. Although neither of the girls claimed to see any fairies, and there were no more photographs, "on the contrary, he saw them everywhere" and wrote voluminous notes on his observations.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=390|ps=none}} | |||
By |
By now Elsie and Frances were tired of the whole fairy business. Years later Elsie looked at a photograph of herself and Frances taken with Hodson and said: "Look at that, fed up with fairies." Both Elsie and Frances later admitted that they "played along" with Hodson "out of mischief",{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=105|ps=none}} and that they considered him "a fake".{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=390|ps=none}} | ||
==Later investigations== | ==Later investigations== | ||
Public interest in the Cottingley Fairies gradually subsided after 1921. Elsie and Frances both eventually married, moved away from the area and each lived overseas for varying periods of time.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=393|ps=none}} In 1966, a reporter from the ''Daily Express'' newspaper traced Elsie, who was by then back in England. She admitted in an interview given that year that the fairies might have been "figments of my imagination", but left open the possibility she believed that she had somehow managed to photograph her thoughts.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=104|ps=none}} The media subsequently became interested in Frances and Elsie's photographs once again.<ref name=Cooper/> ] television's '']'' programme investigated the case in 1971, but Elsie stuck to her story: "I've told you that they're photographs of figments of our imagination, and that's what I'm sticking to".{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=104|ps=none}} | |||
] | |||
Public interest in the Cottingley Fairies gradually diminished after 1921. Elsie and Francis eventually married and lived abroad for many years.<ref name=SmithP393>{{Harvnb|Smith|1997|p=393}}</ref> In 1966, a reporter from the ''Daily Express'' newspaper traced Elsie, who was by then back in England. She admitted in an interview that the fairies might have been "figments of my imagination", but left open the possibility she believed that she had somehow managed to photograph her thoughts.<ref name=MagnussonP104>{{Harvnb|Magnusson|2006|p=104}}</ref> The media subsequently once again became interested in Frances and Elsie's photographs.<ref name=Cooper/> ] television's '']'' programme investigated the case in 1971, but Elsie stuck to her story: "I've told you that they're photographs of figments of our imagination, and that's what I'm sticking to".<ref name=MagnussonP104/> | |||
Elsie and Frances were interviewed by journalist ] in September 1976, for a programme broadcast on ]. When pressed, both women agreed that "a rational person doesn't see fairies", but they denied having fabricated the photographs. |
Elsie and Frances were interviewed by journalist ] in September 1976, for a programme broadcast on ]. When pressed, both women agreed that "a rational person doesn't see fairies", but they denied having fabricated the photographs.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=105|ps=none}} In 1978 the magician and ] ] and a team from the ] examined the photographs, using a "computer enhancement process". They concluded that the photographs were fakes, and that strings could be seen supporting the fairies.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|pp=394–395|ps=none}} ], editor of the '']'', undertook a "major scientific investigation of the photographs and the events surrounding them", published between 1982 and 1983, "the first major postwar analysis of the affair". He also concluded that the pictures were fakes.{{sfnp|Smith|1997|p=395|ps=none}} | ||
==Confession== | ==Confession== | ||
] | |||
] | |||
In 1983, the cousins admitted in an article published in the magazine '']'' that the photographs had been faked, although both maintained that they really had seen fairies. Elsie had copied illustrations of fairies from a popular children's book of the time, Claude Arthur Shepperson's ''Princess Mary's Gift Book'', published in 1914. They had then cut out the cardboard figures and supported them with hat pins, disposing of their props in the beck once the photograph had been taken.<ref name=MagnussonP105/> The cousins did, however, disagree about the fifth and final photograph, which Conan Doyle, in his ''The Coming of the Fairies'', described in this way: | |||
{{quote|Seated on the upper left hand edge with wing well displayed is an undraped fairy apparently considering whether it is time to get up. An earlier riser of more mature age is seen on the right possessing abundant hair and wonderful wings. Her slightly denser body can be glimpsed within her fairy dress.<ref>{{Harvnb|Conan Doyle|2006|p=103}}</ref>}} | |||
In 1983, the cousins admitted in an article published in the magazine '']'' that the photographs had been faked, although both maintained that they really had seen fairies. Elsie had copied illustrations of dancing girls from a popular children's book of the time, ''Princess Mary's Gift Book'', published in 1914, and drew wings on them.<ref name="World of Strange Powers">"Fairies, Phantoms, and Fantastic Photographs". Presenter: ]. Narrator: ]. '']''. ]. 22 May 1985. No. 6, season 1</ref> They said they had then cut out the cardboard figures and supported them with ]s, disposing of their props in the beck once the photograph had been taken.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=105|ps=none}} But the cousins disagreed about the fifth and final photograph, which Doyle in his ''The Coming of the Fairies'' described in this way: | |||
Elsie maintained it was a fake, just like all the others, but Frances insisted that it was genuine. In an interview given during the early 1980s Frances said: | |||
{{blockquote|Seated on the upper left hand edge with wing well displayed is an undraped fairy apparently considering whether it is time to get up. An earlier riser of more mature age is seen on the right possessing abundant hair and wonderful wings. Her slightly denser body can be glimpsed within her fairy dress.{{sfnp|Doyle|2006|p=103|ps=none}}}} | |||
{{quote|It was a wet Saturday afternoon and we were just mooching about with our cameras and Elsie had nothing prepared. I saw these fairies building up in the grasses and just aimed the camera and took a photograph.<ref name=Cooper/>}} | |||
] | |||
Both Frances and Elsie claimed to have taken the fifth photograph.<ref>{{citation |last=Hewson |first=David |title=Secrets of Two Famous Hoaxers {{subscription required}} |date=4 April 1983 |newspaper=The Times |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/643/561/106140179w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS50957444&dyn=11!xrn_3_0_CS50957444&hst_1?sw_aep=mclib |accessdate=26 April 2010}}</ref> In a letter published in ''The Times'' newspaper on 9 April 1983, Crawley explained the discrepancy in the womens' accounts as "an unintended double exposure of fairy cutouts in the grass".<ref>{{citation |last=Crawley |first=Geoffrey |title=More to Discover about Fairies {{subscription required}} |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/643/561/106140179w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS119245961&dyn=29!xrn_2_0_CS119245961&hst_1?sw_aep=mclib |accessdate=26 April 2010}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Elsie maintained it was a fake, just like all the others, but Frances insisted that it was genuine. In an interview given in the early 1980s Frances said: | |||
In a 1985 television interview on '']'', Elsie said that she and Frances were too embarrassed to admit the truth after fooling the author of Sherlock Holmes: "Two village kids and a brilliant man like Conan Doyle{{ndash}} well, we could only keep quiet." In the same interview Frances said: "I never even thought of it as being a fraud{{ndash}} it was just Elsie and I having a bit of fun and I can't understand to this day why they were taken in{{ndash}} they wanted to be taken in."<ref>"Fairies, Phantoms, and Fantastic Photographs". Presenter: ]. Narrator: ]. '']''. ]. 22 May 1985. No. 6, season 1. 8:25 minutes in</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|It was a wet Saturday afternoon and we were just mooching about with our cameras and Elsie had nothing prepared. I saw these fairies building up in the grasses and just aimed the camera and took a photograph.<ref name=Cooper/>}} | |||
Both Frances and Elsie claimed to have taken the fifth photograph.<ref>{{cite news |last=Hewson |first=David |title=Secrets of Two Famous Hoaxers |date=4 April 1983 |newspaper=The Times |url=http://archive.timesonline.co.uk/tol/viewArticle.arc?articleId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1983-04-04-03-004&pageId=ARCHIVE-The_Times-1983-04-04-03 |access-date=26 April 2010 |mode=cs2 }}{{dead link|date=September 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> In a letter published in '']'' newspaper on 9 April 1983, Geoffrey Crawley explained the discrepancy by suggesting that the photograph was "an unintended ] of fairy cutouts in the grass", and thus "both ladies can be quite sincere in believing that they each took it".<ref name=crawley>{{cite web |last=Crawley |first=Geoffrey |title=More to Discover about Fairies |url=http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/643/561/106140179w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS119245961&dyn=29!xrn_2_0_CS119245961&hst_1?sw_aep=mclib |access-date=26 April 2010 |mode=cs2 }} {{subscription required}}</ref> | |||
In a 1985 interview on ]'s '']'', Elsie said that she and Frances were too embarrassed to admit the truth after fooling Doyle, the author of ]: "Two village kids and a brilliant man like Conan Doyle – well, we could only keep quiet." In the same interview Frances said: "I never even thought of it as being a fraud – it was just Elsie and I having a bit of fun and I can't understand to this day why they were taken in – they wanted to be taken in."<ref name="World of Strange Powers" />{{clear}} | |||
==Subsequent history== | ==Subsequent history== | ||
] | |||
Frances died in 1986, and Elsie in 1988.<ref name=MagnussonP105/> Prints of their photographs of the fairies, along with a few other items including a first edition of Conan Doyle's book ''The Coming of Fairies'', were sold at auction in London for £21,620 in 1998.<ref>{{citation |title ='Fairy' fakes sell for fortune |publisher=BBC News |date=16 July 1998 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/134243.stm |accessdate=11 May 2007}}</ref> That same year, Geoffrey Crawley sold his Cottingley Fairy material to the National Museum of Film, Photography and Television in Bradford (now the ]), where it is on display. The collection included prints of the photographs, two of the cameras used by the girls, watercolours of fairies painted by Elsie, and a nine-page letter from Elsie admitting to the hoax.<ref>{{citation |title=Sorry, Mel – they're ours! |newspaper=Bradford Telegraph & Argus |date=16 April 1998 |url=http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/archive/1998/04/16/Bradford+District+Archive/8078013.Sorry__Mel___they_re_ours_/ |accessdate=25 April 2010}}</ref> | |||
The glass photographic plates were bought for £6,000 by an unnamed buyer at a London auction held in 2001.<ref>{{citation |title='Fairy' pictures fetch £6,000 |publisher=BBC News |date=13 March 2001 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/1218778.stm |accessdate=11 May 2007}}</ref> | |||
Frances died in 1986, and Elsie in 1988.{{sfnp|Magnusson|2006|p=105|ps=none}} Prints of their photographs of the fairies, along with a few other items including a first edition of Doyle's book ''The Coming of the Fairies'', were sold at auction in London for £21,620 in 1998.<ref>{{cite news |title='Fairy' fakes sell for fortune |work=BBC News |date=16 July 1998 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/134243.stm |access-date=11 May 2007 |mode=cs2 }}</ref> That same year, Geoffrey Crawley sold his Cottingley Fairy material to the National Museum of Film, Photography and Television in Bradford (now the ]), where it is on display. The collection included prints of the photographs, two of the cameras used by the girls, ]s of fairies painted by Elsie, and a nine-page letter from Elsie admitting to the hoax.<ref>{{cite news |title=Sorry, Mel – they're ours! |newspaper=Bradford Telegraph & Argus |date=16 April 1998 |url=http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/archive/1998/04/16/Bradford+District+Archive/8078013.Sorry__Mel___they_re_ours_/ |access-date=25 April 2010 |mode=cs2 }}</ref> | |||
Frances' daughter, Christine Lynch, appeared in an episode of the television programme '']'' in ], broadcast on ] in January 2009, with the photographs and one of the cameras given to the girls by Conan Doyle. Christine told the expert, ], that she believed, as her mother had done, that the fairies in the fifth photograph were genuine. Atterbury estimated the value of the items to be between £25,000 and £30,000.<ref>'']''. Presenter: ]. ]. 4 January 2009. No. 17, series 31</ref> A few months later, the first edition of Frances' memoirs was published, under the title ''Reflections on the Cottingley Fairies''.<ref>{{citation |title=Cursed by the Fairies |url=http://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/view/100031 |date=10 May 2009 |publisher=express.co.uk |accessdate=22 April 2010}}</ref> | |||
The glass photographic plates were bought for £6,000 by an unnamed buyer at a London auction held in 2001.<ref>{{cite news |title='Fairy' pictures fetch £6,000 |work=BBC News |date=13 March 2001 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/1218778.stm |access-date=11 May 2007 |mode=cs2 }}</ref> | |||
Frances's daughter, Christine Lynch, appeared in an episode of the television programme '']'' in ], broadcast on ] in January 2009, with the photographs and one of the cameras given to the girls by Doyle. Christine told the expert, ], that she believed, as her mother had done, that the fairies in the fifth photograph were genuine. Atterbury estimated the value of the items at between £25,000 and £30,000.<ref>'']''. Presenter: ]. ]. 4 January 2009. No. 17, series 31</ref> The first edition of Frances's memoirs was published a few months later, under the title ''Reflections on the Cottingley Fairies''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cursed by the Fairies |url=http://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/view/100031 |date=10 May 2009 |publisher=express.co.uk |access-date=22 April 2010 |mode=cs2 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120529211043/http://www.dailyexpress.co.uk/posts/view/100031 |archive-date=29 May 2012 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The book contains correspondence, sometimes "bitter", between Elsie and Frances. In one letter, dated 1983, Frances wrote: | |||
The 1997 films '']'', and '']'', were inspired by the events surrounding the Cottingley Fairies.<ref>{{citation |last=Klein |first=Andy |title=Fairy, Fairy, Quite Contrary |newspaper=Phoenix New Times |date=23 October 1997 |url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/1997-10-23/film/fairy-fairy-quite-contrary/ |accessdate=22 April 2010}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|I hated those photographs from the age of 16 when Mr Gardner presented me with a bunch of flowers and wanted me to sit on the platform with him. I realised what I was in for if I did not keep myself hidden.<ref>{{cite news |last=Clayton |first=Emma |title=Cottingley Fairies Back in the Spotlight |date=14 July 2009 |newspaper=Bradford Telegraph & Argus |url=http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/4492364.Book_reveals_story_behind_the_Fairies/ |access-date=3 May 2010 |mode=cs2}}</ref>}} | |||
The 1997 films '']'' and '']'' were inspired by the events surrounding the Cottingley Fairies.<ref>{{cite news |last=Klein |first=Andy |title=Fairy, Fairy, Quite Contrary |newspaper=Phoenix New Times |date=23 October 1997 |url=http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/1997-10-23/film/fairy-fairy-quite-contrary/ |access-date=22 April 2010 |mode=cs2 |archive-date=17 March 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150317144624/http://www.phoenixnewtimes.com/1997-10-23/film/fairy-fairy-quite-contrary/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> The photographs were parodied in a 1994 book written by ] and ], ''Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book''.{{sfnp|Ansley|2003|p=174|ps=none}} In ]'s 2021 novel, '']'', a series of letters were written soon after the Cottingley fairy photographs were published claiming further sightings of fairies and proof of their existence.<ref name=Clayton>{{cite news |last=Clayton |first=Emma |url=https://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/19108689.cottingley-fairies-chilling-fantasy-novel/ |title=Cottingley Fairies in chilling fantasy novel |newspaper=] |date=23 February 2021 |access-date=16 June 2022}}</ref> | |||
In 2017 a further two fairy photographs were presented as evidence that the girls' parents were part of the conspiracy. Dating from 1917 and 1918, both photographs are poorly executed copies of two of the original fairy photographs. One was published in 1918 in '']'' newspaper, which was before the originals had been seen by anyone outside the girls' immediate family.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Polidoro |first1=Massimo |author-link=Massimo Polidoro |title=The Conspiracy of the Fairies |journal=Skeptical Inquirer |date=1 December 2017 |volume=41 |pages=24–25 |mode=cs2}}</ref> | |||
In 2019, a print of the first of the five photographs sold for £1,050. A print of the second was also put up for sale but failed to sell as it did not meet its £500 reserve price. The pictures previously belonged to the ].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-50781521|title=Fake fairies photo print sells for £1,000|date=2019-12-13|access-date=2019-12-13|language=en-GB}}</ref> In December 2019, the third camera used to take the images was acquired by the National Science and Media Museum.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk/about-us/press-office/museum-acquires-final-camera-cottingley-fairies-story|title=Museum acquires final camera in the Cottingley Fairies story|date=9 December 2019|access-date=31 August 2021|publisher=The National Science and Media Museum}}</ref> | |||
{{clear}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist|refs=}} | |||
;Notes | |||
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}} | |||
===Bibliography=== | |||
{{ |
{{refbegin}} | ||
* {{citation |last=Ansley |first=William H. |contribution=Little, Big Girl: The Influence of the Alice Books and Other Works of Lewis Carroll on John Crowley's Novel ''Little Big, or The Fairies' Parliament'' |title=Snakes-Hands: The Fiction of John Crowley |editor1-last=Turner |editor1-first=Alice K. |editor2-last=Andre-Druissi |editor2-first=Michael |year=2003 |publisher=Cosmos Books |pages=165–203 |isbn=978-1-59224-051-7}} | |||
*{{citation |last=Conan Doyle |first=Arthur |title=The Coming of the Fairies |year=2006 |origyear=1922 |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-0803266551}} | |||
*{{citation |last= |
* {{citation |last=Doyle |first=Arthur Conan |title=The Coming of the Fairies |year=2006 |orig-year=1922 |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-0-8032-6655-1}} | ||
*{{citation |last= |
* {{citation |last=Magnusson |first=Magnus |title=Fakers, Forgers & Phoneys |publisher=Mainstream Publishing |year=2006 |isbn=1-84596-190-0}} | ||
*{{citation |last= |
* {{citation |last=Prashad |first=Sukhadev |title=World Famous Supernatural Mysteries |year=2008 |publisher=Pustak Mahal |isbn=978-81-223-0559-3}} | ||
* {{citation |last=Smith |first=Paul |contribution=The Cottingley Fairies: The End of a Legend |editor-last=Narváez |editor-first=Peter |title=The Good People: New Fairylore Essays |year=1997 |pages=371–405 |publisher=The University Press of Kentucky |isbn=978-0-8131-0939-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DLmoKKkxAX0C&pg=PA371}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* Bihet, Francesca (2013). "". In: Afterlife: 18th Postgraduate Religion and Theology Conference, 8–9 March 2013, University of Bristol. (Unpublished) | |||
* {{Skeptoid|id=4805|number=805|title=The Cottingley Fairies: Analysis of a Famous Hoax: The true and weird history of the two girls who fooled the world with their fairy photographs in 1917|date=November 9, 2021}} | |||
* {{citation |last1=Griffiths |first1=Frances Mary |last2=Lynch |first2=Christine |title=Reflections on the Cottingley Fairies |year=2009 |publisher=JMJ Publications |isbn=978-1-899228-06-5 |ref=none}} | |||
* Homer, Michael W. and Massimo Introvigne, 'The Recoming of the Fairies', ''Theosophical History'' 6 (1996), 59–76. | |||
* Inuma, Kaori “Fairies to Be Photographed!: Press Reactions in ‘Scrapbooks’ to the Cottingley Fairies,” ''Correspondence: Hitotsubashi Journal of Arts and Literature'' 4 (2019), 53–84. | |||
* {{citation |last1=Losure |first1=Mary |title=The Fairy Ring or Elsie and Frances Fool the World |year=2012 |publisher=Candlewick |isbn=978-0-7636-5670-6 |ref=none |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/fairyringorelsie0000losu }} | |||
* Maher, F. R., ''Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the Secret of the Cottingley Fairies'' (NP, 2021), ISBN 1548818941. | |||
* Owen, Alex <nowiki>''</nowiki>Borderland Forms': Arthur Conan Doyle, Albion's Daughters, and the Politics of the Cottingley Fairies', ''History Workshop'' 38 (1994), 48–85. | |||
* {{citation |last1=Sanderson |first1=S.F. |title=The Cottingley Fairy Photographs: A Re-Appraisal of the Evidence |journal=Folklore |date=1973 |volume=84 |issue=Summer|pages=89–103 |doi=10.1080/0015587X.1973.9716501 }}, pp. 89–103, {{ISSN|0015-587X}} | |||
* Sugg, Richard 'Cottingley Revisited', ''Fairy Investigation Society Newsletter'' 6 (2017), 19–25 | |||
==External links== | == External links == | ||
{{Commons category|Cottingley fairies}} | |||
* at The James Randi Educational Foundation | |||
{{Wikisource|The Coming of the Fairies}} | |||
* at Cottingley.Net - The Cottingley Network | |||
* – scans of the original version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's book (1922) | |||
* at Cottingley Connect | |||
* – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's book as an eBook in different formats at ] | |||
* (the original source of the drawings) – eBook in different formats at ] | |||
* at The James Randi Educational Foundation | |||
* at Cottingley.Net – The Cottingley Network | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204084119/http://www.cottingleyconnect.org.uk/fairies.htm |date=4 February 2012 }} at Cottingley Connect | |||
* {{librivox book | title=The Coming of the Fairies | author=Sir Arthur Conan DOYLE}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:11, 14 January 2025
Faked photographs of fairies by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths
The Cottingley Fairies appear in a series of five photographs taken by Elsie Wright (1901–1988) and Frances Griffiths (1907–1986), two young cousins who lived in Cottingley, near Bradford in England. In 1917, when the first two photographs were taken, Elsie was 16 years old and Frances was 9. The pictures came to the attention of writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who used them to illustrate an article on fairies he had been commissioned to write for the Christmas 1920 edition of The Strand Magazine. Doyle was enthusiastic about the photographs, and interpreted them as clear and visible evidence of supernatural phenomena. Public reaction was mixed; some accepted the images as genuine, others believed that they had been faked.
Interest in the Cottingley Fairies gradually declined after 1921. Both girls married and lived abroad for a time after they grew up, and yet the photographs continued to hold the public imagination. In 1966 a reporter from the Daily Express newspaper traced Elsie, who had by then returned to the United Kingdom. Elsie left open the possibility that she believed she had photographed her thoughts, and the media once again became interested in the story.
In the early 1980s Elsie and Frances admitted that the photographs were faked, using cardboard cutouts of fairies copied from a popular children's book of the time, but Frances maintained that the fifth and final photograph was genuine. As of 2019 the photographs and the cameras used are in the collections of the National Science and Media Museum in Bradford, England.
1917 photographs
In mid-1917 nine-year-old Frances Griffiths and her mother – both newly arrived in England from South Africa – were staying with Frances's aunt, Elsie Wright's mother, Polly, in the village of Cottingley in West Yorkshire; Elsie was then 16 years old. The two girls often played together beside the beck at the bottom of the garden, much to their mothers' annoyance, because they frequently came back with wet feet and clothes. Frances and Elsie said they only went to the beck to see the fairies, and to prove it, Elsie borrowed her father's camera, a Midg quarter-plate. The girls returned about 30 minutes later, "triumphant".
Elsie's father, Arthur, was a keen amateur photographer, and had set up his own darkroom. The picture on the photographic plate he developed showed Frances behind a bush in the foreground, on which four fairies appeared to be dancing. Knowing his daughter's artistic ability, and that she had spent some time working in a photographer's studio, he dismissed the figures as cardboard cutouts. Two months later the girls borrowed his camera again, and this time returned with a photograph of Elsie sitting on the lawn holding out her hand to a 1-foot-tall (30 cm) gnome. Exasperated by what he believed to be "nothing but a prank", and convinced that the girls must have tampered with his camera in some way, Arthur Wright refused to lend it to them again. His wife Polly, however, believed the photographs to be authentic.
Letter from Frances Griffiths to a friend in South AfricaI am learning French, Geometry, Cookery and Algebra at school now. Dad came home from France the other week after being there ten months, and we all think the war will be over in a few days ... I am sending two photos, both of me, one of me in a bathing costume in our back yard, while the other is me with some fairies. Elsie took that one.
Towards the end of 1918, Frances sent a letter to Johanna Parvin, a friend in Cape Town, South Africa, where Frances had lived for most of her life, enclosing the photograph of herself with the fairies. On the back she wrote "It is funny, I never used to see them in Africa. It must be too hot for them there."
The photographs became public in mid-1919, after Elsie's mother attended a meeting of the Theosophical Society in Bradford. The lecture that evening was on "fairy life", and at the end of the meeting Polly Wright showed the two fairy photographs taken by her daughter and niece to the speaker. As a result, the photographs were displayed at the society's annual conference in Harrogate, held a few months later. There they came to the attention of a leading member of the society, Edward Gardner. One of the central beliefs of theosophy is that humanity is undergoing a cycle of evolution, towards increasing "perfection", and Gardner recognised the potential significance of the photographs for the movement:
the fact that two young girls had not only been able to see fairies, which others had done, but had actually for the first time ever been able to materialise them at a density sufficient for their images to be recorded on a photographic plate, meant that it was possible that the next cycle of evolution was underway.
Initial examinations
Gardner sent the prints along with the original glass-plate negatives to Harold Snelling, a photography expert. Snelling's opinion was that "the two negatives are entirely genuine, unfaked photographs ... no trace whatsoever of studio work involving card or paper models". He did not go so far as to say that the photographs showed fairies, stating only that "these are straight forward photographs of whatever was in front of the camera at the time". Gardner had the prints "clarified" by Snelling, and new negatives produced, "more conducive to printing", for use in the illustrated lectures he gave around Britain. Snelling supplied the photographic prints which were available for sale at Gardner's lectures.
Author and prominent spiritualist Sir Arthur Conan Doyle learned of the photographs from the editor of the spiritualist publication Light. Doyle had been commissioned by The Strand Magazine to write an article on fairies for their Christmas issue, and the fairy photographs "must have seemed like a godsend" according to broadcaster and historian Magnus Magnusson. Doyle contacted Gardner in June 1920 to determine the background to the photographs, and wrote to Elsie and her father to request permission from the latter to use the prints in his article. Arthur Wright was "obviously impressed" that Doyle was involved, and gave his permission for publication, but he refused payment on the grounds that, if genuine, the images should not be "soiled" by money.
Gardner and Doyle sought a second expert opinion from the photographic company Kodak. Several of the company's technicians examined the enhanced prints, and although they agreed with Snelling that the pictures "showed no signs of being faked", they concluded that "this could not be taken as conclusive evidence ... that they were authentic photographs of fairies". Kodak declined to issue a certificate of authenticity. Gardner believed that the Kodak technicians might not have examined the photographs entirely objectively, observing that one had commented "after all, as fairies couldn't be true, the photographs must have been faked somehow". The prints were also examined by another photographic company, Ilford, who reported unequivocally that there was "some evidence of faking". Gardner and Doyle, perhaps rather optimistically, interpreted the results of the three expert evaluations as two in favour of the photographs' authenticity and one against.
Doyle also showed the photographs to the physicist and pioneering psychical researcher Sir Oliver Lodge, who believed the photographs to be fake. He suggested that a troupe of dancers had masqueraded as fairies, and expressed doubt as to their "distinctly 'Parisienne'" hairstyles.
On 4 October 2018 the first two of the photographs, Alice and the Fairies and Iris and the Gnome, were to be sold by Dominic Winter Auctioneers, in Gloucestershire. The prints, suspected to have been made in 1920 to sell at theosophical lectures, were expected to bring £700–£1000 each. As it turned out, Iris with the Gnome sold for a hammer price of £5,400 (plus 24% buyer's premium incl. VAT), while Alice and the Fairies sold for a hammer price of £15,000 (plus 24% buyer's premium incl. VAT).
1920 photographs
Doyle was preoccupied with organising an imminent lecture tour of Australia, and in July 1920, sent Gardner to meet the Wright family. By this point, Frances was living with her parents in Scarborough, but Elsie's father told Gardner that he had been so certain the photographs were fakes that while the girls were away he searched their bedroom and the area around the beck (stream), looking for scraps of pictures or cutouts, but found nothing "incriminating".
Gardner believed the Wright family to be honest and respectable. To place the matter of the photographs' authenticity beyond doubt, he returned to Cottingley at the end of July with two W. Butcher & Sons Cameo folding plate cameras and 24 secretly marked photographic plates. Frances was invited to stay with the Wright family during the school summer holiday so that she and Elsie could take more pictures of the fairies. Gardner described his briefing in his 1945 Fairies: A Book of Real Fairies:
I went off, to Cottingley again, taking the two cameras and plates from London, and met the family and explained to the two girls the simple working of the cameras, giving one each to keep. The cameras were loaded, and my final advice was that they need go up to the glen only on fine days as they had been accustomed to do before and tice the fairies, as they called their way of attracting them, and see what they could get. I suggested only the most obvious and easy precautions about lighting and distance, for I knew it was essential they should feel free and unhampered and have no burden of responsibility. If nothing came of it all, I told them, they were not to mind a bit.
Until 19 August the weather was unsuitable for photography. Because Frances and Elsie insisted that the fairies would not show themselves if others were watching, Elsie's mother was persuaded to visit her sister's for tea, leaving the girls alone. In her absence the girls took several photographs, two of which appeared to show fairies. In the first, Frances and the Leaping Fairy, Frances is shown in profile with a winged fairy close by her nose. The second, Fairy offering Posy of Harebells to Elsie, shows a fairy either hovering or tiptoeing on a branch, and offering Elsie a flower. Two days later the girls took the last picture, Fairies and Their Sun-Bath.
The plates were packed in cotton wool and returned to Gardner in London, who sent an "ecstatic" telegram to Doyle, by then in Melbourne. Doyle wrote back:
My heart was gladdened when out here in far Australia I had your note and the three wonderful pictures which are confirmatory of our published results. When our fairies are admitted other psychic phenomena will find a more ready acceptance ... We have had continued messages at seances for some time that a visible sign was coming through.
Publication and reaction
Doyle's article in the December 1920 issue of The Strand contained two higher-resolution prints of the 1917 photographs, and sold out within days of publication. To protect the girls' anonymity, Frances and Elsie were called Alice and Iris respectively, and the Wright family was referred to as the "Carpenters". An enthusiastic and committed spiritualist, Doyle hoped that if the photographs convinced the public of the existence of fairies then they might more readily accept other psychic phenomena. He ended his article with the words:
The recognition of their existence will jolt the material twentieth-century mind out of its heavy ruts in the mud, and will make it admit that there is a glamour and mystery to life. Having discovered this, the world will not find it so difficult to accept that spiritual message supported by physical facts which have already been put before it.
Early press coverage was "mixed", generally a combination of "embarrassment and puzzlement"; though Japanese scholar Kaori Inuma has noted that there were also open and positive assessments. The historical novelist and poet Maurice Hewlett published a series of articles in the literary journal John O' London's Weekly, in which he concluded: "And knowing children, and knowing that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle has legs, I decide that the Miss Carpenters have pulled one of them." The London newspaper Truth on 5 January 1921 expressed a similar view; "For the true explanation of these fairy photographs what is wanted is not a knowledge of occult phenomena but a knowledge of children." Some public figures were more sympathetic. Margaret McMillan, the educational and social reformer, wrote: "How wonderful that to these dear children such a wonderful gift has been vouchsafed." The novelist Henry De Vere Stacpoole decided to take the fairy photographs and the girls at face value. In a letter to Gardner he wrote: "Look at Alice's face. Look at Iris's face. There is an extraordinary thing called Truth which has 10 million faces and forms – it is God's currency and the cleverest coiner or forger can't imitate it."
Major John Hall-Edwards, a keen photographer and pioneer of medical X-ray treatments in Britain, was a particularly vigorous critic:
On the evidence I have no hesitation in saying that these photographs could have been "faked". I criticize the attitude of those who declared there is something supernatural in the circumstances attending to the taking of these pictures because, as a medical man, I believe that the inculcation of such absurd ideas into the minds of children will result in later life in manifestations and nervous disorder and mental disturbances.
Doyle used the later photographs in 1921 to illustrate a second article in The Strand, in which he described other accounts of fairy sightings. The article formed the foundation for his 1922 book The Coming of the Fairies. As before, the photographs were received with mixed credulity. Sceptics noted that the fairies "looked suspiciously like the traditional fairies of nursery tales" and that they had "very fashionable hairstyles".
Gardner's final visit
Gardner made a final visit to Cottingley in August 1921. He again brought cameras and photographic plates for Frances and Elsie, but was accompanied by the occultist Geoffrey Hodson. Although neither of the girls claimed to see any fairies, and there were no more photographs, "on the contrary, he saw them everywhere" and wrote voluminous notes on his observations.
By now Elsie and Frances were tired of the whole fairy business. Years later Elsie looked at a photograph of herself and Frances taken with Hodson and said: "Look at that, fed up with fairies." Both Elsie and Frances later admitted that they "played along" with Hodson "out of mischief", and that they considered him "a fake".
Later investigations
Public interest in the Cottingley Fairies gradually subsided after 1921. Elsie and Frances both eventually married, moved away from the area and each lived overseas for varying periods of time. In 1966, a reporter from the Daily Express newspaper traced Elsie, who was by then back in England. She admitted in an interview given that year that the fairies might have been "figments of my imagination", but left open the possibility she believed that she had somehow managed to photograph her thoughts. The media subsequently became interested in Frances and Elsie's photographs once again. BBC television's Nationwide programme investigated the case in 1971, but Elsie stuck to her story: "I've told you that they're photographs of figments of our imagination, and that's what I'm sticking to".
Elsie and Frances were interviewed by journalist Austin Mitchell in September 1976, for a programme broadcast on Yorkshire Television. When pressed, both women agreed that "a rational person doesn't see fairies", but they denied having fabricated the photographs. In 1978 the magician and scientific sceptic James Randi and a team from the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal examined the photographs, using a "computer enhancement process". They concluded that the photographs were fakes, and that strings could be seen supporting the fairies. Geoffrey Crawley, editor of the British Journal of Photography, undertook a "major scientific investigation of the photographs and the events surrounding them", published between 1982 and 1983, "the first major postwar analysis of the affair". He also concluded that the pictures were fakes.
Confession
In 1983, the cousins admitted in an article published in the magazine The Unexplained that the photographs had been faked, although both maintained that they really had seen fairies. Elsie had copied illustrations of dancing girls from a popular children's book of the time, Princess Mary's Gift Book, published in 1914, and drew wings on them. They said they had then cut out the cardboard figures and supported them with hatpins, disposing of their props in the beck once the photograph had been taken. But the cousins disagreed about the fifth and final photograph, which Doyle in his The Coming of the Fairies described in this way:
Seated on the upper left hand edge with wing well displayed is an undraped fairy apparently considering whether it is time to get up. An earlier riser of more mature age is seen on the right possessing abundant hair and wonderful wings. Her slightly denser body can be glimpsed within her fairy dress.
Elsie maintained it was a fake, just like all the others, but Frances insisted that it was genuine. In an interview given in the early 1980s Frances said:
It was a wet Saturday afternoon and we were just mooching about with our cameras and Elsie had nothing prepared. I saw these fairies building up in the grasses and just aimed the camera and took a photograph.
Both Frances and Elsie claimed to have taken the fifth photograph. In a letter published in The Times newspaper on 9 April 1983, Geoffrey Crawley explained the discrepancy by suggesting that the photograph was "an unintended double exposure of fairy cutouts in the grass", and thus "both ladies can be quite sincere in believing that they each took it".
In a 1985 interview on Yorkshire Television's Arthur C. Clarke's World of Strange Powers, Elsie said that she and Frances were too embarrassed to admit the truth after fooling Doyle, the author of Sherlock Holmes: "Two village kids and a brilliant man like Conan Doyle – well, we could only keep quiet." In the same interview Frances said: "I never even thought of it as being a fraud – it was just Elsie and I having a bit of fun and I can't understand to this day why they were taken in – they wanted to be taken in."
Subsequent history
Frances died in 1986, and Elsie in 1988. Prints of their photographs of the fairies, along with a few other items including a first edition of Doyle's book The Coming of the Fairies, were sold at auction in London for £21,620 in 1998. That same year, Geoffrey Crawley sold his Cottingley Fairy material to the National Museum of Film, Photography and Television in Bradford (now the National Science and Media Museum), where it is on display. The collection included prints of the photographs, two of the cameras used by the girls, watercolours of fairies painted by Elsie, and a nine-page letter from Elsie admitting to the hoax. The glass photographic plates were bought for £6,000 by an unnamed buyer at a London auction held in 2001.
Frances's daughter, Christine Lynch, appeared in an episode of the television programme Antiques Roadshow in Belfast, broadcast on BBC One in January 2009, with the photographs and one of the cameras given to the girls by Doyle. Christine told the expert, Paul Atterbury, that she believed, as her mother had done, that the fairies in the fifth photograph were genuine. Atterbury estimated the value of the items at between £25,000 and £30,000. The first edition of Frances's memoirs was published a few months later, under the title Reflections on the Cottingley Fairies. The book contains correspondence, sometimes "bitter", between Elsie and Frances. In one letter, dated 1983, Frances wrote:
I hated those photographs from the age of 16 when Mr Gardner presented me with a bunch of flowers and wanted me to sit on the platform with him. I realised what I was in for if I did not keep myself hidden.
The 1997 films FairyTale: A True Story and Photographing Fairies were inspired by the events surrounding the Cottingley Fairies. The photographs were parodied in a 1994 book written by Terry Jones and Brian Froud, Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book. In A. J. Elwood's 2021 novel, The Cottingley Cuckoo, a series of letters were written soon after the Cottingley fairy photographs were published claiming further sightings of fairies and proof of their existence.
In 2017 a further two fairy photographs were presented as evidence that the girls' parents were part of the conspiracy. Dating from 1917 and 1918, both photographs are poorly executed copies of two of the original fairy photographs. One was published in 1918 in The Sphere newspaper, which was before the originals had been seen by anyone outside the girls' immediate family.
In 2019, a print of the first of the five photographs sold for £1,050. A print of the second was also put up for sale but failed to sell as it did not meet its £500 reserve price. The pictures previously belonged to the Reverend George Vale Owen. In December 2019, the third camera used to take the images was acquired by the National Science and Media Museum.
References
- Magnusson (2006), pp. 97–98
- ^ Magnusson (2006), p. 97
- Prashad (2008), p. 42
- ^ Prashad (2008), p. 40
- "Episode 229: A Glamour and a Mystery (7.28.2023)". Criminal. 28 July 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
- ^ Magnusson (2006), pp. 98–99
- ^ Smith (1997), p. 382
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- ^ Smith (1997), p. 389
- Smith (1997), p. 401
- ^ Crawley, Geoffrey, "More to Discover about Fairies", retrieved 26 April 2010 (subscription required)
- Smith (1997), p. 383
- Magnusson (2006), pp. 99–100
- Smith (1997), p. 384
- ^ Magnusson (2006), p. 101
- ^ Smith (1997), p. 385
- Hester, Jessica Leigh (28 September 2018). "For Sale: Legendary Photographic 'Proof' of Fairies and Gnomes". Atlas Obscura. Archived from the original on 3 October 2018. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
- Dominic Winter Auctioneer website, Sale Results, retrieved 26 March 2019.
- ^ Magnusson (2006), p. 102
- ^ Cooper, Joe (1982), "Cottingley: At Last the Truth", The Unexplained (117): 2, 338–340
- Magnusson (2006), pp. 102–103
- ^ Magnusson (2006), p. 103
- Doyle, A. Conan (December 1920). "Fairies Photographed". Strand Magazine. 60 (12): 462–468. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
- Smith (1997), p. 388
- ^ Roden, Barbara, "The Coming of the Fairies: An Alternative View of the Episode of the Cottingley Fairies", The Arthur Conan Doyle Society, archived from the original on 17 September 2010, retrieved 25 April 2010
- ^ Smith (1997), p. 390
- Smith (1997), p. 391
- “Fairies to Be Photographed!: Press Reactions in ‘Scrapbooks’ to the Cottingley Fairies,” Correspondence: Hitotsubashi Journal of Arts and Literature 4 (2019), 53-84.
- "Major John Hall-Edwards", Birmingham City Council, archived from the original on 28 September 2012, retrieved 23 April 2010
- ^ Magnusson (2006), p. 105
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- ^ "Fairies, Phantoms, and Fantastic Photographs". Presenter: Arthur C. Clarke. Narrator: Anna Ford. Arthur C. Clarke's World of Strange Powers. ITV. 22 May 1985. No. 6, season 1
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Bibliography
- Ansley, William H. (2003), "Little, Big Girl: The Influence of the Alice Books and Other Works of Lewis Carroll on John Crowley's Novel Little Big, or The Fairies' Parliament", in Turner, Alice K.; Andre-Druissi, Michael (eds.), Snakes-Hands: The Fiction of John Crowley, Cosmos Books, pp. 165–203, ISBN 978-1-59224-051-7
- Doyle, Arthur Conan (2006) , The Coming of the Fairies, University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 978-0-8032-6655-1
- Magnusson, Magnus (2006), Fakers, Forgers & Phoneys, Mainstream Publishing, ISBN 1-84596-190-0
- Prashad, Sukhadev (2008), World Famous Supernatural Mysteries, Pustak Mahal, ISBN 978-81-223-0559-3
- Smith, Paul (1997), "The Cottingley Fairies: The End of a Legend", in Narváez, Peter (ed.), The Good People: New Fairylore Essays, The University Press of Kentucky, pp. 371–405, ISBN 978-0-8131-0939-8
Further reading
- Bihet, Francesca (2013). "Sprites, spiritualists and sleuths: the intersecting ownership of transcendent proofs in the Cottingley Fairy Fraud". In: Afterlife: 18th Postgraduate Religion and Theology Conference, 8–9 March 2013, University of Bristol. (Unpublished)
- Dunning, Brian (9 November 2021). "Skeptoid #805: The Cottingley Fairies: Analysis of a Famous Hoax: The true and weird history of the two girls who fooled the world with their fairy photographs in 1917". Skeptoid.
- Griffiths, Frances Mary; Lynch, Christine (2009), Reflections on the Cottingley Fairies, JMJ Publications, ISBN 978-1-899228-06-5
- Homer, Michael W. and Massimo Introvigne, 'The Recoming of the Fairies', Theosophical History 6 (1996), 59–76.
- Inuma, Kaori “Fairies to Be Photographed!: Press Reactions in ‘Scrapbooks’ to the Cottingley Fairies,” Correspondence: Hitotsubashi Journal of Arts and Literature 4 (2019), 53–84.
- Losure, Mary (2012), The Fairy Ring or Elsie and Frances Fool the World, Candlewick, ISBN 978-0-7636-5670-6
- Maher, F. R., Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the Secret of the Cottingley Fairies (NP, 2021), ISBN 1548818941.
- Owen, Alex ''Borderland Forms': Arthur Conan Doyle, Albion's Daughters, and the Politics of the Cottingley Fairies', History Workshop 38 (1994), 48–85.
- Sanderson, S.F. (1973), "The Cottingley Fairy Photographs: A Re-Appraisal of the Evidence", Folklore, 84 (Summer): 89–103, doi:10.1080/0015587X.1973.9716501, pp. 89–103, ISSN 0015-587X
- Sugg, Richard 'Cottingley Revisited', Fairy Investigation Society Newsletter 6 (2017), 19–25
External links
- The Coming of the Fairies – scans of the original version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's book (1922)
- The Coming of the Fairies – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's book as an eBook in different formats at Project Gutenberg
- Princess Mary's Gift Book (the original source of the drawings) – eBook in different formats at Project Gutenberg
- The Case of the Cottingley Fairies at The James Randi Educational Foundation
- Cottingley Fairies at Cottingley.Net – The Cottingley Network
- Cottingley Fairies Archived 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine at Cottingley Connect
- The Coming of the Fairies public domain audiobook at LibriVox