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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsFor Sale: Legendary Photographic 'Proof' of Fairies and Gnomes
For Sale: Legendary Photographic Proof of Fairies and Gnomes
In 1917, two young girls with a camera pranked the world.
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/cottingley-fairies-photographs-for-sale
by Jessica Leigh Hester September 28, 2018
Elsie Wright photographed her cousin, Frances Griffths, surrounded by fairies in July 1917. Courtesy Dominic Winter Auctioneers
In summer and autumn of 1917, teenage Elsie Wright and her adolescent cousin, Frances Griffiths, borrowed a glass-plate camera from Wrights father and tromped to Cottingley Beck, in West Yorkshire. They photographed each other on the bank of the stream and in the grass of a sun-dappled glenand also captured some special guests.
One image shows Griffiths, looking wistful, chin in hand, with a cavorting troupe of fairies. In another, a smiling Wright greets a gnome high-stepping through the grass.
For those inclined to believe in the existence of small, magical forest creatures, the photos felt like ironclad proofthe ultimate rebuke to the skeptics, clear as day. Some of the most ardent support for the veracity of the images, known as the Cottingley Fairies, came from Arthur Conan Doyle. Years after he had dreamed up Sherlock Holmes, the author campaigned for belief in Spiritualism, which boomed during and after World War I. Conan Doyle, who had lost his son Kingsley in the war, seized on the girls photographs as evidence of the mystical world. He compiled his arguments into a volume called The Coming of the Fairies. The pictures, he wrote, represent either the most elaborate and ingenious hoax ever played upon the public, or else they constitute an event in human history which may in the future appear to have been epoch-making in its character.
Frances Griffiths photographed Elsie Wright hanging out with a gnome in September 1917. Courtesy Dominic Winter Auctioneers
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The hoax, it turned out, wasnt so elaborate. The cousins had carefully cut the creatures out of paper and staked them to the ground with little hat pins to create the illusion of floating. Hints of this sleight-of-hand were there, for those looking closely. The gnomes belly, for instance, had a tiny hole where the pin poked through. Conan Doyle, for one, proposed that the little hole was a navel.
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marble falls
(57,109 posts)smart phone display and feel the power.
Pope George Ringo II
(1,896 posts)This is one famous hoax. Probably some collectible value there.
The King of Prussia
(737 posts)I live about 6 miles from Cottingley. These photos seem to be its only claim to fame.
keithbvadu2
(36,829 posts)Early photoshop/photobombing?
marble falls
(57,109 posts)Nitram
(22,822 posts)OK, I just saw the same had been posted above.