Ernest Hanley Protheroe Original Typescript for Budge and Betty in Fairy Town 'Fairy Fancies' Children's Story

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An original 1920s pen & ink drawing, Ernest Protheroe, Original Typescript for Budge and Betty in Fairy Town 'Fairy Fancies' Children's Story.

This is an original 16-page typed manuscript dating from the 1920s by British children's author Ernest Hanley Protheroe (1866–1929). Protheroe wrote and illustrated a series of children's books about two adventurous young twins named Budge and Betty. This story is titled 'Fairy Fancies', which forms part of the book 'Budge and Betty in Fairy Town'. The typescript includes a number of corrections written by the author in pencil.

The typescript is in its original state, with holes punched at the left edge and folded in half. Please note that the typescript will ship folded.

We are also selling separately a number of charming original pen and ink illustrations for this story by Protheroe.

+ Read the S&W Collection Research

Ernest Hanley Protheroe (1866–1929): 1920s Children's Illustrations

This typescript forms part of a charming collection of works by Ernest Hanley Protheroe (1866–1929) that we have for sale. Protheroe was a prolific British children's author who wrote stories for boys under his own name, and stories for girls under the pseudonyms Alys Chatwyn, Phyllis Hanley, P. Nester and Marjorie Wynne. He was also a teacher and wrote numerous reference books, on subjects as diverse as natural history, railways, mining and the British Empire. During the First World War he wrote patriotic biographies on Lord Kitchener and the British nurse Edith Cavell.

Protheroe lived in Wimbledon and at Hyde in Greater Manchester, and he had five children: Alan, Cyril, Geoffrey, Marjorie and Phyllis. In his books for children we get a real sense of his understanding of a child's imagination. In the 1920s he wrote a series of fantasy stories featuring the adventurous young twins Budge and Betty, which are charming evocations of the innocence, goodness and freedom of childhood. The story 'The Tree that Ran' is an archetypal tale of adventure and faith in the triumph of good over evil. Protheroe writes: 'One could never tell what might happen, especially in an enchanted land. One could only hope for the best.' Budge and Betty are connoisseurs of fairy tales themselves—'Betty knew every fairy story from beginning to end'—and so there is a sense that these children are us, are our children, and we too can enter the stories via our imaginations.

+ Artwork Details

Dimensions: Height: 26cm (10.24") Width: 21cm (8.27")

Presented: Unframed.

Medium: Pen & Ink

Age: Early 20th-century

Signed: No.

Inscribed: Handwritten corrections by the author.

Dated: --

Condition: In fair condition for its age. with some minor age toning and creasing, commensurate with age. Please see photos for detail.

Stock number: JX-465