![]() The Legend - The Rest of the Story... - In Their Own Words Variations - Theories - Bibliography
The Legend:
Elsie's mother had developed an interest in things supernatural, and took the pictures to share with a Theosophist meeting in Bradford one evening. In no time at all, the pictures were the center of attention and argument.
Of the people who believed the fairies were real, the most prominant and vocal was Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, creator of Sherlock Holmes. Sir Arthur printed the first two pictures in Strand Magazine in 1920 to help support his argument for the existance of fairies; this article made the story a worldwide sensation.
In 1920, Sir Arthur arranged for Elsie and Frances to once again be given a camera and left on their own in the small creek. The results were three more photos of the fairies; the last to be made, for shortly after Elsie and Frances moved away from one another and stopped seeing fairies. Sir Arthur later printed these three pictures in a sequel to his earlier article, and, in 1922, he expanded the two articles into a book, The Coming of the Fairies.
Variations - Theories - Bibliography
| ||||||||||||||||||||



| PLEASE NOTE: All articles in the Anomalies database and it's sub-databases (Mysteries, Curiosities, and SHC) are written by Garth Haslam, and should not be copied in any format without his express permission. If you use Anomalies, Mysteries, or Curiosities for research, please be sure to list Anomalies and it's URL -- http://www.anomalyinfo.com -- in your references. This article is written by and copyright (c)2005-2008 Garth Haslam, all rights reserved. Web page design, logo/link art by Garth Haslam, September 1996-2008; he can be emailed by Clicking Here. |