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Cobb, Ruth (1878-1950) - Little Girls of other Lands

Cobb, Ruth (1878-1950) - Little Girls of other Lands

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This image of children from other lands is taken from the 20th edition of Blackie's Children's Annual from 1923.

This download consists of 1 image, in jpeg format, that is 600dpi and 4680 pixels wide by 6336 pixels tall. 

The picture is out of copyright and in the public domain, so you are free to use it in whatever way you'd like, including commercial use.

Ruth Cobb (1878-1950) was an English illustrator and writer, particularly noted for portraying children and dolls in colourful costumes.

Ruth was born on 14th June 1878 to Thomas Cobb, a future novelist but at the time evidently a tailor in New Bond Street, London.  However the family soon moved to Tunbridge Wells where her sister and brother were born.

All the family became busy writers, but young Ruth was determined to be simply an illustrator.  She worked first in a studio then as a freelance, eventually selling to magazines as varied as Chatterbox, the Autocar, the Builder and Punch.

Notable success began from 1902 with her three books in the Dumpy Books series, where Richard Hunter’s verses accompanied Ruth’s vivid colour sketches of Dollies, More Dollies, and Irene’s Christmas Party. Other Dumpy titles included one by her father and two by Mary Tourtel, pre-Rupert.  She then produced larger-format books such as The Wonder-Voyage and A Trip to Fairyland, and provided illustrations for books by others.

Meanwhile her holiday sketches of old buildings started seeing print, eventually blossoming into a long secondary career of illustrated articles.  For adults she decorated works such F.J. Harvey Darton’s A Parcel of Kent, her brother’s first novel Stand to Arms, and E.H. Young’s 1930 best-seller Miss Mole. However, she remained devoted to children’s art.

During the Twenties and Thirties Ruth contributed to a number of children’s annuals and miscellanies for Blackie, Collins, Nelson, Tuck and others.  At times she provided both text and pictures for stories or articles. However, her run of children’s illustration was ended in 1939 by the outbreak of World War II.  Ruth’s market was shattered, and so was her whole way of life.  A memoir states: “She went to live with relations in Sussex.  There, she did a lot of voluntary war work, became President of a Women’s Institute, did map drawing, for the War Agricultural Committee in Lewes, and spoke for the Ministry of Information.”  Typically, a 1941 lecture of hers was “Some of London’s Bombed Buildings.”

Later she resumed her work for periodicals, and as the war ended she began producing a quartet of slim illustrated topographical books, all well-received.  Evidently she suffered a sudden heart attack, being found dead on 7th December 1950.  Her wartime struggles seem to have deepened her appreciation of liberty; the first chapter of A Sussex Highway is entitled “The Beginning of the Road”, its main illustration dated shortly after VE Day. The final chapter of her final book commemorates Thomas Paine, author of The Rights of Man.


 

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