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Cottingley fairies house for sale |
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Written by admin
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Fancy
owning a piece of Fortean history? Cottingley is forever in our minds
courtesy of Arthur Conan Doyle and the fairy photographs of Elsie
Wright and Frances Griffiths from 1917 and 1920. There are so many
Fortean aspects and indeed cliches in this case that I shall not rehash
them here. Cottingley is currently experiencing a bit of a building
boom and new streets are being added, streets with names such as Oberon
Way, Lysander Way and Goodfellow Close. There is already a Fairy Dell
there. But Main Street survives. This is the street where the girls
were staying at the time, specifcially in number 31. Number 31 was sold
in July of 2000, for £57 000. But it now appears that next door is up
for sale
A mere snip at £154 995 The estate agent description inlcudes
mention of the fairies: "Access to the garden from the rear of the
property which has a history as the garden featured in the Cottingley
Fairies Story. In July 1917, two young girls claimed to have taken
photographs of real life fairies at the bottom of their garden. When
the genius behind the Sherlock Holmes stories, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
presented the pictures to the public as evidence of the existence of
fairies, the tale of the two little girls in Cottingley was
immortalised. Like a pebble dropped into the middle of a pond, the
Cottingley tale travelled across the globe and debated by millions.
Every few years, the story is resurrected and once again enchants a
generation.
Despite the confession in her twilight years,
Frances Griffiths added another twist to the story when she insisted
that although the photos were faked, she really did see fairies and
played with them at the Beck. Indeed, even today, many people believe
in fairies and refute the evidence held against the photos which were
later admitted to have been fabricated by the girls themselves.
View: Full Article | Source: CFI
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