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IssuesOctober 1957

Tasha Tudor's Storybook Farm

Famed illustrator of children's books

Tasha Tudor, author and illustrator of books for children, recently passed away at 92. An illustrator of more than 100 books, she lived in New England for her entire life, raising her four children on a New Hampshire farm without electricity or running water for many years. She worked in her small kitchen, while outside on the farm were the animals, which, like her children, became characters in her books. The following Yankee Classic about the farm is from October 1957.

"Pekin White was a large and handsome drake whose wife Matilda Paddleford was a beautiful, white duck. Pekin was the particular friend of a little rooster called Biggity Bantam. And there were other farm friends too, like Flatfoot and his family of Toulouse geese; Regal, a Rhode Island Red Rooster and his flock of hens; the soft-eyed Jersey cow, Mrs. Mocha, as well as a family of beagle dogs. And, to be sure, there was a variety of house and barn cats headed by a tom cat with no tail, called Mr. Stubbs. They all lived on a New Hampshire farm belonging to the Warner family, and most of these creatures were the pets of the Warner children, Bill, Ralph, Helen and Emily."

So opens a charming children's book entitled Pekin White, written by Thomas L. McCready, Jr. and beautifully illustrated by his wife, Tasha Tudor. Two other books, Mr. Stubbs and Biggety Bantam recount further adventures of the Warner children and their animal friends and are so cleverly written and illustrated that they have delighted thousands of young readers -- and their parents. But if these young people only knew that the "Warner" children were real and their adventures true, I have no doubt that their eyes would pop with amazement. But they are true and everything is real, except the names of the Warner family. In reality, Mr. And Mrs. "Warner" are Tom and Tasha McCready and Bill, Ralph, Helen and Emily are really Seth, Tom, Bethany and Efner McCready. The names of the animals are not fictitious and if you visit the McCready farm in Webster, New Hampshire, you can see them today. Biggity Bantam still crows his way about the farm; Pekin and Matilda Paddleford still splash in their pool; Mr. Stubbs and his nephew, Young Stubbs, greet visitors with a mew; and the cows graze contentedly in the rolling fields about the farm. They are a little older, as are the children, but the rollicking, carefree spirit of the McCready menage is just the same as a few years ago when the books were written.

Tom and Tasha McCready are gentle, sensitive people with an ability to look at the world through children's eyes. To say the way of life at the McCready farm is slightly old fashioned is to compliment them, for they make their own fun, enjoy themselves as a family and seem to have a happier look on their faces than is normally seen in this jet powered age. Tasha is a lovely person who goes about her daily chores with disarming grace. She has been the subject of many of Nell Dorr's beautiful photographs, some of which appeared in the international photo exhibit "The Family of Man." An artist of long standing, her illustrations of Tom's books, of children's classics such as Mother Goose and A Child's Garden of Verses, books by other authors, as well as those she has written, are charmingly simple yet show the detail which so delights young readers. Quite recently, Tasha has begun to paint portraits of children and a few adults. Tasha works almost every day at her drawing board and the children try to give her the quiet she needs. However, she is not averse to having Mr. Tweedie, Bethany's tame starling, visit her while she paints and he frequently hops to the back of a chair and watches with beady eyes.

Reader CommentsRSS

Comment from Bonnie Mercaldo on August 3, 2008

I am sorry that Tasha Tudor has passed away. The world would be a better place if they lived like she did. I find it interesting that she lived in New Hampshire as I thought she lived in Vermont.

Comment from mary whitney on August 5, 2008

she didlive in s.e. vermont

Comment from joan orrall on August 19, 2008

She was always "young" at heart, I enjoyed her stories about her family and the corgi dog, along with her beautiful flowers and plants, I always remember her in a long skirt walking bare-foot amongst her plants and flowers. She will forever be a happy memory.

Comment from joan orrall on August 19, 2008

I remember watching a segment about her on tv, showing her in her lovely garden with her Corgi dog, walking barefoot in a long skirt. Her lovely puppets, and shows that she and her children put on when they were young...She never was old, she always had a sense of wonder.

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