Harold H. Piffard: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|British artist |
{{Short description|British artist and aviator (1867–1939)}} |
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{{good article}} |
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{{EngvarB|date=April 2023}} |
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{{Infobox artist |
{{Infobox artist |
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| name |
| name = Harold H. Piffard |
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| image |
| image = H. Piffard - The Thin Red Line - restoration.jpg |
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| caption |
| caption = ''The Thin Red Line'' by Piffard |
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| birth_date |
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1867|08|10|df=y}} |
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| birth_place |
| birth_place = [[Marylebone]], London, England |
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| death_date |
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1939|01|17|1867|08|10|df=y}} |
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| death_place = |
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| resting_place |
| resting_place = [[Old Chiswick]] Cemetery |
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| nationality = British |
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| spouse = {{marriage|Helena Katherine Docetti Walker|4 June 1895|27 November 1900|end=d.}} |
| spouse = {{ubl|{{marriage|Helena Katherine Docetti Walker|4 June 1895|27 November 1900|end=d.}}|{{marriage|Eleanor Margaret Hoile|8 January 1902}}}} |
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| known_for |
| known_for = {{hlist|Artist|aviator|illustrator}} |
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| notable_works |
| notable_works = |
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| style |
| style = |
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| movement |
| movement = [[Orientalism]] |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Harold Hume Piffard''' (10 August 1867 – 17 January |
'''Harold Hume Piffard''' (10 August 1867 – 17 January 1939) was a British artist, illustrator, and one of the first British aviators.<ref name=Kirk-355-362>{{ cite book |last=Kirkpatrick |first=Robert J. |title=The Men Who Drew For Boys (And Girls): 101 Forgotten Illustrators of Children's Books: 1844–1970 |chapter=Harold Piffard |pages=355–362 |date=11 July 1905 |publisher=Robert J. Kirkpatrick |location=London }}</ref><ref name="Manton 2006">{{cite journal |last1=Manton |first1=Colin |title=Harold Piffard of Bedford Park, Artist and Aviator Extraordinaire |journal=Brentford & Chiswick Local History Journal |date=2006 |volume=15 |url=https://brentfordandchiswicklhs.org.uk/harold-piffard-of-bedford-park-artist-and-aviator-extraordinaire/ |access-date=1 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191101084947/https://brentfordandchiswicklhs.org.uk/harold-piffard-of-bedford-park-artist-and-aviator-extraordinaire/ |archive-date=1 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Harold Hume Piffard (British, 1867–1938) |url=http://www.theknohlcollection.com/portfolio/detail/loneliness/ |publisher=The Knohl Collection |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109212602/http://www.theknohlcollection.com/portfolio/detail/loneliness/ |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> He studied art at the Royal Academy Schools in London, exhibiting his first painting at the [[Royal Academy of Arts|Royal Academy]] in 1895. He painted a wide variety of subjects in oils and watercolour, including [[history painting]]s. At the same time he worked as an illustrator, both for periodicals such as ''[[The Strand Magazine]]'' and ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'', and illustrating novels. From 1907 he became interested in aviation, and began flying in 1909 in an aircraft he built himself. He made his first flights in West London near his [[Chiswick]] home; in 1910 he flew at [[Shoreham-by-Sea]], near his old school, [[Lancing College]]. |
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==Personal life== |
== Personal life == |
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⚫ | Harold Hume Piffard was born in Marylebone |
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⚫ | Harold Hume Piffard was born in [[Marylebone]], the sixth son of Charles Piffard and his wife Emily, née Hume, the daughter of James Hume, a barrister and Magistrate at [[Kolkata|Calcutta]]. They had married in Calcutta on 1 June 1858.<ref name="Hume-Piffard">{{cite journal |title=Marriages |journal=Homeward Mail from India, China and the East |issue=Tuesday 27 July 1858 |pages=8 |date=27 July 1858 }}</ref> Charles was Clerk of the Crown in the High Court of Calcutta; Piffard's four eldest brothers were all born in India.<ref name="Kirk-356">{{cite book |last=Kirkpatrick |first=Robert J. |title=The Men Who Drew For Boys (And Girls): 101 Forgotten Illustrators of Children's Books: 1844–1970 |chapter=Harold Piffard |pages=356 |year=1905 |publisher=Robert J. Kirkpatrick |location=London }}</ref> |
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Piffard was the couple's sixth son. He was educated at [[Lancing College]], being sent there together with his older brother Lawrence in 1877.<ref name=Kirk-356 /> He was still there at the time of the 1881 census. A year earlier he had run away from school to find employment on the stage, sleeping on the [[Thames Embankment|Embankment]] for several nights while he visited theatres and music halls.<ref name=Kirk-356 /> He travelled to India in February 1884 then spent some time travelling in India and working on a [[tea plantation]]. In 1889, he returned to London and began to study art at the Royal Academy Schools, and he exhibited his first painting at the [[Royal Academy]] in 1895. His address was then 5 Fitzroy Square, [[St Pancras, London|St Pancras]]. |
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Harold was educated at [[Lancing College]], being sent there together with his older brother Lawrence in 1877.<ref name="Kirk-356" /><ref name="Allingham">{{cite web |last1=Allingham |first1=Philip V. <!--prof at Lakehead Univ., Ontario--> |title=Harold Hume Piffard: A Brief Life (1867–1939) |url=https://victorianweb.org/art/illustration/piffard/bio.html |website=The Victorian Web |access-date=24 January 2023}}</ref> He briefly ran away from school to find employment on the stage, sleeping on the [[Thames Embankment|Embankment]] for several nights while he visited theatres and music halls.<ref name="Kirk-356" /> In February 1884, he travelled around India and worked on a [[tea plantation]]. In 1889, he returned to London and began to study art at the [[Royal Academy Schools]], exhibiting his first painting at the [[Royal Academy]] in 1895<!-- and living in [[St Pancras, London|St Pancras]]-->. On 4 June 1895 he married Helena <!--Katherine Docetti -->Walker at St John's Free Church in [[Dundee]].<ref name=Walker-Piffard>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1895 Walker, Helena K D (Statutory registers Marriages 282/1 82) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=7 June 1895 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_marriages/818462?return_row=0 |accessdate=10 April 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024041/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_marriages/818462%3Freturn_row%3D0 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref><!--Piffard's house Cambridge Avenue (presumably Kilburn)(was burgled)<ref name=Burglary>{{ cite web |title=Albert Wallace, Charles Ward: Theft: Burglary |website=The Proceedings of the Old Bailey |date=8 September 1896 |url=https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?div=t18960908-641 |accessdate=10 April 2020 }}</ref>--> They had four children. Helena died soon after giving birth to her fourth child in 1900; the baby died a few months later.<ref name="Ramus 2021" /> In 1902, Piffard married Eleanor Hoile in Edinburgh; they had one son,<ref name="Ramus 2021" /> and lived<!--for at least the last 40 years of Piffard's life--> in <!--no. 18 -->Addison Road (now Addison Grove), [[Bedford Park, London|Bedford Park]], [[Chiswick]], in the west of London.<ref name=Birth-hume>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1905 Piffard, Hume (Statutory registers Births 312/ 160) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=8 August 1905 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/45279250?return_row=0 |accessdate=10 April 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024009/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/45279250%3Freturn_row%3D0 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> Piffard died on 17 January 1939.<ref name="Times Obit">{{cite news |title=Deaths |work=The Times |quotation=Piffard.-On 17 January 1939, Harold Hume Piffard, of 18, Addison Road, Bedford Park, W.4. |date=18 January 1939 |issue= 48206 |page=1}}</ref><!--<ref>{{cite news |title=Legal Notices |work=The Times |issue=48268 |quotation=Re: Harold Hume Piffard [...] who died at St Thomas's Hospital, Lambeth Palace Road, London, S.E. on the 17th day of January 1939 |date=31 March 1939 |page=2}}</ref><ref>{{London Gazette |issue=34612 |pages=2226 |date=31 March 1939}}</ref>--><!--<ref group=note name="grave">He is buried in Old Chiswick Cemetery. His gravestone and several modern sources erroneously record his death date as 17 January 1938.</ref>--> |
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A month later, on 4 June 1895, he married Helena Katherine Docetti Walker (1 August 1871{{snd}}27 November 1900)—the daughter of Peter Geddes Walker (13 December 1833{{snd}}28 May 1896), a [[jute]] manufacturer, and a naturalised German, Margaretha (Meta) Docetti (c. 1837{{snd}}19 October 1897)<ref name=Docetti-Death>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1897 Docetti, Meta (Statutory registers Deaths 282/1 425) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=1897-10-22 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_deaths/4943094?return_row=0 |accessdate=2020-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024009/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_deaths/4943094%3Freturn_row%3D0 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref>—at St John's Free Church in Dundee. At the time of his marriage his address was 29 Cambridge Avenue, [[Maida Vale]], North London.<ref name=Walker-Piffard>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1895 Walker, Hekena K D (Statutory registers Marriages 282/1 82) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=1895-06-07 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_marriages/818462?return_row=0 |accessdate=2020-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024041/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_marriages/818462%3Freturn_row%3D0 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> He was at the same address a year later in August 1896 when he was burgled.<ref name=Burglary>{{ cite web |title=Albert Wallace, Charles Ward: Theft: Burglary |website=The Proceedings of the Old Bailey |date=1896-09-08 |url=https://www.oldbaileyonline.org/browse.jsp?div=t18960908-641 |accessdate=2020-04-10 }}</ref> However, the 1899 Electoral register shows him living at 18 Addison Road,<ref group=note>This street is now called Addison Grove.</ref> Bedford Park, Chiswick, London, where he remained until he died |
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Piffard and Helena had four children: |
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*Harold Reginald Grahame Sherard Piffard(28 May 1896{{snd}}7 June 1917):<ref name=Birth-First>{{ cite journal |title=Birth |journal=Dundee Courier |issue=Tuesday 2 June 1896 |pages=8 |date=1896-06-02 }}</ref> He emigrated to New Zealand for his health before the outbreak of the war. He worked for the Lone and Mercantile Agency as a clerk. He enlisted in New Zealand on 8 February 1916, and was killed in France in the following year.<ref name=Reinforcements>{{ cite journal |title=13th Reinforcements |website=Nelson Evening Mail |issue=6380 |pages=6 |date=1916-02-08 |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NEM19160208.2.25?end_date=31-12-1921&items_per_page=100&page=2&query=Piffard&snippet=true&sort_by=byDA&start_date=01-01-1901 |accessdate=2020-04-10 }}</ref><ref name=Piffard-War>{{ cite journal |title=Personal Notes |website=Marlborough Express |issue=6380 |pages=5 |date=1917-06-19 |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19170619.2.18.36?end_date=31-12-1921&items_per_page=100&page=2&query=Piffard&snippet=true&sort_by=byDA&start_date=01-01-1901 |accessdate=2020-04-10 }}</ref><ref name=Army>{{ cite book |title=Piffard, Harold Reginald Graham Sherrard - WW1 24221 - Army |website=National Library of New Zealand |url=https://ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE10270687 }}</ref> |
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*Dorothy Helena Hume Piffard(19 March 1898{{snd}}7 May 1969): The 1939 England and Wales Register shows her as an artist-painter, living at her parents' old address at 18 Addison Road.<ref group=note>She gives the name of the house as ''The Studio'' and satellite images show a building the back garden with a large north-light.</ref> |
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*Ivan Adrian Augustus Piffard(5 November 1899{{snd}}27 February 1993): Like his father, he was the victim of burglary. <ref name=Thief>{{ cite journal |title= 'Cool thief' is one-man crime wave |journal=Acton Gazette |issue=Thursday 31 August 1972 |pages=7 |date=1972-08-31 }}</ref> |
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*Grahame Laurence Piffard (November 1900{{snd}}12 February 1901): Died at three months of age and is buried with his parents in Old Chiswick Cemetery. |
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Piffard painted a wide variety of subjects in both oils and watercolour.<ref name="Bear-Piffard" /> He made his reputation by exhibiting large [[history painting]]s at the Royal Academy, on four occasions between 1895 and 1899. The best-known of these was ''Saragossa 10 February 1809''.<ref name="Allingham" /> The scholar of literature Philip V. Allingham describes this as "dramatically (one might even say, sensationally) depict[ing] Napoleon's forces brutally putting down the resistance of Spanish patriots inside the cathedral of Zaragoza during the Peninsular War".<ref name="Allingham" /> |
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Helena died soon after the birth of her fourth child, Grahame, in 1900. Harold married again on 8 January 1902, again in Scotland, but at the St. Giles Cathedral (Church of Scotland) in Edinburgh rather than the Free Church this time. His bride was Eleanor Margaret Hoile (17 April 1871{{snd}}20 December 1953), the daughter of John Hoile (c. 1840{{snd}}16 December 1877)<ref name=Death-Hoile>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1877 Hoile, John (Statutory registers Deaths 282/1 484) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=1877-12-20 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_deaths/1902251?return_row=0 |accessdate=2020-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024008/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_deaths/1902251%3Freturn_row%3D0 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> another jute merchant (deceased) and Catherine Robertson Kirkland (c. 1843{{snd}}12 September 1911)).<ref name=Hoile-Piffard>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1902 Piffard, Harold Hume (Statutory registers Marriages 685/4 37) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=1902-01-08 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_marriages/11023647?return_row=1 |accessdate=2020-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024056/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_marriages/11023647%3Freturn_row%3D1 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> Piffard and Eleanor had one son. |
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*Hume Piffard (28 July 1905{{snd}}12 September 1976)<ref name=Birth-hume>{{cite web |last=National Records of Scotland |title=1905 Piffard, Hume (Statutory registers Births 312/ 160) |website=ScotlandsPeople |date=1905-08-08 |url=https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/45279250?return_row=0 |accessdate=2020-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200411024009/https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/view-image/nrs_stat_births/45279250%3Freturn_row%3D0 |archive-date=11 April 2020 |url-status=live }}</ref> Hume trained as an engineer and married Mabel Nancy Sothers in St Paul's Cathedral (Church of England) in Calcutta on 24 February 1940. |
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Piffard died on 17 January 1938; he is buried in Old Chiswick Cemetery, as is his first wife Helena.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Nisinger |first1=Connie |title=Harold Hume Piffard |url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22086/harold-hume-piffard |publisher=Find A Grave |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190502135335/https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22086/harold-hume-piffard |archive-date=2 May 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> His second wife Eleanor survived him for nearly 20 years. |
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==Aviator== |
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⚫ | Piffard began making model aircraft in 1907, winning a prize for one of them at Olympia in 1909. He began to fly in 1909, using an 8-cylinder 40 horsepower ENV 'D' engine and building the airframe in his studio; he rented a shed on Back Common Road, [[Turnham Green]] near his home to assemble the aircraft, which was a biplane with elevator in front of the wing, and a [[variable-pitch propeller]].<ref name="Manton 2006"/> From September 1909 he tested the aircraft on a rented field in Ealing to the west of Masons Lane at what was then Hangar Hill Farm (not the same as the later Acton Aerodrome, which was on the other side of Masons Lane).<ref name="Manton 2006"/><ref>Map and discussion of probable site: {{cite web |title=NORTH EALING: Private flying field |url=http://www.ukairfieldguide.net/airfields/North-Ealing |publisher=UK Airfield Guide |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109123019/http://www.ukairfieldguide.net/airfields/North-Ealing |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> He managed to get the plane airborne and fly "a foot or two from the ground for a distance of a hundred yards or so."<ref name="Manton 2006"/> However, on 3 December 1909 the aircraft and its marquee hangar were destroyed in a storm.<ref name="Manton 2006"/> |
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⚫ | Piffard then co-founded (with George Wingfield, a lawyer) the Aviator's Finance Company, which took out a lease on land at [[Shoreham-by-Sea]] near his old school, [[Lancing College]], which already possessed a hangar. With Edouard Baumann and two assistants, they reworked the aircraft's design and had ''Hummingbird'' ready on 3 May 1910. It was able to take off in short hops, earning it the nickname of "The Grasshopper"; it frequently crashed because of the hidden ditches in the grass. In September 1910 he flew at a height of 30 or 40 feet for half a mile, managing to fly right across the field to a nearby hotel, The Sussex Pad "in about 40 seconds". He had not learnt how to turn the plane in the air, and the plane had to be wheeled back to the hangar, as there was no space to take off near the hotel, but he celebrated with champagne all the same.<ref name="Manton 2006"/><ref>{{cite web |title=The Clarion : Armistice Centenary Edition |url=http://www.smaaa.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Clarion-Armistice-Centenary-Edition-1918-2018.pdf |publisher=St Michael's and All Angels, Bedford Park |page=10 |date=2018 |access-date=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109103158/http://www.smaaa.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Clarion-Armistice-Centenary-Edition-1918-2018.pdf |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Gage |first1=Bill (asst. county archivist) |title=Pioneer aviators helped develop Shoreham airfield |url=https://www.shorehamherald.co.uk/lifestyle/pioneer-aviators-helped-develop-shoreham-airfield-1-6690835 |date=17 April 2015 |access-date=13 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109204850/https://www.shorehamherald.co.uk/lifestyle/pioneer-aviators-helped-develop-shoreham-airfield-1-6690835 |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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⚫ | A local cinematograph company asked to film a flight, and he confidently accepted; Colin Manton describes this as characteristic [[hubris]].<ref name="Manton 2006"/> Ignoring warnings of a dangerous ditch, he tried to fly over it, destroying the aircraft in a "comprehensive smash" which was recorded on film.<ref name="Manton 2006"/> The cameraman |
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⚫ | In 1911 Piffard unsuccessfully tested a new aircraft, the ''Piffard Hydroplane'', which had floats as well as wheels, on Shoreham beach. He developed no more aircraft and did not attempt to fly again, working as an artist and illustrator. The land at Shoreham became [[Shoreham Airport]].<ref name="Manton 2006"/> |
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Piffard painted a wide variety of subjects in both oils and watercolour.<ref name=Bear-Piffard/> |
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File:Harold H. Piffard 028 (27735154369).jpg|Classical scene |
File:Harold H. Piffard 028 (27735154369).jpg|Classical scene |
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File:Harold piffard joan of arc.jpg|''Joan of Arc'' |
File:Harold piffard joan of arc.jpg|''[[Joan of Arc]]'' |
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File:Harold H. Piffard 031 (38615646175).jpg|''Snowballing'' |
File:Harold H. Piffard 031 (38615646175).jpg|''Snowballing'' |
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File:Harold H. Piffard - Bather.jpg|''Bather'' |
File:Harold H. Piffard - Bather.jpg|''Bather'' |
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File:Harold Piffard - Odalisque.jpg|''Odalisque'' |
File:Harold Piffard - Odalisque.jpg|''[[Odalisque]]'' |
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File:Harold H. Piffard |
File:Harold H. Piffard 015 (27735175849).jpg|[[Napoleon]] history painting |
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File: |
File:Sarogassa 10 february 1809 assault by the french by harold piffard.jpg|French [[Second siege of Zaragoza|assault on Saragossa]], 10 February 1809 |
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⚫ | File:Harold H. Piffard 032 (39481120402).jpg|''The Signing of the Armistice, Nov. 11th, 1918''<ref>{{cite web |last=Gregson |first=Marjorie |title=The Signing of the Armistice (after) Harold Hume Piffard |url=https://www.lythamstannesartcollection.org/the-signing-of-the-armistice-after-harold-hume-piffard.html |publisher=Lytham St Anne's Art Collection |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109212817/https://www.lythamstannesartcollection.org/the-signing-of-the-armistice-after-harold-hume-piffard.html |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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<gallery class="center" mode="nolines" widths="200px" heights="175px"> |
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⚫ | File:Harold H. Piffard 032 (39481120402).jpg|''The Signing of the [[Armistice of 11 November 1918|Armistice]], Nov. 11th, 1918''<ref>{{cite web |last=Gregson |first=Marjorie |title=The Signing of the Armistice (after) Harold Hume Piffard |url=https://www.lythamstannesartcollection.org/the-signing-of-the-armistice-after-harold-hume-piffard.html |publisher=Lytham St Anne's Art Collection |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109212817/https://www.lythamstannesartcollection.org/the-signing-of-the-armistice-after-harold-hume-piffard.html |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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</gallery> |
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Piffard started his work as an illustrator with contributions to periodicals including ''[[The Strand Magazine]]'', ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'' and ''The Penny Pictorial Magazine''.<ref name=Bear-Piffard>{{cite web |last=Kirkpatrick |first=Robert J. |title=Harold Piffard |website=Bear Alley |date=2018 |
Piffard started his work as an illustrator in 1894 with contributions to periodicals including ''[[The Strand Magazine]]'', ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'' and ''The Penny Pictorial Magazine''.<ref name="Allingham" /><ref name=Bear-Piffard>{{cite web |last=Kirkpatrick |first=Robert J. |title=Harold Piffard |website=Bear Alley |date=8 October 2018 |url=https://bearalley.blogspot.com/2018/09/harold-piffard.html |accessdate=10 April 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109192442/https://bearalley.blogspot.com/2018/09/harold-piffard.html |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> He began to illustrate books in 1895, eventually illustrating over a hundred novels, many of them for the [[Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge]],<ref name="Allingham" /> by authors including [[Frances Hodgson Burnett]],<ref>{{cite web |title=Harold Piffard |url=https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/photos/harold-piffard?family=editorial&phrase=harold%20piffard&sort=mostpopular# |publisher=[[Getty Images]] |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109210254/https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/photos/harold-piffard?family=editorial&phrase=harold%2520piffard&sort=mostpopular |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> [[Guy Boothby]], [[Harry Collingwood]], [[Ellen Wood (author)|Mrs. Henry Wood]], [[Richard Marsh (author)|Richard Marsh]], [[Max Pemberton]], and [[J. M. Neale]]. From 1908 he illustrated a series of classics for [[Collins Publishers|Collins]] including works by [[Thackeray]], [[Dickens]], and [[George Eliot]].<ref name="Allingham" /><ref name="Bear-Piffard" /> |
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<gallery mode=packed |
<gallery mode="packed" heights="175px"> |
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File:Valdar the Oft-born by George Griffith cover illus Harold H. Piffard 1895.jpg|Cover of [[George Griffith]]'s ''Valdar the Oft-born'', 1895, signed lower left |
File:Valdar the Oft-born by George Griffith cover illus Harold H. Piffard 1895.jpg|Cover of [[George Griffith]]'s ''Valdar the Oft-born'', 1895, signed lower left |
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File:Zoraida (William le Queux) cover by Harold Piffard.jpg|Cover of [[William le Queux]]'s ''Zoraida'', 1895, signed lower left |
File:Zoraida (William le Queux) cover by Harold Piffard.jpg|Cover of [[William le Queux]]'s ''Zoraida'', 1895, signed lower left |
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===Example of a full set of illustrations=== |
=== Example of a full set of illustrations === |
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The following set of six illustrations were made by Piffard for ''Geoffrey Harrington's Adventures'' by [[Harry Collingwood]]. This was published by the [[Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge]] in 1907. |
The following set of six illustrations were made by Piffard for ''Geoffrey Harrington's Adventures'' by [[Harry Collingwood]]. This was published by the [[Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge]] in 1907. |
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<gallery mode="packed |
<gallery mode="packed" heights="175"> |
||
File: |
File:I clung for dear life to the shattered stump.jpg|Geoffrey Harrington holds onto the stump of the mast while attempting to cut free the broken mast and rigging |
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File: |
File:The shadow paused and i could see that its owner was immediately outside the doorway.jpg|Geoffrey Harrington foils an assassination attempt |
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File: |
File:You will become my wife.jpg|Geoffrey Harrington and the Queen plight their troth to each other |
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File: |
File:Destruction of the tutans dockyard.jpg|The Avelians set the Tutan Dockyard on fire |
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File: |
File:Ilia my royal sweetheart was bending over me.jpg|Geoffrey Harrington is succoured by his Royal Sweetheart |
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File: |
File:I found him reclining on a couch.jpg|The deposed Tutan King listens to music |
||
</gallery> |
</gallery> |
||
== |
== Aviator == |
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⚫ | |||
In 2007 the Shoreham Airport Historical Association built a replica of Piffard's ''Hummingbird''.<ref name="Argus 2007">{{cite news |title=Flying Machine |url=https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/1826970.flying-machine/ |work=The Argus |date=12 November 2007 |access-date=13 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191110121722/https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/1826970.flying-machine/ |archive-date=10 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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⚫ | Piffard began making model aircraft in 1907, winning a prize for one of them at [[Olympia London|Olympia]] in 1909. He began to fly in 1909, using an 8-cylinder 40 horsepower ENV 'D' engine and building the airframe in his studio; he rented a shed on Back Common Road, [[Turnham Green]], near his home to assemble the aircraft, which was a biplane with an elevator in front of the wing, and a [[Variable-pitch propeller (aeronautics)|variable-pitch propeller]].<ref name="Manton 2006" /> From September 1909 he tested the aircraft on a rented field in [[Ealing]] to the west of Masons Lane at what was then Hangar Hill Farm (not the same as the later Acton Aerodrome, which was on the other side of Masons Lane).<ref name="Manton 2006" /><ref>Map and discussion of probable site: {{cite web |title=NORTH EALING: Private flying field |url=http://www.ukairfieldguide.net/airfields/North-Ealing |publisher=UK Airfield Guide |accessdate=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109123019/http://www.ukairfieldguide.net/airfields/North-Ealing |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> He managed to get the plane airborne and fly "a foot or two from the ground for a distance of a hundred yards or so."<ref name="Manton 2006" /> However, on 3 December 1909 the aircraft and its marquee hangar were destroyed in a storm.<ref name="Manton 2006" /> |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | Piffard then co-founded (with George Wingfield, a lawyer) the Aviator's Finance Company, which took out a lease on land at [[Shoreham-by-Sea]] near his old school, [[Lancing College]], which already possessed a hangar. With Edouard Baumann and two assistants, they reworked the aircraft's design and had ''Hummingbird'' ready on 3 May 1910. It was able to take off in short hops, earning it the nickname of "The Grasshopper"; it frequently crashed because of the hidden ditches in the grass. In September 1910 he flew at a height of 30 or 40 feet for half a mile, managing to fly right across the field to a nearby hotel, The Sussex Pad, "in about 40 seconds". He had not learnt how to turn the plane in the air, and the plane had to be wheeled back to the hangar, as there was no space to take off near the hotel, but he celebrated with champagne all the same.<ref name="Manton 2006" /><ref>{{cite web |title=The Clarion : Armistice Centenary Edition |url=http://www.smaaa.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Clarion-Armistice-Centenary-Edition-1918-2018.pdf |publisher=St Michael's and All Angels, Bedford Park |page=10 |date=2018 |access-date=9 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109103158/http://www.smaaa.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Clarion-Armistice-Centenary-Edition-1918-2018.pdf |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Gage |first1=Bill (asst. county archivist) |title=Pioneer aviators helped develop Shoreham airfield |url=https://www.shorehamherald.co.uk/lifestyle/pioneer-aviators-helped-develop-shoreham-airfield-1-6690835 |date=17 April 2015 |access-date=13 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191109204850/https://www.shorehamherald.co.uk/lifestyle/pioneer-aviators-helped-develop-shoreham-airfield-1-6690835 |archive-date=9 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Ramus 2021">{{cite web |last1=Ramus |first1=Andy |title=A Brief History of Aviation at Shoreham – Part 1: Harold Hume Piffard |url=https://www.shorehambysea.com/a-brief-history-of-aviation-at-shoreham-part-1-2/ |website=Shorehambysea.com |access-date=24 January 2023 |date=2021}}<!--with bibliography--></ref> |
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⚫ | A local cinematograph company asked to film a flight, and he confidently accepted; Colin Manton describes this as characteristic [[hubris]].<ref name="Manton 2006" /> Ignoring warnings of a dangerous ditch, he tried to fly over it, destroying the aircraft in a "comprehensive smash" which was recorded on film.<ref name="Manton 2006" /> The cameraman recalled that Piffard still "seemed in no way disappointed; in fact, I thought I saw a gleam of satisfaction in his eye".<ref name="Manton 2006" /> |
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⚫ | In 1911 Piffard unsuccessfully tested a new aircraft, the ''Piffard Hydroplane'', which had floats as well as wheels, on Shoreham beach. He developed no more aircraft and did not attempt to fly again, working as an artist and illustrator. The land at Shoreham became [[Shoreham Airport]].<ref name="Manton 2006" /> In 2007 the Shoreham Airport Historical Association built a replica of Piffard's ''Hummingbird''.<ref name="Argus 2007">{{cite news |title=Flying Machine |url=https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/1826970.flying-machine/ |work=The Argus |date=12 November 2007 |access-date=13 June 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191110121722/https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/1826970.flying-machine/ |archive-date=10 November 2019 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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⚫ | |||
{{Reflist|group=note}} |
{{Reflist|group=note}} |
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==References== |
== References == |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
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==External links== |
== External links == |
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{{Commons category}} |
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; Artworks |
; Artworks |
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* [http://www.mutualart.com/Artist/Harold-H--Piffard/5A25C57B3744F8A1 At MutualArt] (29 artworks) |
* [http://www.mutualart.com/Artist/Harold-H--Piffard/5A25C57B3744F8A1 At MutualArt] (29 artworks) |
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* [https://www.artrenewal.org/artists/harold-piffard/354 Art Renewal Center] (4 artworks) |
* [https://www.artrenewal.org/artists/harold-piffard/354 Art Renewal Center] (4 artworks) |
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* [https://artuk.org/discover/artists/piffard-harold-hume- |
* [https://artuk.org/discover/artists/piffard-harold-hume-18671939 Art UK] (2 artworks) |
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; Books illustrated |
; Books illustrated |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Piffard, Harold}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Piffard, Harold}} |
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[[Category:1867 births]] |
[[Category:1867 births]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:1939 deaths]] |
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[[Category:19th-century British artists]] |
[[Category:19th-century British artists]] |
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[[Category:20th-century British artists]] |
[[Category:20th-century British artists]] |
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[[Category:People educated at Lancing College]] |
[[Category:People educated at Lancing College]] |
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[[Category:Alumni of the Royal Academy Schools]] |
[[Category:Alumni of the Royal Academy Schools]] |
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[[Category:British aviators]] |
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[[Category:People from Chiswick]] |
Latest revision as of 22:39, 3 April 2023
Harold H. Piffard | |
---|---|
Born | Marylebone, London, England | 10 August 1867
Died | 17 January 1939 | (aged 71)
Resting place | Old Chiswick Cemetery |
Known for |
|
Movement | Orientalism |
Spouses |
|
Harold Hume Piffard (10 August 1867 – 17 January 1939) was a British artist, illustrator, and one of the first British aviators.[1][2][3] He studied art at the Royal Academy Schools in London, exhibiting his first painting at the Royal Academy in 1895. He painted a wide variety of subjects in oils and watercolour, including history paintings. At the same time he worked as an illustrator, both for periodicals such as The Strand Magazine and The Illustrated London News, and illustrating novels. From 1907 he became interested in aviation, and began flying in 1909 in an aircraft he built himself. He made his first flights in West London near his Chiswick home; in 1910 he flew at Shoreham-by-Sea, near his old school, Lancing College.
Personal life
[edit]Harold Hume Piffard was born in Marylebone, the sixth son of Charles Piffard and his wife Emily, née Hume, the daughter of James Hume, a barrister and Magistrate at Calcutta. They had married in Calcutta on 1 June 1858.[4] Charles was Clerk of the Crown in the High Court of Calcutta; Piffard's four eldest brothers were all born in India.[5] Harold was educated at Lancing College, being sent there together with his older brother Lawrence in 1877.[5][6] He briefly ran away from school to find employment on the stage, sleeping on the Embankment for several nights while he visited theatres and music halls.[5] In February 1884, he travelled around India and worked on a tea plantation. In 1889, he returned to London and began to study art at the Royal Academy Schools, exhibiting his first painting at the Royal Academy in 1895. On 4 June 1895 he married Helena Walker at St John's Free Church in Dundee.[7] They had four children. Helena died soon after giving birth to her fourth child in 1900; the baby died a few months later.[8] In 1902, Piffard married Eleanor Hoile in Edinburgh; they had one son,[8] and lived in Addison Road (now Addison Grove), Bedford Park, Chiswick, in the west of London.[9] Piffard died on 17 January 1939.[10]
Artist
[edit]Painter
[edit]Piffard painted a wide variety of subjects in both oils and watercolour.[11] He made his reputation by exhibiting large history paintings at the Royal Academy, on four occasions between 1895 and 1899. The best-known of these was Saragossa 10 February 1809.[6] The scholar of literature Philip V. Allingham describes this as "dramatically (one might even say, sensationally) depict[ing] Napoleon's forces brutally putting down the resistance of Spanish patriots inside the cathedral of Zaragoza during the Peninsular War".[6]
-
Classical scene
-
Snowballing
-
Bather
-
Napoleon history painting
-
French assault on Saragossa, 10 February 1809
-
Courtship history painting
-
Jacobean bathtime scene
Illustrator
[edit]Piffard started his work as an illustrator in 1894 with contributions to periodicals including The Strand Magazine, The Illustrated London News and The Penny Pictorial Magazine.[6][11] He began to illustrate books in 1895, eventually illustrating over a hundred novels, many of them for the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge,[6] by authors including Frances Hodgson Burnett,[13] Guy Boothby, Harry Collingwood, Mrs. Henry Wood, Richard Marsh, Max Pemberton, and J. M. Neale. From 1908 he illustrated a series of classics for Collins including works by Thackeray, Dickens, and George Eliot.[6][11]
-
Cover of George Griffith's Valdar the Oft-born, 1895, signed lower left
-
Cover of William le Queux's Zoraida, 1895, signed lower left
-
Interior of a Bromsgrove Nailmaker's shed, 1896
-
"The Silent Groves", plate on page 279 of Sibyl Falcon. A study in romantic morals by Alfred Edgar Jepson, 1895
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"There in the blackness of the night I saw two gleaming eyes", plate on page 77 of The City of Gold by Edward Markwick, 1896
Example of a full set of illustrations
[edit]The following set of six illustrations were made by Piffard for Geoffrey Harrington's Adventures by Harry Collingwood. This was published by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge in 1907.
-
Geoffrey Harrington holds onto the stump of the mast while attempting to cut free the broken mast and rigging
-
Geoffrey Harrington foils an assassination attempt
-
Geoffrey Harrington and the Queen plight their troth to each other
-
The Avelians set the Tutan Dockyard on fire
-
Geoffrey Harrington is succoured by his Royal Sweetheart
-
The deposed Tutan King listens to music
Aviator
[edit]First flights in Ealing
[edit]Piffard began making model aircraft in 1907, winning a prize for one of them at Olympia in 1909. He began to fly in 1909, using an 8-cylinder 40 horsepower ENV 'D' engine and building the airframe in his studio; he rented a shed on Back Common Road, Turnham Green, near his home to assemble the aircraft, which was a biplane with an elevator in front of the wing, and a variable-pitch propeller.[2] From September 1909 he tested the aircraft on a rented field in Ealing to the west of Masons Lane at what was then Hangar Hill Farm (not the same as the later Acton Aerodrome, which was on the other side of Masons Lane).[2][14] He managed to get the plane airborne and fly "a foot or two from the ground for a distance of a hundred yards or so."[2] However, on 3 December 1909 the aircraft and its marquee hangar were destroyed in a storm.[2]
Flying at Shoreham
[edit]Piffard then co-founded (with George Wingfield, a lawyer) the Aviator's Finance Company, which took out a lease on land at Shoreham-by-Sea near his old school, Lancing College, which already possessed a hangar. With Edouard Baumann and two assistants, they reworked the aircraft's design and had Hummingbird ready on 3 May 1910. It was able to take off in short hops, earning it the nickname of "The Grasshopper"; it frequently crashed because of the hidden ditches in the grass. In September 1910 he flew at a height of 30 or 40 feet for half a mile, managing to fly right across the field to a nearby hotel, The Sussex Pad, "in about 40 seconds". He had not learnt how to turn the plane in the air, and the plane had to be wheeled back to the hangar, as there was no space to take off near the hotel, but he celebrated with champagne all the same.[2][15][16][8]
A local cinematograph company asked to film a flight, and he confidently accepted; Colin Manton describes this as characteristic hubris.[2] Ignoring warnings of a dangerous ditch, he tried to fly over it, destroying the aircraft in a "comprehensive smash" which was recorded on film.[2] The cameraman recalled that Piffard still "seemed in no way disappointed; in fact, I thought I saw a gleam of satisfaction in his eye".[2]
In 1911 Piffard unsuccessfully tested a new aircraft, the Piffard Hydroplane, which had floats as well as wheels, on Shoreham beach. He developed no more aircraft and did not attempt to fly again, working as an artist and illustrator. The land at Shoreham became Shoreham Airport.[2] In 2007 the Shoreham Airport Historical Association built a replica of Piffard's Hummingbird.[17]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Kirkpatrick, Robert J. (11 July 1905). "Harold Piffard". The Men Who Drew For Boys (And Girls): 101 Forgotten Illustrators of Children's Books: 1844–1970. London: Robert J. Kirkpatrick. pp. 355–362.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Manton, Colin (2006). "Harold Piffard of Bedford Park, Artist and Aviator Extraordinaire". Brentford & Chiswick Local History Journal. 15. Archived from the original on 1 November 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2019.
- ^ "Harold Hume Piffard (British, 1867–1938)". The Knohl Collection. Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "Marriages". Homeward Mail from India, China and the East (Tuesday 27 July 1858): 8. 27 July 1858.
- ^ a b c Kirkpatrick, Robert J. (1905). "Harold Piffard". The Men Who Drew For Boys (And Girls): 101 Forgotten Illustrators of Children's Books: 1844–1970. London: Robert J. Kirkpatrick. p. 356.
- ^ a b c d e f Allingham, Philip V. "Harold Hume Piffard: A Brief Life (1867–1939)". The Victorian Web. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
- ^ National Records of Scotland (7 June 1895). "1895 Walker, Helena K D (Statutory registers Marriages 282/1 82)". ScotlandsPeople. Archived from the original on 11 April 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- ^ a b c Ramus, Andy (2021). "A Brief History of Aviation at Shoreham – Part 1: Harold Hume Piffard". Shorehambysea.com. Retrieved 24 January 2023.
- ^ National Records of Scotland (8 August 1905). "1905 Piffard, Hume (Statutory registers Births 312/ 160)". ScotlandsPeople. Archived from the original on 11 April 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- ^ "Deaths". The Times. No. 48206. 18 January 1939. p. 1.
Piffard.-On 17 January 1939, Harold Hume Piffard, of 18, Addison Road, Bedford Park, W.4.
- ^ a b c Kirkpatrick, Robert J. (8 October 2018). "Harold Piffard". Bear Alley. Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- ^ Gregson, Marjorie. "The Signing of the Armistice (after) Harold Hume Piffard". Lytham St Anne's Art Collection. Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "Harold Piffard". Getty Images. Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ Map and discussion of probable site: "NORTH EALING: Private flying field". UK Airfield Guide. Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ "The Clarion : Armistice Centenary Edition" (PDF). St Michael's and All Angels, Bedford Park. 2018. p. 10. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ^ Gage, Bill (asst. county archivist) (17 April 2015). "Pioneer aviators helped develop Shoreham airfield". Archived from the original on 9 November 2019. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
- ^ "Flying Machine". The Argus. 12 November 2007. Archived from the original on 10 November 2019. Retrieved 13 June 2020.
External links
[edit]- Artworks
- At Artnet (79 artworks)
- At MutualArt (29 artworks)
- Art Renewal Center (4 artworks)
- Art UK (2 artworks)
- Books illustrated
- Works by Harold H. Piffard at Project Gutenberg
- Online Books listed at University of Pennsylvania library (22 books)
- Online Books list at Internet Speculative Fiction Database (15 books)
- Books illustrated by Harold Piffard at the Hathi Trust
- Books illustrated by Piffard in the Jisc Library Hub Discover database (which draws together 160 UK and Irish academic, national & specialist library catalogues.
- Books by Piffard at the Internet Archive
- Books by Piffard listed in the catalogue of the British Library, including two online texts.
- The Bear Alley blow on Piffard by Robert J. Kirkpatrick, includes a list of 174 books illustrated by Piffard.