Henry J. Ford
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Henry Justice Ford (1860-1941) was a prolific and successful artist and illustrator, active from 1886 through to the late 1920s. Sometimes known as HJFord or Henry J Ford, he came to public attention when he provided the numerous beautiful illustrations for Andrew Lang's Fairy Books, which captured the imagination of a generation of British children and were sold worldwide in the 1880s and 1890s.
In 1892, Henry Justice Ford began exhibiting paintings of historical subjects and landscapes at the Royal Academy of Art exhibitions. However it was his illustrations for such books as 'The Arabian Nights Entertainments'(Longmans 1898), 'Kenilworth'(TC & EC Jack 1900)
and 'A School History of England' by Charles Fletcher and Rudyard Kipling (Clarendon Press 1911) that provided Ford with both income and fame.

After education at Repton School and Clare College, Cambridge - where he gained a first class in the Classical Tripos in 1882 - Ford returned to London to study at the Slade School of Fine Art and later, at the Bushey School of Art, under the German-born Hubert von Herkomer.

The Ford family were known to be enthusiastic cricketers. His father, a solicitor, wrote a number of articles and books on cricket and Ford's brother, Francis Justice Ford (1866-1940) played for England in an Ashes series in Australia. His love of the game led Henry Justice Ford to play cricket regularly with the playwright JM Barrie's Allahakbarrie Cricket Club. This in turn led to Ford providing the well-known map of Kensington Gardens in Barrie's 'The Little White Bird' He also designed the costume for the character of Peter Pan when Barrie's play was staged in the West End for the first time in 1904. Ford's wide-ranging interests brought him into contact and friendship with many well-known figures of his time, including the writers PG Wodehouse, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and AEW Mason.

At the age of 61, Henry Justice Ford surprised his friends by marrying a woman some thirty-five years younger. She was Emily Amelia Hoff (nee Rose), a widow whose first husband had been killed in the battle of Neuve Chapelle in March 1915. Following the marriage in Kensington Register Office in February 1921, Henry and Emily Ford settled down in Bedford Gardens, Kensington for several years and, in 1927, the couple adopted a child, June Mary Magdelene Ford. The seated model in Henry Justice Ford's painting 'Remembering Happier Times', now in the collection of the Russell-Cotes Art Gallery, Bournemouth, bears a strong resemblance to Ford's wife, Emily.
References
'Doing Justice to Henry: a biographical study of Henry Justice Ford', by Caroline Hares-Stryker (Imaginative Book Illustration Society,
Studies in Illustration, Number 43, Winter 2009.

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