Helen Haywood (1907 - 1995) was an English artist and writer noted for children's book illustrations and her interest in natural history and anthropology. "Went to S. America as a child, where father, Arthur Haywood, was building the first trans Andean railway ... Lived in a small village in the Chilean Andes & began painting and writing at the age of six, being fascinated by the animals & birds of most remote part of the world.... Returned to England at 16 & published first book, "The Mouse That Ran" (F. Warne). Won a scholarship to Landsdowne (sic) College of Art. Worked for Maurice Inmans of New York & Robert Riviere & Son Bookbinders of Heddon St. London." "Miss Haywood was a keen student of science and an amateur naturalist and anthropologist. Many of the books she illustrated for the publisher Hutchinson & Co., London, were keenly observed and scrupulously accurate depictions of plants, birds and animals. When commissioned to do illustrations for a children's book on dinosaurs, her research into the skin colors she subsequently chose for her dinosaur illustrations was cited by the Royal Academy of Sciences
She died in Bournemouth in 1995.
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