In 1898, Baby's Record was published by Frederick A. Stokes Co. of New York. Issued in three simultaneous editions featuring one, six, or twelve color illustrations (all here), the book was by Maud Humphrey, who, in the same year, married Dr. Belmont De Forest Bogart. A year later, on Christmas Day, she bore a son. The couple named him Humphrey.
Maud Humphrey was born in 1868 to a well-to-do family in Rochester, New 
York. Demonstrating a precocious talent for drawing, by age twelve she 
was taking art classes and soon became one of the founding members of 
the Rochester Art Club. As a teenager she began to receive commissions to provide 
illustrations for children's magazines. 
At age eighteen she went to New York 
City and enrolled at the new Art Students League, later making the 
obligatory pilgrimage to Paris to continue her studies at the Julian 
Academy. Returning to New York, her ambition and ability were rewarded 
by her era: it was the beginning of what is now known as the golden age 
of book illustration, which dawned in the mid-late 1890s with the development
 of improved printing techniques and color-printing processes, and set 
when World War I began.
She
 became a highly in-demand illustrator for magazines, children's books, 
and advertising, her idealized and highly sentimental portraits of 
rosy-cheeked babies and youngsters very popular. Ivory Soap was a 
client, as was Mellin's Baby Food. She preferred to use live subjects 
and master Humphrey clocked many hours as a babe posing for his mother's Mellin's Baby Food
 illustrations, often dressed-up in 
little girl's clothing.  
She ultimately 
became one of the most sought-after and highly paid female illustrators 
in the United States, her work reproduced for calendars and all manner 
of merchandise.
Other books illustrated by Maud Humphrey include Sunshine of Little Children (1888); Babes of the Nations (1889); Baby Sweethearts (1890); Bonnie Little People (1890); Ideals of Beauty (1891); Famous Rhymes from Mother Goose (1891); The Light Princess (1893); The Book of Pets (1893); Little Playmates (1894); Old Youngsters (1897); Little Grown-Ups (1897); The Littlest Ones (1898); Little Rosebuds (1898); Sleepy-Time Stories (1899); Gallant Little Patriots (1899); Children of the Revolution (1900); Little Continentals (1900); Little Folk of '76 (1900); Young American Speaker (c. 1900); and many more.
Maud Humphrey, along with Jessie Wilcox Smith, 
Bessie Pease Gutmann, Queen Holden, and Frances Brundage, was amongst 
the most sought-after illustrators of the late nineteenth through early 
twentieth century, her annual income often reaching upwards of $50,000. The 
average illustrator was earning approximately $4,000.
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| Draw it again, Mom. But, please, no more pinafores. | 
Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, Maud Humphrey walks into mine, Café Booktryst, where the suspicious, the dubious, the imperiled, and the dispossessed read at the bar until the worst blows over.
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Brilliant Writing on Maud Humprey. Kudos.
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RK Siegel
Thanks for the write up and illustrations Stephen.Maud Humprey was inspirational.
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