Frederick William Booty (Circa 1840 - 1924)[1][2] was an artist, living in Brighton, England, who was also the author of the first postage stamp catalogue in English,[3] and the first illustrated stamp catalogue anywhere.
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In 1893, a Frederick William Booty received a Master of Arts Degree from Cambridge University.[4]
Booty's Aids to Stamp Collectors, being a list of British and Foreign Postage Stamps in Circulation since 1840 - by a Stamp Collector, was published in April 1862,[3] just weeks before Mount Brown issued his more successful work, and when Booty was in his early twenties.[5] The catalogue was partly based on earlier works produced in Belgium and France.[1]
Later in 1862, Booty was also the first to issue an illustrated catalogue, titled The Stamp Collector’s Guide; being a list of English and Foreign Postage Stamps, with 200 fac-simile drawings. This edition listed 1100 stamps[5] and Booty drew all of the illustrations himself.[6] He reportedly used half a million stamps to compile the catalogue.[7]
Booty also contributed to the Monthly Advertiser, published by Edward Moore & Co., in 1862.
These catalogues appear to have been a business venture, capitalising on Booty's artistic skills, as there is no evidence that Booty was a philatelist.
Booty's watercolour landscape pictures are still regularly featured in art auctions in Britain. Although originally based in Brighton, his later work is mainly of scenes from Yorkshire and Humberside, including Hull and the ports of Scarborough and Whitby. Harbour scenes were a popular subject with Booty. He also painted Yorkshire panoramas and the peacocks at Haddon Hall, Derbyshire.[8]