Chipperfield, Joseph

About the author

Joseph Chipperfield was born in Cornwall on 20 April 1912 and died on 3 Jan 1976. He worked as an editor for the Authors’ Literary Service from 1930-1934, and as an editor and scriptwriter for documentary films from 1934-1940. The vast majority of his books were about animals: principally dogs and horses, though eagles and stags feature too.

His subjects were usually wild: his books are a world away from gymkhanas and hacking. The world of men is seen as a threat to the animals: in Banner, in which men are determined to catch the legendary horse – a fate which most of Chipperfield’s horses share – the reader is left in no doubt “that the frontiers of the west are pushing in and destroying the old ways of life,” a preoccupation Chipperfield shared with Monica Edwards and her Punchbowl Farm books: set on an altogether more domestic scale but again portraying the tension between old ways and the need to make a living.

Joseph Chipperfield’s books are still popular, though none alas seem to be in print now. Cecilia Gordon says that you will not find “Chipperfield’s books learnedly analysed” (and I haven’t yet been able to find anything but that isn’t to say it doesn’t exist) “but neither will you find them sitting unread on library shelves.”

Finding the books
Dark Fury and Ghost Horse are very easy and cheap to find as paperbacks: as hardbacks with dustjackets they are harder. Banner is easy to find in its CBC version; and not impossible to find as the original hardback. Checoba is reasonably easy to find. Silver Star is very difficult to find indeed.

Sources and Links
Joseph Chipperfield: Cecilia Gordon, in 20th Century Children’s Writers, St James Press 1989, ed Tracey Chevalier. 3rd edn.


Bibliography (pony books only)


SILVER STAR

Hutchinson, 1953, illus C Clifford Ambler
As Silver Star, Stallion of the Echoing Mountain
Roy Publishers, New York, 1995

DARK FURY, STALLION OF LOST RIVER VALLEY

Hutchinson, 1956, illus C Clifford Ambler
Roy Publishers, New York
Armada, pb, 1965, cover Peter Archer
Beaver, pb, 1977, cover Harry Bishop

“Dark Fury, last of the great wild stallions, escapes from the humiliating life as a circus performer and heads across uncharted desert towards his own country.  Many men want him, Indians as well as white trappers, who think Dark Fury will lead them to untold wealth.”

GHOST HORSE, STALLION OF THE OREGON TRAIL

Hutchinson, 1959, illus C Clifford Ambler
Armada, pb, 1963, cover Peter Archer
Hutchinson & Co, London, 1974, cover design Robert Hales
Beaver, pb, 1976

“Pahute was the son of Blue Steel, the great wild stallion who became a legend in the West – the Ghost Horse  who thundered across the mesa with his herd, untameable, too clever to be captured by man.  Pahute in turn became a mighty horse, fighting his enemies and protecting the mares that came to him.  Men glimpsed him and swore he was the original Ghost Horse; they tried to capture him, but failed until Jim Blaine took the trail. But Jim Blaine had an advantage over all the other men who sought Pahute – he loved this wonderful wild stallion.”

CHECOBA, STALLION OF THE COMMANCHE

Hutchinson, 1964, illus C Clifford Ambler
Royal Star, New York, 1964

BANNER, THE PACING WHITE STALLION

Hutchinson, 1972, illus Robert Hales
Children’s Book Club, 1972

Banner and his herd have been driven up into the Colorado Rockies away from men and their new railroads. This does not protect him from men, and he is obsessively hunted by those determined to catch a legend.