L. A. Hayter


Lawrence Ambrose Hayter was an English children's illustrator and writer associated with vegetarian children's literature. He was the primary illustrator for The Children's Realm, a magazine for children published by the Vegetarian Federal Union and the London Vegetarian Society, to which he also contributed stories and articles. Hayter lived in Letchworth, where he worked as a draughtsman and was engaged to the musician Gladys Cawston. During the First World War, he initially registered as a conscientious objector, but later enlisted in the Bedfordshire Regiment, 6th Battalion, and was killed in action near Hollebeke, Belgium, in December 1917. A wartime letter by Hayter published in the Christian Science Sentinel described his experiences in the trenches and referred to the role of Christian Science in his response to illness.

Biography

Early life and education

Lawrence Ambrose Hayter was born on 13 April 1893, in Upper Holloway, London, to Arthur William and Edith Rose Hayter; his father worked as an organ builder. At school he became friends with Gerald Bullett and produced a jellygraphed school magazine, which he edited and illustrated with cartoons.

Illustration and writing

Hayter lived in Letchworth, where he worked as a draughtsman. He was engaged to the musician Gladys Cawston.
Hayter was the primary illustrator for The Children's Realm, a children's magazine published by the Vegetarian Federal Union and the London Vegetarian Society. His first illustration for the magazine appeared in its Christmas 1908 issue.
In addition to illustrating the magazine, Hayter contributed numerous articles and stories, some of them co-written with Gerald Bullett. His stories included "The Weather Kingdom", "The Land of Undh-Aneethe", and "The Nimble Sixpence". In 1912, Bullett described Hayter as a "born artist" in an article about him for the magazine.
The Children's Realm ceased publication in 1914. In the same year, its editor George Bedborough published Stories from the Children's Realm, a children's storybook with animal rights, anti-vivisection, and vegetarian themes, which included several illustrations by Hayter.

Military service and death

During the First World War, Hayter initially registered as a conscientious objector, but later enlisted in the Bedfordshire Regiment as a private in the 6th Battalion.
In the summer of 1917, Hayter was buried by a shell explosion and was mistakenly presumed dead. In November that year, a letter by Hayter was published in the Christian Science Sentinel, in which he described his experiences in the trenches and stated that he had cured himself of dysentery through the teachings of Christian Science.
Hayter was killed in action by shelling in the trenches near Hollebeke, Belgium, on 30 December 1917. He was buried at Klein Vierstraat British Cemetery. He was posthumously awarded the British War Medal and Victory Medal. His name is recorded on the Letchworth Cross memorial.