Featuring MAGNIFICENT FULL-COLOR ILLUSTRATED BOOK

Gatefold Cover and book is VG (shelf wear)
Record is VG++ (look barely played)
Labels are clean

Visually Graded

Tracklist

Side 1
Home Town Rhythm Band - Yankee Doodle     
Ride A Cock Horse     
Humpty Dumpty     
Betty Botter     
Little Tom Tucker     
Rock-A-Bye Baby     
Two Riddles     
Dance To Your Daddy     
Doctor Foster     
Georgie Porgie     
Dame Get Up     
Another Riddle     
Oh Dear What Can The Matter Be     

Side 2
Jack And Jill     
Little Miss Muffet     
Little Nut Tree     
Buff Says Buff (Game)     
Over The Hills     
London Bridge     
Polly Put The Kettle On     
Pussy Cat, Pussy Cat     
Yankee Doodle

The figure of Mother Goose is the imaginary author of a collection of fairy tales and nursery rhymes often published as Old Mother Goose's Rhymes, as illustrated by Arthur Rackham in 1913. As a character, she appears in one nursery rhyme.  A Christmas pantomime called Mother Goose is often performed in the United Kingdom. The so-called "Mother Goose" rhymes and stories have formed the basis for many classic British pantomimes.

The term's first appearance in English dates back to the early 18th century, when Charles Perrault’s collection of fairy tales was first translated by Robert Samber. Publisher John Newbery's stepson, Thomas Carnan, was the first to use the term Mother Goose for nursery rhymes when he published a compilation of English rhymes, Mother Goose's Melody, or, Sonnets for the Cradle (London, 1780). Mother Goose is generally depicted in literature and book illustration as an elderly country woman in a tall hat and shawl, a costume identical to the peasant costume worn in Wales in the early 20th century, but is sometimes depicted as a goose (usually wearing a bonnet).