Of Rusher's books those engraved by the Bewick School were:
Cock Robin; The History of Tom Thumb; and Children in the Wood.
Rusher's books also included:
Mother Hubbard and Her Dog, Cinderella and Her
Glass Slipper, and Dick Whittington and His
Cat, all designed by Cruikshank, engraved by
Branstone.
1818. Fairy Tales, or the Lilliputian Cabinet, collected by Benj. Tabart, London. This was a new edition of the collection of 1809, and contained twenty-four stories. A full review of it may be seen in the Quarterly Review, 1819, No. 41, pp. 91-112. The tales included translations from Perrault, Madame D'Aulnoy, Madame de Beaumont, tales from The Thousand and One Nights, and from Robin Hood; and the single tales of Jack the Giant-Killer, Tom Thumb, and Jack and the Bean-Stalk.
1824, 1826. German Popular Stories, translated by Edgar Taylor, with illustrations by Cruikshank, published by Charles Tilt, London. A new edition, introduction by Ruskin, was published by Chatto & Windus, 1880.
The above are the main collections of fairy tales in England. Many individual publications show the gradual development of fairy tale illustration in England:[6]—
1713-1767. John Newbery's Books for Children. Among these
were Beauty and the Beast, by Charles Lamb, 1765, and
Sinbad the Sailor, 1798.
1778. Fabulous Histories of the Robins. Mrs. Sarah
Trimmer. Cuts designed by Thomas Bewick, engraved by John
Thompson, Whittingham's Chiswick Press.
1755-1886. Life and Perambulations of a Mouse; and
Adventures of a Pin-Cushion. Dorothy Kilner.