The earliest record of the tale was found in the Toronto Public Library and was titled The Story of The Three Bears metrically related, with illustrations locating it at Cecil Lodge in September 1831. The story was written by an aunt named Eleanor Mure, who wrote and illustrated the story for her nephew. This version of the fairy tale included an old woman, not a young girl, as the intruder to the bears house. The version of this fairy tale which has been the most influential upon other later versions was published by Robert Southey in 1837, titled, The Story of the Three Bears. This version has been so influential, in fact, that many mistake this as the original version of the fairy tale. This version also featured an old woman as the intruder. Twelve years after Southey's publication, Joseph Cundall changed the intruder from an old woman to a young girl, because he thought there were too many stories with old women. It wasn't until 1904 that Goldilocks became Goldilocks, and has been the most used ever since.