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OLD SIDE SHOWS
AND STRANGE PEOPLE
WHEN BARNUM FLOURISHED
HEAL FREAKS & FALSE
I Many changes have taken place during the course of years in the attractions provided by the side shows at the agricultural show, says a writer in the Melbourne "Age." The freaks of Nature, such as the Siamese' Twins, the Living Skeleton, the Boneless Wonder, the Bearded Lady, the dwarfs and giants, the two-headed calf,, and the six-legged sheep have ceased to exist, or at least the showmen, and th.eir public are convinced that their day is over. Most of the side shows at the show this year have invited patrons to exercise their skill in games in which it is easier to lose than to win. , The origin of the side show was the peep show. "Lord" George • Sanger, the most famous English showman of the Victorian era, gives in his book, "Seventy Years a Showman," an interesting account of his experiences as a child in the days of. the peep show. His father, who fought at the Battle of Trafalgar on board Nelson's flagship, the Victory, and was severely wounded in: boarding an enemy ship, was retired from the Navy on a pension of £10 a year, and then made a fresh start in life as a showman. While serving in the Navy he had acquired some skill in "hanky panky and conjuring" from two strolling conjurers who were among his shipmates, and he began his career as a showman by fitting up a small peep show. "This was nothing more than a large box, carried on the back, containing some movable and'very gaudy pictures, and having six peep holes fitted with fairly strong lenses,", writes his son.' "When a pitch was made, the box was placed on a folding trestle, and the public were invited to walk up and see the show. My father was an excellent talker. He could 'patter' in the most, approved style, especially about the Battle of Trafalgar, scenes of which formed one of the staple features of his little.show. In his white smock frock, beaver "hat, knee breeches with worsted stockings and low-buckled shoes—a costume he never varied to the day of his death— the tall, handsome, well-set-up young fellow attracted much attention." . "LIVING CURIOSITIES." After-his marriage he launched out on a, larger scale, purchasing a caravan in; which to travel about the country from one fair to another. "He procured new pictures, and made a bigger peep show, and resolved on additional attractions in the way of living curiosities. To obtain these was the difficulty; but he was equal to the occasion, and very soon was travelling with 'Madame Gomez, the tallest woman in the world,' and 'Tamee Ahmee and Orio Rio, the savage cannibal pigmies of the Dark Continent.' This description sounds very imposing, but those 'living curiosities' were not all that they seemed. -My father had taken showman's licence in, introducing these novelties to the public. This often involves a judicious economy of the truth. . First, as to Madame Gomez. She had nothing foreign about her but the name, nor was she very remarkable. as. a giantess. Art, however, aids where Nature stops short, arid'this is where ray father came in. , Madame was; exhibited on' a raised platform in the travelling booth,, and when the company was assembled the curtains were pulled aside and she stepped forward from a mass of draperies at the back. Her actual height, which might have been pearly six feet, was added to by her high heels and cork raisers in her shoes, and—note the point—her dresses were made very' full and long. , : .f. ' '■'...■ "Seen, from the 'audience, she certainly looked very tall, and my father would 'patter' to the audience in this style: This, ladies and gentlemen, is Madame Gomez, admitted to be the tallest woman the world has ever seen. So admirably, however, is she proportioned -that her great height does not immediately impress the observer. In order, therefore, to assure you that there is no deception I will ask the tallest gentleman in the company to ascend the platform. You will then see that he has not the slightest difficulty in passing under Madame's extended.,arm t ' • THE TEST. "The tallest man would soon be picked out, and as he ascended the steps' to the small platform Madame would pull her long dresses aside and draw; backwards as if to make, room. In making this movement she imperceptibly gained -a little step or dais, cunningly concealed by the back draperies. This dais added at least seven inches to her height; while the long dress fell around her in "seemingly perfect fit The . arm test ■ was,. of course, always easily passed under these conditions, and the spectators invariably went away satisfied there was no deception." ■ '• . ' There was a similar little juggling with the truth in regard to Tamee Ahmee and Orio Rio, the savage cannibal pigmies. They.were really two rather intelligent mulatto children, their mother being a negress and their father an Irishman. My father had got them frbm their mother at Bristol, and they were aged respect tively ten years and nine/ years. Feathers, beads, and carefully-applied paint gave them the necessary savage appearance, and the 'patter' did the rest. 'Ladies and Gentlemen,— These wonderful people ~ are - fully grown, being, in-fact, each over thirty years of age. They were captured by Portuguese .traders, in the African wilds, and ■ are . incapable of ordinary human speech. . Their food consists of raw meat, and if they can capture a small animal they tear it to pieces alive with their teeth, eagerly devouring its flesh and drinking its blood.1 Thus was the tale told, and the credulous country folks were mightily impressed. So successful; indeed, was the whole show that rivals on the road hated my father bitterly, complaining that when he was about he took all the money."
Before he was six years of age George Sanger, the sixth child of his parents, was doing the "patter" for his father's new peep show. "It was an enormous improvement on the one wherewith my father started life on the road,", he writes. "To my childish mind it was indeed 'the greatest show on earth,' and some 'of the proudest hours of my existence came in this year, when I was allowed in my shrill treble to call the attention of the fair-going crowds to its glories It had twenty-six glasses, so that twenty-six persons could see the views at -the same time, the pictures being pulled up and down by strings. At night it was illuminated by a row of tallow candles, set before the pictures and the observer, and requiring very regular snuffing. Tragedies were always strong points with peep-shows, and one of our attractions at that time was a series o£ scenes representing the "Murder in the Red Barn." "Walk up! Walk up!" I would pipe, "and see the only 'correct views of tht terrible mur-
der of Maria Martin. They are historically accurate and true to life, depicting the death of Maria at the hands of the villain Corder, in the. famous Red Barn. You will see how the ghost of Maria appeared to her mother on three successive nights at the bedside leading to the discovery of the body and the arrest of Corder at Eveley Grove House, Brentford, seven miles from London." When we had our row of spectators getting their pennyworths from the peep-holes, I would describe the various pictures as they were pulled into view. The arrest of Corder was always given special prominence, as follows:—"The arrest of the murderer Corder. as he was at breakfast with the two Miss Singletons. Lee, the officer, is seen entering the door and telling Corder of the serious charge against him. Observe the horrified faces of the ladies, and note, also, so true to life are these pictures that even the saucepan is shown upon the fire, and the minute glass upon the table, timing the boiling of the eggs!" HUMAN FREAKS. Many of the so-called freaks of Nature exhibited by showmen of a preceding generation were frauds, but some were genuine. •" To understand the attraction such exhibitions and peepshows had for the general public it is necessary to remember that very little in the way of public entertainment was provided. Sports and games had not been developed to anything like the extent that they have since been, and not only were there no films or wireless, but even the'theatre was frowned upon by the churches, and therefore was tabu to most families. Nevertheless its seems incredible that 800,000 people paid to see Mile. Bois de Cheyne, the bearded lady, when she was exhibited in England in 1852-53. She was a Sv/iss girl,- having been born at Versoix' in • 1831. At the age of eight years she had a beard of two inches, which increased to five inches by.the time she.was fourteen. When she was exhibited in London she was twenty-two years of age, and had a strong, black beard, and thick hair on her arms and back. -She married a French artist, M. Clofullia, and their first child, a boy, was covered with hair at birth. Barnum'engaged the bearded lady to appear at his museum in New York in ,1853,. and, ,as usual, he adopted enterprising-meth-ods of drawing public attention to the latest attraction of the museum. He induced a man named William Canto take legal proceedings for the return of the 25 cents (one' shilling) he had paid for admission to see the bearded lady, the claim for refund resting on the .contention.,that'the lady was a man. Thia gave Barrium the opportunity of putting doctors and.her husband in the.witness-box to prove she was a woman. ..'■' THE RECORD. No human freak has ever approached the record of the famous dwarf General Tom Thumb as a money spinner. But there- was nothing extraordinary about this dwarf, and his success as a public attraction over a long period of years was due to the skilful showmanship of Barnum. When Barnum first saw Tom Thumb (his real name was Charles Sherwood Stratton) at Bridgeport, Connecticut, TJ.SA., where the-dwarf lived with his parents, the boy Was five years of age, weighed 151b, and measured 2 feet 1 inch in height. Barnum engaged the boy for exhibition at his museum .at New York, but as he was doubtful whether a dwarf would prove much of an attraction, the engagement was for only four weeks, at a salary of 3 dollars (12s 6d a week), plus board and lodging for the child and his mother. •Barnum advertised the "Child."as being eleven years old, in - order to create the impression that his small size was more abnormal than was actually the case. He also advertised him as having been imported from England at great expense, as vi those days' Americans had not begun to boost themselves, and preferred importations from England to local products. It was Barnum who christened the dwarf Tom Thumb ( after the dwarf in Charles ; Perraull's fairy story), gave him the title of general, and dressed him in a military uniform • as ; a miniature Napoleon. His weight increased to 251b. at twenty-five years of age, and eventually he reached a height of 3 feet 4 inches. Barnum boomed Tom Thumb so effectively in New York that he proved a decided attraction, and the engagement was renewed for a year.at 7 dollars (295) a week. The salary was increased to 25 dollars (£5) when Tom Thumb's parents awakened .to the value Of their son to Barnum, and subsequently the salary, was raised to 50 dollars (£10). The dwarf" sang songs in a piping .treble, danced and told stories. He had the pert manner of a forward child, and this added to the attractions of the midget for adults. After two years in New York'Barnum took him to England in 1844, where the enterprising showman succeeded in getting a command from Queen Victoria to bring the midget to Buckingham.Palace: The Queen- took a fancy to. Tom Thumb.; and he appeared at Buckingham./ Palace • three: times to ariiuse : the ■ children. This made the dwarf famous throughout' England, and enormous; crowds thronged to see him at the*Egyptian:Hall iri Piccadilly; where he was publicly exhibited by Barnum'at 'a shilling a head. And society hostesses vied with one another to secure the dwarf at their parties to entertain guests— at ten guineas an-evening. When Barnum took the, midget on tour to France, Belgium, and. Spain he was received, by the monarchs of these countries. By that- time the dwarf's parents had fully awakened to his financial'value,'and the tour was conducted on a basis of equal shares between Barnum and them. It was said that the net proceeds of the tour of Great Britain and the Continent, which lasted three years, reached £150,000. When Barnum took the midget back to America he advertised him extensively as having been received by all the crowned heads of Europe, and this added greatly to the midget's fame and his drawing power. .■"■'..
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 91, 14 October 1935, Page 4
Word Count
2,168OLD SIDE SHOWS Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 91, 14 October 1935, Page 4
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OLD SIDE SHOWS Evening Post, Volume CXX, Issue 91, 14 October 1935, Page 4
Using This Item
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Evening Post. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0 New Zealand licence. This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.