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P. T. Barnum

Phineas Taylor Barnum

Phineas Taylor Barnum by Mathew Brady

1856 newspaper advertisement for Barnum's American Museum

Panorama_of_Humbug_with_Jenny_Lind.jpg

Parody of Jenny Lind's first American tour for P.T. Barnum, New York City, October 1850

Phineas Taylor Barnum (July 5, 1810April 7, 1891), American showman who is best remembered for his entertaining hoaxes and for founding the circus that eventually became Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus.

He was born in Bethel, Connecticut, the son of an inn and store-keeper. Barnum first started as a store-keeper, and was also involved with the lottery mania then prevailing in the United States. After failing in business, he started in 1829 a weekly paper, The Herald of Freedom, in Danbury, Connecticut; after several libel suits and a prosecution which resulted in imprisonment, he moved to New York City in 1834, and in 1835 began his career as a showman, with his purchase and exhibition of a blind and almost completely paralyzed African-American slave woman, Joice Heth, claimed by Barnum to have been the nurse of George Washington, and to be over a hundred and sixty years old.

With this woman and a small company he made well-advertised and successful tours in America until 1839, though Joice Heth died in 1836, when her age was proved to be not more than seventy. After a period of failure he purchased Scudder's American Museum, New York, in 1841; to this he added considerably and it became one of the most popular shows in the United States. He made a special hit in 1842 with the exhibition of Charles Stratton, the celebrated midget "General Tom Thumb", as well as the Fiji Mermaid which he exhibited in collaboration with his Boston counterpart Moses Kimball. His collection also included the original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng Bunker. In 1843 Barnum hired the traditional Native American dancer Do-Hum-Me. During 1844-45 Barnum toured with Charles Stratton in Europe and met with Queen Victoria. A remarkable instance of his enterprise was the engagement of Jenny Lind to sing in America at $1,000 a night for one hundred and fifty nights, all expenses being paid by the entrepreneur. The tour began in 1850, and was a great success for both Lind and Barnum.

Barnum retired from the show business in 1855, but had to settle with his creditors in 1857, and began his old career again as showman and museum proprietor. In Brooklyn, New York in 1871, he established "P.T. Barnum's Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan, and Circus", a travelling amalgamation of circus, menagerie and museum of "freaks", which by 1872 was billing itself as "The Greatest Show on Earth". It went through a number of variants on these names: "P.T. Barnum's Traveling World's Fair, Great Roman Hippodrome and Greatest Show On Earth", and after an 1881 merger with James Bailey and James L. Hutchinson, "P.T. Barnum's Greatest Show On Earth, And The Great London Circus, Sanger's Royal British Menagerie and The Grand International Allied Shows United", soon shortened to "Barnum & London Circus". He and Bailey split up again in 1885, but came back together in 1888 with the "Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show On Earth", later "Barnum & Bailey Circus", which toured around the world. The show's primary attraction was Jumbo, an African elephant he purchased in 1882 from the London Zoo.

Barnum died on April 7, 1891 and is buried in Mountain Grove Cemetery, Bridgeport, Connecticut.His circus was eventually sold to Ringling Brothers on July 8, 1907 for a price of US$400,000.

Barnum wrote several books, including The Humbugs of the World (1865), Struggles and Triumphs (1869), and The Art of Money-Getting(1880).

Barnum self-published many different editions of his autobiography (first in 1854, and later editions including 1869). Some were limited publications of elaborate manufacture. Besides trying to sell these for a profit, he gave personally inscribed copies to friends and dignitaries. These limited editions are now valued by book collectors. Others were mass produced in large volume so they could be used as a promotional enticement to potential purchasers of tickets for circus performances. With each new edition, Barnum added new chapters covering the time since the previous edition. He also would revise the previous chapters. His autobiography was unusually frank for its time and thus considered scandalous by some. Historians have found few factual errors, though they do criticize his intentional omission of events, lack of sufficient details regarding some events, proselytizing and editorializing.

Mass publication of his autobiography was one of Barnum's more successful methods of self-promotion. The autobiography was so popular that some people made a point of acquiring and reading each edition. Some collectors were known to boast they had a copy of every edition in their library. Barnum eventually gave up his claim of copyright to allow other printers to publish and sell inexpensive editions. The autobiography was so popular that by the end of the 19th century the number of copies printed was second only to the number of copies of the New Testament printed in North America. (It was the number two best seller of the 19th century in North America.)

Barnum was significantly involved in the politics surrounding race, slavery, and sectionalism in the period leading up the American Civil War. As mentioned above, he had some of his first success as an impresario through his slave Joice Heth. Around 1850, he was involved in a hoax about a weed that would turn black people white.

Barnum was involved (both as performer and promoter) in blackface minstrelsy. According to Eric Lott, Barnum's minstrel shows were often more double-edged in their humor than most at this period. While still replete with racist stereotypes, Barnum's shows also satirized white racial attitudes, as in a stump speech in which a black phrenologist (like all performers in the show, actually a white man in blackface) made a dialect speech paralleling and parodying lectures given at the time to "prove" the superiority of the white race: "You see den, dat clebber man and dam rascal means de same in Dutch, when dey boph white; but when one white and de udder's black, dat's a grey hoss ob anoder color." (Lott, 1993, 78)

Promotion of minstrel shows led indirectly to his sponsorship in 1853 of H.J. Conway's politically watered-down stage version of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin; the play, at Barnum's American Museum, gave the story a happy ending, with Tom and various other slaves freed. The success of this Uncle Tom led, in turn, to his promotion of a production of a play based on Stowe's Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp. By 1860, Barnum had become a Republican.

See also

*Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus
*Fiji Mermaid
*Cardiff Giant
*James Anthony Bailey
*Fedor Jeftichew
*Moses Kimball
*Barnum effect
*There's a sucker born every minute
*Middlebush Giant
*General Tom Thumb
*Human zoo
*Zip the Pinhead
*Barnum, a Broadway musical about P.T. Barnum

External links


* The Barnum Museum
* The Lost Museum - a virtual reproduction of Barnum's American Museum; includes a collection of primary source materials.
* A Founding Trustee of Tufts University, Barnum gave $50,000 for the first building for the Department of Natural History
* Full text of The Life of Phineas T. Barnum by Joel Benton, from Project Gutenberg
*Free ebook of P. T. Barnum at Project Gutenberg
* P.T. Barnum never did say "There's a sucker born every minute"
* P.T. Barnum, the Shakespeare of Advertising
* P.T. Barnum and Henry Bergh Bergh was founder of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA).

References


* Secondary sources
** Adams, Bluford. E Pluribus Barnum: The Great Showman and the Making of U.S. Popular Culture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997. ISBN 0816626316.
** Cook, James W. The Arts of Deception: Playing with Fraud in the Age of Barnum. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001. ISBN 0674005910. Relates Barnum's Fiji Mermaid and What Is It? exhibits to other popular arts of the nineteenth century, including magic shows and trompe l'oeil paintings.
** Harding, Les. Elephant Story: Jumbo and P. T. Barnum Under the Big Top. Jefferson, NC.: McFarland & Co., 2000. ISBN 0786406321. (129 p.)
** Harris, Neil. Humbug: The Art of P.T. Barnum. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1973. ISBN 0226317528.
** Lott, Eric. Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. ISBN 0195078322. (Especially p. 76–78.)
** P.T. Barnum on the site of Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus. Accessed December 6, 2005.
** Reiss, Benjamin. The Showman and the Slave: Race, Death, and Memory in Barnum's America. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001. ISBN 0674006364. Focuses on Barnum's exhibition of Joice Heth.
** Saxon, Arthur H. P.T. Barnum: The Legend and the Man. New York: Columbia University Press, 1995. ISBN 0231056877.
* Primary sources
** Barnum, P.T. Art of Getting Money, or, Golden Rules for Making Money. Originally published 1880. Reprint ed., Bedford, MA: Applewood, 1999. ISBN 1557094942.
** -. Struggles and Triumphs, or Forty Years' Recollections of P.T. Barnum. Originally published 1869. Reprint ed., Whitefish, MT: Kessinger, 2003. ISBN 0766155560 (Part 1) and ISBN 0766155579 (Part 2).
** -. The Colossal P.T. Barnum Reader: Nothing Else Like It in the Universe. Ed. by James W. Cook. Champaign, University of Illinois Press, 2005. ISBN 0252072952.
** -. The Life of P.T. Barnum: Written By Himself. Originally published 1855. Reprint ed., Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 2000. ISBN 0252069021.



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