The Circus
Collection consists of such a variety of elements as books, magazines, advertising
posters and leaflets, photographs, pictorial cards of animals and circus people, and
special illustrations. The father of the American Circus, Phineas T. Barnum, (1810-1891),
is represented with a signed note, a cartoon, and two of his books. The intensely exciting,
evolving whirligig world of the circus in nineteenth century America is vividly depicted in
such magazines at Pluck and Luck, Brave and Bold, and Work and Win.
These publications feature such spine tinglers as: "Fred Fearnot and the
Boy Acrobat; or, Out with His Own Circus"; "Nimble Nick, the Circus Prince; or,
The Fortunes of a Bareback Rider"; "The Boy Fire King"; or, "Barnum's
Brightest Star"; and "Dashing Hal, the Hero of the Ring, a Story of the Circus".
How the circuses loudly proclaimed themselves!: "Hagenbeck-Wallace
Circus... The Highest Class Show on Earth"; "Bentley's 'Big' Vodvil and Dog Circus ...
Positively Most Beautiful Troupe of Trained Dogs in the World"; "The Leviathan of
Shows. Howes' Great London Circus and Grecian Hippodrome...". How, also, they blare
the merits of their performers!: "Miss Kate Fisher, the Great Protean Actress and Daring
Equestrienne!"; "Pennick the Expansionist, or Human Balloon"; and the
"Flying Concellos. Peerless, Daring Artists of the Flying Trapeze".
Out west of the Mississippi, that legendary Western frontier of song and story, was
theatrically brought to life by Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. This Western version of circus
entertainment popularized cowboys and Indians, stagecoaches and sharp-shooting, indelibly
implanting these images onto the American consciousness and foreshadowing the movie Western.
Our Collection in this area gives a tantalizing flavor of these shows and their popularity.
One 1893 "programme" booklet is entitled Buffalo Bill's Wild West and Congress of Rough
Riders of the World. There are samples of Buffalo Bill tales of daring in such magazines as:
Buffalo Bill Stories, Boys of New York, Beadle's Dime Library. New York, Beadle's Half Dime
Library, and Beadle's Boy's Library of Sport, Story and Adventure. So readers, mostly young
men and boys, poised on the edge of their seats over such thrilling tales as: "Adventures
of Buffalo Bill from Boyhood to Manhood"; "Buffalo Bill's Rifle Shots, or, The Buckskin
Bravo's Lone Trail"; "Buffalo Bill's Boy Mascot or Jack Jarvis' Hold-up, a Story of the
Tenderfoot in the Wild West"; and "Gold Bullet Sport; or, The Knights of the
Overland". Some stories, including the last named, are presented as written by the
"Hon. Wm. F. Cody (Buffalo Bill)". Thus the legendary West was formulated,
and later sustained, celebrated, and endlessly reformatted on movie screens throughout
the 20th Century. Also, gunshots and hoof beats were heard from radios across America,
and, of course, during the second half of the Century, came the sights and sounds of gunfights,
stagecoach chases, and saloon brawls to families gathered before their television screens.
Thus the three rings of daredevil entertainment under the Big Tent and the out-of-doors
devil-may-care action and drama of Western Americana are here united in one collection.
Whether sawdust or sagebrush, ladies in tights standing on their horse's backs or cowpokes
leaning from their saddles while lassoing varmints, acrobats balancing on the high wire or
war-painted warriors chasing berserk stagecoaches, it's all one - "The Greatest Show
on Earth"!
Conrad H. Schoeffling
Special Collections Librarian |