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Jumbo

Jumbo (about December 25, 1860 – September 15, 1885), also known as Jumbo the Elephant and Jumbo the Circus Elephant, was a 19th-century male African bush elephant born in Sudan. Jumbo was exported to Jardin des Plantes, a zoo in Paris, and then transferred in 1865 to London Zoo in England. Despite public protest, Jumbo was sold to P. T. Barnum, who took him to the United States for exhibition in March 1882.

Jumbo
Jumbo and his keeper Matthew Scott
(Circus poster, c. 1882)
SpeciesAfrican bush elephant
SexMale
Born(1860-12-25)December 25, 1860[1]
Sudan
DiedSeptember 15, 1885(1885-09-15) (aged 24)
St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeVarious
OccupationZoo and circus attraction
Years active1862–1885 in captivity
Owner
Weight6.15 metric tons (6.78 short tons)[2]
Height3.23 m (10 ft 7 in)[2] 13 ft 1 in (3.99 m) as promoted by Barnum
Cause of deathRailway accident

The giant elephant's name spawned the common word "jumbo", meaning large in size.[3] Examples of his lexical impact are phrases like "jumbo jet", "jumbo shrimp," and "jumbotron." Jumbo's shoulder height has been estimated to have been 3.23 metres (10 ft 7 in) at the time of his death,[2] and was claimed to be about 4 m (13 ft 1 in) by Barnum.

History Edit

Jumbo was born around December 25, 1860, in Sudan,[1] and after his mother was killed by poachers, the infant Jumbo was captured by Sudanese elephant poacher Taher Sheriff and German big-game poacher Johann Schmidt.[1] The calf was sold to Lorenzo Casanova, an Italian animal dealer and explorer. Casanova transported the animals that he had bought from Sudan north to Suez, and then across the Mediterranean Sea to Trieste.

 
Jumbo and Matthew Scott giving a ride to children in London Zoo

This collection was sold to Gottlieb Christian Kreutzberg's "Menagerie Kreutzberg" in Germany.[4] Soon after, the elephant was imported to France and kept in the Paris zoo Jardin des Plantes. In 1865, he was transferred to the London Zoo and arrived on 26 June.[5] In the following years, Jumbo became a crowd favorite due to his size, and would give rides to children on his back, including those of Queen Victoria.

While in London, Jumbo broke both tusks, and when they regrew, he ground them down against the stonework of his enclosure.[5] His keeper in London was Matthew Scott, whose 1885 autobiography details his life with Jumbo.[5]

 
"Jumbo's pitiful refusal to leave London Zoo tugged at the nation's heartstrings"

In 1882, Abraham Bartlett, superintendent of the London zoo, sparked national controversy with his decision to sell Jumbo to the American entertainer Phineas T. Barnum of the Barnum & Bailey Circus for £2,000 (US$10,000).[4] This decision came as a result of concern surrounding Jumbo's growing aggression and potential to cause a public disaster. The sale of Jumbo, however, sent the citizens of London into a panic, because they viewed the transaction as an enormous loss for the British empire. 100,000 school children wrote to Queen Victoria begging her not to sell the elephant.[a]

 
Jumbo's Journey to the Docks, The Illustrated London News, 1 April 1882

John Ruskin, a fellow of the Zoological Society, wrote in The Morning Post in February 1882: "I, for one of the said fellows, am not in the habit of selling my old pets or parting with my old servants because I find them subject occasionally, perhaps even "periodically," to fits of ill temper; and I not only "regret" the proceedings of the council, but disclaim them utterly, as disgraceful to the city of London and dishonourable to common humanity."[6] Despite a lawsuit against the Zoological Gardens alleging the sale was in violation of multiple zoo bylaws, and the zoo's attempt to renege on the sale, the court upheld the sale.[4] Matthew Scott elected to go with Jumbo to the United States.[5] The London-based newspaper The Daily Telegraph begged Barnum to lay down terms on which he would return Jumbo; however, no such terms existed in the eyes of Barnum.

In New York, Barnum exhibited Jumbo at Madison Square Garden, earning enough in three weeks from the enormous crowds to recoup the money he spent to buy the animal.[4][7] In the 31-week season, the circus earned $1.75M, largely due to its star attraction.[4] On May 17, 1884, Jumbo was one of Barnum's 21 elephants that crossed the Brooklyn Bridge to demonstrate that it was safe, a year after 12 people died during a stampede precipitated by fear that the bridge might collapse.[8]

Death Edit

 
Jumbo after being hit by a locomotive on September 15, 1885, in St. Thomas, Ontario
 
An 1889 photograph of Jumbo at Barnum Hall, the taxidermy work of Carl Akeley
 
Poster of Jumbo's skeleton
 
Surviving fragments of Jumbo from the conflagration[9]

Jumbo died at a railway classification yard in St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada, on September 15, 1885. In those days the circus crisscrossed North America by train. St. Thomas was the perfect location for a circus because many rail lines converged there. Jumbo and the other animals had finished their performances that night, and as they were being led to their box car, a train came down the track. Jumbo was hit and mortally wounded, dying within minutes.[10][11][12]

Barnum told the story that Tom Thumb, a young circus elephant, was walking on the railroad tracks and Jumbo was attempting to lead him to safety. Barnum claimed that the locomotive hit and killed Tom Thumb before it derailed and hit Jumbo, and other witnesses supported Barnum's account. According to newspapers, the freight train hit Jumbo directly, killing him, while Tom Thumb suffered a broken leg.[13][14]

Many metallic objects were found in the elephant's stomach, including English pennies, keys, rivets, and a police whistle.[b]

Ever the showman, Barnum had portions of his star attraction separated, to have multiple sites attracting curious spectators. After touring with Barnum's circus,[16] the skeleton was donated to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where it remains.[17][18] The elephant's heart was sold to Burt Green Wilder of Cornell University, and had been lost by the 1940s.[19] Jumbo's hide was stuffed by William J. Critchley and Carl Akeley, both of Ward's Natural Science, who stretched it during the mounting process; the mounted specimen traveled with Barnum's circus for two years.[16]

Barnum eventually donated the stuffed Jumbo to Tufts University, where it was displayed at P.T. Barnum Hall there for many years. The hide was destroyed in a fire in April 1975.[17] Ashes from that fire, which are believed to contain the elephant's remains, are kept in a 14-ounce Peter Pan Crunchy Peanut Butter jar in the office of the Tufts athletic director, while his taxidermied tail, removed during earlier renovations, resides in the holdings of the Tufts Digital Collections and Archives.[12] Jumbo is the Tufts University mascot.[20]

Legacy Edit

Remaining in the United Kingdom are statues and other memorabilia of Jumbo. The elephant – or rather his statuette in the Natural History Museum – was made holotype of Richard Lydekker's proposed subspecies (Loxodonta africana rothschildi) for the large elephants of the eastern Sahel. Modern authorities do not recognize this (or any other subspecies of African bush elephants), considering its purportedly diagnostic large size and peculiarly shaped ears to be individual variation.

While Jumbo's hide resided at Tufts' P.T. Barnum Hall, a superstition held that dropping a coin into a nostril of the trunk would bring good luck on an examination or sports event.[20] Although the hide was destroyed by a major fire,[17] Jumbo remains the mascot of Tufts, and representations of the elephant are featured prominently throughout the campus.[20]

 
Jumbo statue in St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada

A life-sized statue of the elephant was erected in 1985 in St. Thomas, Ontario, to commemorate the centennial of the elephant's death. It is located on Talbot Street on the west side of the city. In 2006 the Jumbo statue was inducted into the North America Railway Hall of Fame in the category of "Railway Art Forms & Events" as having local significance.[21] St. Thomas's Railway City Brewery sells an IPA beer named Dead Elephant.

Jumbo was the inspiration of the nickname of the 19th-century Jumbo Water Tower in the town of Colchester in Essex, England.[22]

 
Lucy the Elephant, a Jumbo-inspired building in New Jersey

Jumbo is referenced by a plaque outside the old Liberal Hall, now a Wetherspoons pub, in Crediton, United Kingdom.[1]

Lucy the Elephant, a six-story structure in Margate City, New Jersey, was modeled after Jumbo.[23] Built by James V. Lafferty in 1881, Lucy is the oldest surviving roadside tourist attraction in America and a National Historic Landmark. Lafferty also made other Jumbo-shaped structures, including Elephantine Colossus, on Coney Island.[24]

Jumbo has been lionized on a series of sheet-music covers from roughly 1882–83. The four-colour lithograph of Jumbo was created by Alfred Concanen of England, with the music title "Why Part With Jumbo",[c] a song by the lion comique of Victorian British music halls, G. H. MacDermott. It pictured children zoo visitors riding, somewhat precariously, on Jumbo's back. Multiple American lithographic music covers were done, including by J. H. Bufford's Sons.

Canadian folk singer James Gordon wrote the song "Jumbo's Last Ride", which recounts the story of Jumbo's life and death. It is on his 1999 CD Pipe Street Dreams.[26]

Canadian professional ice hockey player Joe Thornton (b. 1979) from St. Thomas, Ontario is nicknamed Jumbo Joe as a homage to Jumbo.[27]

The 1941 animated film Dumbo released by Walt Disney Animation Studios was inspired by the story of Jumbo and is regarded as one of the greatest animated films of all time. Despite the film being fictional, many people have speculated that Jumbo might have been the title character's father.[28]

Examination of Jumbo's skeleton Edit

A television program about Jumbo, Attenborough and the Giant Elephant, presented by the naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough, was transmitted on BBC One in the United Kingdom on 10 December 2017.[5] An international team of scientists examined the skeleton and found:

  • Jumbo's molar teeth were malformed and out of line as a result of a long-term soft diet that did not wear his molar teeth down enough, obstructing the forward eruptive movement of the next molar.
  • Jumbo's nightly rages were probably caused by toothache, rather than musth, as his keeper thought at the time.
  • A post mortem photograph of Jumbo shows skin abrasions consistent with an illustration produced just after his death of the freight train hitting him on a hip from behind as he was being led across to his traveling carriage, and said that the likeliest cause of death was internal bleeding from his injuries.
  • Examination of Jumbo's limb bones showed overgrown tendon attachment areas consistent with a long-term history of being overloaded at his work.
  • Jumbo was still growing at the time of his death, as is normal for African male elephants of his age, and might eventually have attained the size claimed by Barnum.

See also Edit

References Edit

 
Cover of Autobiography of Matthew Scott, Jumbo's Keeper; also Jumbo's Biography (1885)

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The Elephant War (1960) by Gillian Avery is a historical novel featuring the protest movement based in Oxford.
  2. ^ "A postmortem revealed his stomach to contain 'a hat-full' of English pennies, gold and silver coins, stones, a bunch of keys, lead seals from railway trucks, trinkets of metal and glass, screws, rivets, pieces of wire and a police whistle."[15]
  3. ^ Full title: "Why Part With Jumbo, the Pet of the Zoo"; by: George Barnham (composer); G. H. Macdermott (lyricist); Ernest J. Symons (composer)[25]

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Chambers, Paul (2008). Jumbo the greatest elephant in the world (1st US ed.). Hanover, N.H.: Steerforth Press. p. PT14. ISBN 978-1586421533.
  2. ^ a b c Larramendi, A. (2016). "Shoulder height, body mass and shape of proboscideans" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 61. doi:10.4202/app.00136.2014. S2CID 2092950.
  3. ^ "Jumbo (adj.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e (PDF). St. Thomas Public Library. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 22 August 2016.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Attenborough And The Giant Elephant". Media Centre. UK: BBC. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  6. ^ Complete works of John Ruskin, Vol 34 Page 560. and http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/depts/ruskinlib/Works%20of%20John%20Ruskin
  7. ^ "Madison Square Garden I" on Ballpark.com
  8. ^ McCullough, David (2012). The Great Bridge: the epic story of the building of the Brooklyn Bridge (Updated ed.). London: Simon & Schuster. pp. 431, 543. ISBN 978-1451683233.
  9. ^ Maeda. "A Portion Of Jumbo The Elephant's Tail At Tufts University". Getty Images. Boston Globe. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  10. ^ "Friday January 5, 2018 Full Text Transcript". CBC Radio.
  11. ^ David Suzuki. "Jumbo: The Life Of An Elephant Superstar". CBC.
  12. ^ a b Susan Wilson (Spring 2002). . Tufts Magazine. Archived from the original on January 23, 2015.
  13. ^ Brennan, Pat (2010-09-08). "Jumbo the elephant leaves a big legend in southern Ontario". The Toronto Star. ISSN 0319-0781. Retrieved 2018-01-23.
  14. ^ "Jumbo's Death", The Globe, September 17, 1885, p. 1.
  15. ^ Meredith, Martin (2009). Elephant Destiny: Biography of an Endangered Species in Africa. PublicAffairs. p. 117. ISBN 978-0786728381. Retrieved 16 January 2013.
  16. ^ a b "Jumbo: From Our Special Collections". University of Rochester Libraries. Retrieved 2 January 2014.
  17. ^ a b c "The Immolation Of Jumbo", American Heritage, Vol. 26, Issue 6, October 1975.
  18. ^ Collins, Glenn (22 January 1993). "Barnum's Jumbo Is Back In Museum's Center Ring". New York Times. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  19. ^ "Guide to the Jumbo the Elephant Material". Cornell Rare Manuscript Collections. 2001. Retrieved 2023-03-31.
  20. ^ a b c "Jumbo the Elephant, Tufts' Mascot". Tufts University. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  21. ^ The North America Railway Hall of Fame | Inductee: The Jumbo Statue
  22. ^ "Column: Rev John, Jumbo and another remarkable story in Colchester's history". Gazette. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  23. ^ Ensslin, John C. "Jersey Icons: Lucy the Elephant". northjersey.com. www.northjersey.com. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  24. ^ "The World's Greatest Elephant - Lucy The Elephant". Lucy The Elephant. Retrieved 2018-02-19.
  25. ^ Barnham (Composer), George; MacDermott (Lyricist), G. H.; Symons (Composer), Ernest J. "Why Part With Jumbo, the Pet of the Zoo". Levy Sheet Music Collection. JScholarship. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  26. ^ "Jumbo's Last Ride". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved 6 September 2014.
  27. ^ Rea, Kyle (July 10, 2010). . St. Thomas Journal. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved April 29, 2018. The nickname is a homage to Jumbo, the famous elephant killed in St. Thomas 125 years ago.
  28. ^ "Barnum, Jumbo & Dumbo!". The Barnum Museum. 2019-03-28. Retrieved 2021-05-05.

Bibliography Edit

  • Chambers, Paul. Jumbo: The Greatest Elephant in the World, Andre Deutsch, 2007. ISBN 978-0-233-00222-4
  • Harding, Les. Elephant Story: Jumbo and P.T. Barnum Under the Big Top. McFarland, 2000. ISBN 0-7864-0632-1
  • Knowles, Sebastian D. G. At Fault: Joyce and the Crisis of the Modern University. The Florida James Joyce Series, Gainesville, University Press of Florida, 2018. ISBN 978-0-813-05692-0
  • McClellan, Andrew. “P. T. Barnum, Jumbo the Elephant, and the Barnum Museum of Natural History at Tufts University,” Journal of the History of Collections, Volume 24, Issue 1, 1 March 2012, Pages 45–62, https://doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhr001
  • Nicholls, Henry. “Jumbo the Elephant: the Afterlife.” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, 11 Nov. 2013, www.theguardian.com/science/2013/nov/11/jumbo-the-elephant-the-afterlife.
  • Scott, Matthew. The autobiography of Matthew Scott and his biography of P.T. Barnum's great elephant Jumbo. 1885. ISBN 978-1-480-10798-4
  • Sutherland, John. Jumbo: The Unauthorised Biography of a Victorian Sensation, Aurum Press, 2014, ISBN 978-1781312445

External links Edit

  • 1942 photo of the 'stuffed' Jumbo at the Barnum Museum
  • The Story of Jumbo's Death 2018-06-17 at the Wayback Machine
  • Jumbo memorial in St. Thomas, ON, Canada
  • The North America Railway Hall of Fame
  • Autobiography of Matthew Scott, Jumbo's Keeper; also Jumbo's Biography at Faded Page (Canada)

jumbo, this, article, about, historic, elephant, other, uses, disambiguation, elephant, redirects, here, concrete, reinforced, steel, statue, canadian, artist, winston, bronnum, elephant, bronnum, about, december, 1860, september, 1885, also, known, elephant, . This article is about the historic elephant For other uses see Jumbo disambiguation Jumbo the Elephant redirects here For the concrete and reinforced steel statue by Canadian artist Winston Bronnum see Jumbo the Elephant Bronnum Jumbo about December 25 1860 September 15 1885 also known as Jumbo the Elephant and Jumbo the Circus Elephant was a 19th century male African bush elephant born in Sudan Jumbo was exported to Jardin des Plantes a zoo in Paris and then transferred in 1865 to London Zoo in England Despite public protest Jumbo was sold to P T Barnum who took him to the United States for exhibition in March 1882 JumboJumbo and his keeper Matthew Scott Circus poster c 1882 SpeciesAfrican bush elephantSexMaleBorn 1860 12 25 December 25 1860 1 SudanDiedSeptember 15 1885 1885 09 15 aged 24 St Thomas Ontario CanadaResting placeVariousOccupationZoo and circus attractionYears active1862 1885 in captivityOwnerJardin des Plantes London Zoo P T BarnumWeight6 15 metric tons 6 78 short tons 2 Height3 23 m 10 ft 7 in 2 13 ft 1 in 3 99 m as promoted by BarnumCause of deathRailway accidentThe giant elephant s name spawned the common word jumbo meaning large in size 3 Examples of his lexical impact are phrases like jumbo jet jumbo shrimp and jumbotron Jumbo s shoulder height has been estimated to have been 3 23 metres 10 ft 7 in at the time of his death 2 and was claimed to be about 4 m 13 ft 1 in by Barnum Contents 1 History 2 Death 3 Legacy 4 Examination of Jumbo s skeleton 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory EditJumbo was born around December 25 1860 in Sudan 1 and after his mother was killed by poachers the infant Jumbo was captured by Sudanese elephant poacher Taher Sheriff and German big game poacher Johann Schmidt 1 The calf was sold to Lorenzo Casanova an Italian animal dealer and explorer Casanova transported the animals that he had bought from Sudan north to Suez and then across the Mediterranean Sea to Trieste nbsp Jumbo and Matthew Scott giving a ride to children in London ZooThis collection was sold to Gottlieb Christian Kreutzberg s Menagerie Kreutzberg in Germany 4 Soon after the elephant was imported to France and kept in the Paris zoo Jardin des Plantes In 1865 he was transferred to the London Zoo and arrived on 26 June 5 In the following years Jumbo became a crowd favorite due to his size and would give rides to children on his back including those of Queen Victoria While in London Jumbo broke both tusks and when they regrew he ground them down against the stonework of his enclosure 5 His keeper in London was Matthew Scott whose 1885 autobiography details his life with Jumbo 5 nbsp Jumbo s pitiful refusal to leave London Zoo tugged at the nation s heartstrings In 1882 Abraham Bartlett superintendent of the London zoo sparked national controversy with his decision to sell Jumbo to the American entertainer Phineas T Barnum of the Barnum amp Bailey Circus for 2 000 US 10 000 4 This decision came as a result of concern surrounding Jumbo s growing aggression and potential to cause a public disaster The sale of Jumbo however sent the citizens of London into a panic because they viewed the transaction as an enormous loss for the British empire 100 000 school children wrote to Queen Victoria begging her not to sell the elephant a nbsp Jumbo s Journey to the Docks The Illustrated London News 1 April 1882John Ruskin a fellow of the Zoological Society wrote in The Morning Post in February 1882 I for one of the said fellows am not in the habit of selling my old pets or parting with my old servants because I find them subject occasionally perhaps even periodically to fits of ill temper and I not only regret the proceedings of the council but disclaim them utterly as disgraceful to the city of London and dishonourable to common humanity 6 Despite a lawsuit against the Zoological Gardens alleging the sale was in violation of multiple zoo bylaws and the zoo s attempt to renege on the sale the court upheld the sale 4 Matthew Scott elected to go with Jumbo to the United States 5 The London based newspaper The Daily Telegraph begged Barnum to lay down terms on which he would return Jumbo however no such terms existed in the eyes of Barnum In New York Barnum exhibited Jumbo at Madison Square Garden earning enough in three weeks from the enormous crowds to recoup the money he spent to buy the animal 4 7 In the 31 week season the circus earned 1 75M largely due to its star attraction 4 On May 17 1884 Jumbo was one of Barnum s 21 elephants that crossed the Brooklyn Bridge to demonstrate that it was safe a year after 12 people died during a stampede precipitated by fear that the bridge might collapse 8 Death Edit nbsp Jumbo after being hit by a locomotive on September 15 1885 in St Thomas Ontario nbsp An 1889 photograph of Jumbo at Barnum Hall the taxidermy work of Carl Akeley nbsp Poster of Jumbo s skeleton nbsp Surviving fragments of Jumbo from the conflagration 9 Jumbo died at a railway classification yard in St Thomas Ontario Canada on September 15 1885 In those days the circus crisscrossed North America by train St Thomas was the perfect location for a circus because many rail lines converged there Jumbo and the other animals had finished their performances that night and as they were being led to their box car a train came down the track Jumbo was hit and mortally wounded dying within minutes 10 11 12 Barnum told the story that Tom Thumb a young circus elephant was walking on the railroad tracks and Jumbo was attempting to lead him to safety Barnum claimed that the locomotive hit and killed Tom Thumb before it derailed and hit Jumbo and other witnesses supported Barnum s account According to newspapers the freight train hit Jumbo directly killing him while Tom Thumb suffered a broken leg 13 14 Many metallic objects were found in the elephant s stomach including English pennies keys rivets and a police whistle b Ever the showman Barnum had portions of his star attraction separated to have multiple sites attracting curious spectators After touring with Barnum s circus 16 the skeleton was donated to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City where it remains 17 18 The elephant s heart was sold to Burt Green Wilder of Cornell University and had been lost by the 1940s 19 Jumbo s hide was stuffed by William J Critchley and Carl Akeley both of Ward s Natural Science who stretched it during the mounting process the mounted specimen traveled with Barnum s circus for two years 16 Barnum eventually donated the stuffed Jumbo to Tufts University where it was displayed at P T Barnum Hall there for many years The hide was destroyed in a fire in April 1975 17 Ashes from that fire which are believed to contain the elephant s remains are kept in a 14 ounce Peter Pan Crunchy Peanut Butter jar in the office of the Tufts athletic director while his taxidermied tail removed during earlier renovations resides in the holdings of the Tufts Digital Collections and Archives 12 Jumbo is the Tufts University mascot 20 Legacy EditRemaining in the United Kingdom are statues and other memorabilia of Jumbo The elephant or rather his statuette in the Natural History Museum was made holotype of Richard Lydekker s proposed subspecies Loxodonta africana rothschildi for the large elephants of the eastern Sahel Modern authorities do not recognize this or any other subspecies of African bush elephants considering its purportedly diagnostic large size and peculiarly shaped ears to be individual variation While Jumbo s hide resided at Tufts P T Barnum Hall a superstition held that dropping a coin into a nostril of the trunk would bring good luck on an examination or sports event 20 Although the hide was destroyed by a major fire 17 Jumbo remains the mascot of Tufts and representations of the elephant are featured prominently throughout the campus 20 nbsp Jumbo statue in St Thomas Ontario CanadaA life sized statue of the elephant was erected in 1985 in St Thomas Ontario to commemorate the centennial of the elephant s death It is located on Talbot Street on the west side of the city In 2006 the Jumbo statue was inducted into the North America Railway Hall of Fame in the category of Railway Art Forms amp Events as having local significance 21 St Thomas s Railway City Brewery sells an IPA beer named Dead Elephant Jumbo was the inspiration of the nickname of the 19th century Jumbo Water Tower in the town of Colchester in Essex England 22 nbsp Lucy the Elephant a Jumbo inspired building in New JerseyJumbo is referenced by a plaque outside the old Liberal Hall now a Wetherspoons pub in Crediton United Kingdom 1 Lucy the Elephant a six story structure in Margate City New Jersey was modeled after Jumbo 23 Built by James V Lafferty in 1881 Lucy is the oldest surviving roadside tourist attraction in America and a National Historic Landmark Lafferty also made other Jumbo shaped structures including Elephantine Colossus on Coney Island 24 Jumbo has been lionized on a series of sheet music covers from roughly 1882 83 The four colour lithograph of Jumbo was created by Alfred Concanen of England with the music title Why Part With Jumbo c a song by the lion comique of Victorian British music halls G H MacDermott It pictured children zoo visitors riding somewhat precariously on Jumbo s back Multiple American lithographic music covers were done including by J H Bufford s Sons Canadian folk singer James Gordon wrote the song Jumbo s Last Ride which recounts the story of Jumbo s life and death It is on his 1999 CD Pipe Street Dreams 26 Canadian professional ice hockey player Joe Thornton b 1979 from St Thomas Ontario is nicknamed Jumbo Joe as a homage to Jumbo 27 The 1941 animated film Dumbo released by Walt Disney Animation Studios was inspired by the story of Jumbo and is regarded as one of the greatest animated films of all time Despite the film being fictional many people have speculated that Jumbo might have been the title character s father 28 Examination of Jumbo s skeleton EditA television program about Jumbo Attenborough and the Giant Elephant presented by the naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough was transmitted on BBC One in the United Kingdom on 10 December 2017 5 An international team of scientists examined the skeleton and found Jumbo s molar teeth were malformed and out of line as a result of a long term soft diet that did not wear his molar teeth down enough obstructing the forward eruptive movement of the next molar Jumbo s nightly rages were probably caused by toothache rather than musth as his keeper thought at the time A post mortem photograph of Jumbo shows skin abrasions consistent with an illustration produced just after his death of the freight train hitting him on a hip from behind as he was being led across to his traveling carriage and said that the likeliest cause of death was internal bleeding from his injuries Examination of Jumbo s limb bones showed overgrown tendon attachment areas consistent with a long term history of being overloaded at his work Jumbo was still growing at the time of his death as is normal for African male elephants of his age and might eventually have attained the size claimed by Barnum See also EditThe Greatest Show on Earth a movie based on the story of the Barnum and Bailey Circus History of elephants in Europe List of individual elephantsReferences Edit nbsp Cover of Autobiography of Matthew Scott Jumbo s Keeper also Jumbo s Biography 1885 Notes Edit The Elephant War 1960 by Gillian Avery is a historical novel featuring the protest movement based in Oxford A postmortem revealed his stomach to contain a hat full of English pennies gold and silver coins stones a bunch of keys lead seals from railway trucks trinkets of metal and glass screws rivets pieces of wire and a police whistle 15 Full title Why Part With Jumbo the Pet of the Zoo by George Barnham composer G H Macdermott lyricist Ernest J Symons composer 25 Citations Edit a b c d Chambers Paul 2008 Jumbo the greatest elephant in the world 1st US ed Hanover N H Steerforth Press p PT14 ISBN 978 1586421533 a b c Larramendi A 2016 Shoulder height body mass and shape of proboscideans PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 61 doi 10 4202 app 00136 2014 S2CID 2092950 Jumbo adj Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 27 December 2013 a b c d e The Life of Jumbo the Elephant PDF St Thomas Public Library Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 22 August 2016 a b c d e Attenborough And The Giant Elephant Media Centre UK BBC Retrieved 10 December 2017 Complete works of John Ruskin Vol 34 Page 560 http www lancaster ac uk depts ruskinlib stormcloud and http www lancaster ac uk depts ruskinlib Works 20of 20John 20Ruskin Madison Square Garden I on Ballpark com McCullough David 2012 The Great Bridge the epic story of the building of the Brooklyn Bridge Updated ed London Simon amp Schuster pp 431 543 ISBN 978 1451683233 Maeda A Portion Of Jumbo The Elephant s Tail At Tufts University Getty Images Boston Globe Retrieved 19 December 2016 Friday January 5 2018 Full Text Transcript CBC Radio David Suzuki Jumbo The Life Of An Elephant Superstar CBC a b Susan Wilson Spring 2002 An Elephant s Tale Tufts Magazine Archived from the original on January 23 2015 Brennan Pat 2010 09 08 Jumbo the elephant leaves a big legend in southern Ontario The Toronto Star ISSN 0319 0781 Retrieved 2018 01 23 Jumbo s Death The Globe September 17 1885 p 1 Meredith Martin 2009 Elephant Destiny Biography of an Endangered Species in Africa PublicAffairs p 117 ISBN 978 0786728381 Retrieved 16 January 2013 a b Jumbo From Our Special Collections University of Rochester Libraries Retrieved 2 January 2014 a b c The Immolation Of Jumbo American Heritage Vol 26 Issue 6 October 1975 Collins Glenn 22 January 1993 Barnum s Jumbo Is Back In Museum s Center Ring New York Times Retrieved 10 December 2017 Guide to the Jumbo the Elephant Material Cornell Rare Manuscript Collections 2001 Retrieved 2023 03 31 a b c Jumbo the Elephant Tufts Mascot Tufts University Retrieved 27 December 2013 The North America Railway Hall of Fame Inductee The Jumbo Statue Column Rev John Jumbo and another remarkable story in Colchester s history Gazette Retrieved 2022 11 09 Ensslin John C Jersey Icons Lucy the Elephant northjersey com www northjersey com Retrieved 17 September 2021 The World s Greatest Elephant Lucy The Elephant Lucy The Elephant Retrieved 2018 02 19 Barnham Composer George MacDermott Lyricist G H Symons Composer Ernest J Why Part With Jumbo the Pet of the Zoo Levy Sheet Music Collection JScholarship Retrieved 26 December 2013 Jumbo s Last Ride AllMusic All Media Network Retrieved 6 September 2014 Rea Kyle July 10 2010 St Thomas honours its hockey hero with banner St Thomas Journal Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved April 29 2018 The nickname is a homage to Jumbo the famous elephant killed in St Thomas 125 years ago Barnum Jumbo amp Dumbo The Barnum Museum 2019 03 28 Retrieved 2021 05 05 Bibliography Edit Chambers Paul Jumbo The Greatest Elephant in the World Andre Deutsch 2007 ISBN 978 0 233 00222 4 Harding Les Elephant Story Jumbo and P T Barnum Under the Big Top McFarland 2000 ISBN 0 7864 0632 1 Knowles Sebastian D G At Fault Joyce and the Crisis of the Modern University The Florida James Joyce Series Gainesville University Press of Florida 2018 ISBN 978 0 813 05692 0 McClellan Andrew P T Barnum Jumbo the Elephant and the Barnum Museum of Natural History at Tufts University Journal of the History of Collections Volume 24 Issue 1 1 March 2012 Pages 45 62 https doi org 10 1093 jhc fhr001 Nicholls Henry Jumbo the Elephant the Afterlife The Guardian Guardian News and Media 11 Nov 2013 www theguardian com science 2013 nov 11 jumbo the elephant the afterlife Scott Matthew The autobiography of Matthew Scott and his biography of P T Barnum s great elephant Jumbo 1885 ISBN 978 1 480 10798 4 Sutherland John Jumbo The Unauthorised Biography of a Victorian Sensation Aurum Press 2014 ISBN 978 1781312445External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jumbo nbsp Look up jumbo in Wiktionary the free dictionary 1942 photo of the stuffed Jumbo at the Barnum Museum Jumbo Images from the PT Barnum Collection at Tufts University The Story of Jumbo s Death Archived 2018 06 17 at the Wayback Machine Jumbo memorial in St Thomas ON Canada Jumbo in typical trade card advertising The North America Railway Hall of Fame Autobiography of Matthew Scott Jumbo s Keeper also Jumbo s Biography at Faded Page Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jumbo amp oldid 1179019837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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