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P. T. Barnum

Phineas Taylor Barnum (/ˈbɑːrnəm/; July 5, 1810 – April 7, 1891) was an American showman, businessman and politician remembered for promoting celebrated hoaxes and founding the Barnum & Bailey Circus[1] with James Anthony Bailey.

P. T. Barnum
Barnum in 1851
Mayor of Bridgeport, Connecticut
In office
1875–1876
Member of the Connecticut House of Representatives
from the Fairfield district
In office
1866–1869
Personal details
Born
Phineas Taylor Barnum

(1810-07-05)July 5, 1810
Bethel, Connecticut, U.S.
DiedApril 7, 1891(1891-04-07) (aged 80)
Bridgeport, Connecticut, U.S.
Resting placeMountain Grove Cemetery, Bridgeport
Political partyDemocratic (until 1854)
Republican (after 1854)
Spouse(s)
Charity Hallett
(m. 1829; died 1873)

(m. 1874)
Children4
Occupation
  • Showman
  • entrepreneur (entertainment as founder and promoter)
  • politician
  • author
  • publisher
  • philanthropist
Known forFounding the Barnum & Bailey Circus
Signature

He was also an author, publisher and philanthropist, although he said of himself: "I am a showman by profession ... and all the gilding shall make nothing else of me."[2] According to Barnum's critics, his personal aim was "to put money in his own coffers."[2] The adage "there's a sucker born every minute"[3] has frequently been attributed to him, although no evidence exists that he had indeed coined the phrase.

Barnum became a small-business owner in his early twenties and founded a weekly newspaper before moving to New York City in 1834. He embarked on an entertainment career, first with a variety troupe called "Barnum's Grand Scientific and Musical Theater", and soon after by purchasing Scudder's American Museum, which he renamed after himself. He used the museum as a platform to promote hoaxes and human curiosities such as the Fiji mermaid and General Tom Thumb.[4] In 1850, he promoted the American tour of Swedish opera singer Jenny Lind, paying her an unprecedented $1,000 (equivalent to $35,176 in 2022) per night for 150 nights. He suffered economic reversals in the 1850s from unwise investments, as well as years of litigation and public humiliation, but he embarked on a lecture tour as a temperance speaker to emerge from debt. His museum added America's first aquarium and expanded its wax-figure department.

Barnum served two terms in the Connecticut legislature in 1865 as a Republican for Fairfield, Connecticut. He spoke before the legislature concerning the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which abolished slavery and involuntary servitude: "A human soul, 'that God has created and Christ died for,' is not to be trifled with. It may tenant the body of a Chinaman, a Turk, an Arab, or a Hottentot—it is still an immortal spirit."[5] He was elected in 1875 as mayor of Bridgeport, Connecticut, where he worked to improve the water supply, bring gas lighting to streets and enforce liquor and prostitution laws. He was also instrumental in the inception of Bridgeport Hospital in 1878 and was its first president.[6] However, the circus business, begun when he was 60 years old, was the source of much of his enduring fame. He established "P.T. Barnum's Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan & Hippodrome" in 1870, a traveling circus, menagerie and museum of "freaks" that adopted many names over the years.

Barnum was married to Charity Hallett from 1829 until her death in 1873, and they had four children. In 1874, a few months after his wife's death, he married Nancy Fish, his friend's daughter and 40 years his junior. They were married until 1891 when Barnum died of a stroke at his home. He was buried in Mountain Grove Cemetery, Bridgeport, which he designed himself.[7]

Early life and family Edit

Barnum was born in Bethel, Connecticut, the son of innkeeper, tailor and storekeeper Philo Barnum (1778–1826) and Philo's second wife Irene Taylor. Barnum's maternal grandfather Phineas Taylor was a Whig, legislator, landowner, justice of the peace, and lottery schemer who had a great influence on him.

Career beginnings Edit

Barnum ran several businesses, including a general store, a book-auctioning trade, real estate speculation and a statewide lottery network. He started a weekly newspaper in 1829 called The Herald of Freedom in Danbury, Connecticut. His editorials against the elders of local churches led to libel suits and prosecution, and he was imprisoned for two months. He sold his store in 1834.

He began his career as a showman in 1835 at the age of 25 with the purchase and exhibition of a blind and almost completely paralyzed slave woman named Joice Heth, whom an acquaintance was billing around Philadelphia as George Washington's 161 year-old former nurse. Slavery was already outlawed in New York, but Barnum exploited a loophole that allowed him to lease Heth for a year for $1,000, borrowing $500 to complete the sale. Barnum forced her to work for 10 to 12 hours per day, and she died in February 1836 at no more than 80 years of age. Barnum hosted a live autopsy of Heth's body in a New York saloon to demonstrate her actual age before spectators paying 50 cents each.[8][9]

Showman and promotions Edit

 
Entertainers associated with Barnum: Charles Stratton ("General Tom Thumb") and his bride Lavinia Warren, alongside her sister Minnie and George Washington Morrison Nutt ("Commodore Nutt")

Barnum had a year of mixed success with his first variety troupe, Barnum's Grand Scientific and Musical Theater, followed by the Panic of 1837 and three years of difficult circumstances. He purchased Scudder's American Museum in 1841, located at Broadway and Ann Street in Manhattan. Renaming it Barnum's American Museum, he improved it, upgrading the building and adding exhibits.

It became a popular showplace. He added a lighthouse lamp that attracted attention up and down Broadway and flags along the roof's edge that attracted attention in daytime, while giant paintings of animals between the upper windows drew attention from pedestrians. The roof was transformed to a strolling garden with a view of the city, where Barnum launched hot-air balloon rides daily. A changing series of live acts and curiosities were added to the exhibits of stuffed animals, including albinos, giants, little people, jugglers, magicians, exotic women, detailed models of cities and famous battles and a menagerie of animals.

Fiji mermaid and Tom Thumb Edit

 
1866 newspaper advertisement for Barnum's American Museum located on Ann Street in Manhattan

In 1842, Barnum introduced his first major hoax: a creature with the body of a monkey and the tail of a fish known as the "Feejee" mermaid. He leased it from fellow museum owner Moses Kimball of Boston who became his friend, confidant and collaborator.[10][11] Barnum justified his hoaxes by calling them advertisements to draw attention to the museum. He said, "I don't believe in duping the public, but I believe in first attracting and then pleasing them."[12]

He followed the mermaid act by exhibiting the four-year-old dwarf Charles Stratton, billed as the 11-year-old General Tom Thumb. Stratton was taught to imitate famous figures such as Hercules and Napoleon.

In 1843, Barnum hired the Indian dancer fu-Hum-Me, the first of many Indians that he would present. During 1844–45, he toured with General Tom Thumb in Europe and met Queen Victoria, who was amused[13][failed verification] but saddened by Stratton, and the event was a publicity coup. It opened the door to visits with royalty throughout Europe, including the tsar of Russia, and enabled Barnum to acquire many new attractions, including automatons and other mechanical marvels. During this time, he bought other museums, including that of artist Rembrandt Peale's in Philadelphia,[14] the nation's first major museum. By late 1846, Barnum's American Museum was drawing 400,000 visitors per year.[4]

Jenny Lind Edit

 
Castle Garden, New York, venue of Lind's first American concerts

Barnum became aware of the popularity of Jenny Lind, the "Swedish Nightingale", during his European tour with Tom Thumb when her career was at its height in Europe. Barnum, admittedly unmusical, had never heard Lind's voice[15] but he offered her the chance to sing in the US at $1,000 a night for 150 nights, with all expenses paid.[16] He wished to exploit Lind's reputation for morality and philanthropy in his publicity.[15]

Lind demanded the fee in advance, and Barnum agreed. She used the fee to raise a fund for charities, principally endowing schools for poor children in Sweden.[17] Barnum borrowed heavily on his mansion and his museum to raise the money to pay Lind,[16] but he was still short of funds, so he persuaded a Philadelphia minister that Lind would be a positive influence on American morals, and the minister lent him the final $6,000. The contract also afforded Lind the option of withdrawing from the tour after 60 or 100 performances, paying Barnum $50,000 (~$1.29 million in 2021) if she did so.[17] Lind and her small company sailed to the US in September 1850, but she was a celebrity before she arrived following Barnum's months of preparations. Nearly 40,000 people greeted her at the docks and another 20,000 at her hotel, and merchandise was sold.[18] When Lind realized how much money stood to earn from the tour, she insisted upon a new agreement, which he signed on September 3, 1850. This paid her the original fee plus the remainder of each concert's profits after Barnum's $5,500 management fee. She was determined to accumulate as much money as possible for her charities.[15]

 
Parody of Lind's first American tour for Barnum, New York City, October 1850

The tour began with a concert at Castle Garden on September 11, 1850, and it was a major success, recouping Barnum four times his investment. Washington Irving proclaimed, "She is enough to counterbalance, of herself, all the evil that the world is threatened with by the great convention of women. So God save Jenny Lind!"[18] Tickets for some of her concerts were in such demand that Barnum sold them at auction, and public enthusiasm was so strong that the press coined the term "Lind mania."[19] The blatant commercialism of Barnum's ticket auctions distressed Lind,[19] and she persuaded him to reserve a substantial portion of tickets at reduced prices.[20]

On the tour, Barnum's publicity always preceded Lind's arrival and generated enthusiasm, as he had as many as 26 journalists on his payroll.[21] After New York, the company toured the East Coast with continued success and later traveled through the southern states and Cuba. By early 1851, Lind had become uncomfortable with Barnum's relentless marketing of the tour, and she invoked a contractual right to sever her ties with him. They parted amicably, and she continued the tour for nearly a year under her own management.[15] Lind performed 93 concerts in the US for Barnum, earning her about $350,000, while Barnum netted at least $500,000 (equivalent to $17,588,000 in 2022).[22]

Diversified activities Edit

Barnum's next challenge was to change public attitudes about the theater, which was widely regarded as a salacious enterprise. He wanted theaters to become palaces of edification and delight as respectable middle-class entertainment. He built New York City's largest and most modern theater, naming it the Moral Lecture Room. Barnum hoped that this would avoid seedy connotations, attract a family crowd and win the approval of the city's moral crusaders. He started the nation's first theatrical matinées to encourage families and to lessen the fear of crime. The theater opened with The Drunkard, a thinly disguised temperance lecture (Barnum had become a teetotaler after returning from Europe). He followed it with melodramas, farces and historical plays performed by highly regarded actors. He edited Shakespearean plays and other works such as Uncle Tom's Cabin to render them more palatable for family audiences.[citation needed]

Barnum organized flower shows, beauty contests, dog shows and poultry contests, but the most popular were baby contests. In 1853 he started the pictorial weekly newspaper Illustrated News. He completed his autobiography one year later, which sold more than one million copies over the course of numerous revisions. Mark Twain loved the book, but the British Examiner thought it "trashy" and "offensive" and wrote that it inspired "nothing but sensations of disgust" and "sincere pity for the wretched man who compiled it."[23]

In the early 1850s, Barnum began investing to develop East Bridgeport, Connecticut. He extended substantial loans to the Jerome Clock Company to lure it to move to his new industrial area, but the company went bankrupt by 1856, taking Barnum's wealth with it. This began four years of litigation and public humiliation. Ralph Waldo Emerson proclaimed that Barnum's downfall showed "the gods visible again", and other critics celebrated Barnum's public dilemma. However, Tom Thumb offered his services, as he was touring on his own, and the two began another European tour. Barnum also started a lecture tour, mostly as a temperance speaker. By 1860, he emerged from debt and built a mansion that he called Lindencroft, and he resumed ownership of his museum.

 
Barnum with Commodore Nutt, photograph by Charles DeForest Fredricks

Barnum created America's first aquarium and expanded the wax figure section of his museum. His "Seven Grand Salons" demonstrated the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. The collections expanded to four buildings, and he published a museum guidebook that claimed 850,000 "curiosities."[24] Late in 1860, Siamese twins Chang and Eng emerged from retirement and appeared at Barnum's museum for six weeks. Also in 1860, Barnum introduced Zip the Pinhead, a microcephalic black man who spoke a mysterious language created by Barnum. In 1862, Barnum discovered giantess Anna Swan and dwarf Commodore Nutt, a new Tom Thumb with whom Barnum visited President Abraham Lincoln at the White House.

During the Civil War, Barnum's museum drew large audiences seeking diversion from the conflict. He added pro-Union exhibits, lectures and dramas, and he demonstrated commitment to the cause. He hired Pauline Cushman in 1864, an actress who had served as a spy for the Union, to lecture about her "thrilling adventures" behind Confederate lines. Barnum's Unionist sympathies incited a Confederate sympathizer to start a fire in 1864. Barnum's American Museum burned to the ground on July 13, 1865 from a fire of unknown origin. Barnum reestablished it at another location in New York City, but this was also destroyed by fire in March 1868. The loss was too great the second time, and Barnum retired from the museum business.

Circus Edit

 
Book engraving of the winter quarters of Barnum's circus in Bridgeport, Connecticut
 
Share of the Barnum and Bailey Ltd, issued January 24, 1902

Barnum did not enter the circus business until he was 60 years old. He established "P. T. Barnum's Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan & Hippodrome" in Delavan, Wisconsin in 1870 with William Cameron Coup. It was a traveling circus, menagerie and museum of "freaks" that assumed various names: "P. T. Barnum's Travelling World's Fair, Great Roman Hippodrome and Greatest Show on Earth", and "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" after an 1881 merger with James Bailey and James L. Hutchinson, soon shortened to "Barnum & Bailey's." This was the first circus to display three rings.[25]

The show's first primary attraction was Jumbo, an African elephant that Barnum purchased in 1882 from the London Zoo. The Barnum and Bailey Circus still contained acts similar to his Traveling Menagerie, including acrobats, freak shows and General Tom Thumb. Barnum persisted in growing the circus in spite of more fires, train disasters and other setbacks, and he was aided by circus professionals who ran the daily operations. He and Bailey parted ways in 1885, but they rejoined in 1888 with the "Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth", later the Barnum & Bailey Circus, which toured the world.

Barnum was among the first circus owners to move his circus by train, a suggestion by Bailey and other business partners, and probably the first to own his own train. He became known as the "Shakespeare of Advertising" because of his innovative and impressive ideas.[26] In this new business venture, Barnum leaned on the advice of Bailey and other business partners.[citation needed]

Author and debunker Edit

 
"Hum-Bug", a cartoon by H. L. Stephens (1851)

Barnum wrote several books, including Life of P. T. Barnum (1855), The Humbugs of the World (1865), Struggles and Triumphs (1869), Forest and Jungle, or, Thrilling Adventures in All Quarters of the Globe[27] and The Art of Money-Getting (1880).[28]

Barnum was often called the Prince of Humbugs and felt that entertainers and vendors perpetrating hoaxes (or "humbugs") in promotional material were justified if the public received value in return. However, he was contemptuous of those who accrued money through fraud, especially the spiritualist mediums popular in his day. He testified against noted "spirit photographer" William H. Mumler in his trial for fraud, and he exposed the tricks employed by mediums to cheat the bereaved. In The Humbugs of the World, Barnum offered $500 (equivalent to $9,559 in 2022) to any medium who could prove the power to communicate with the dead.

Role in politics Edit

Barnum was significantly involved in politics. He mainly focused on race, slavery and sectionalism in the period preceding the American Civil War. He opposed the Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854, which supported slavery, and left the Democratic Party because it had endorsed slavery. Barnum joined the new anti-slavery Republican Party.

Barnum claimed that "politics were always distasteful to me", but he was elected to the Connecticut General Assembly in 1865 as a Republican representing Fairfield.[29][30] He hired spies to acquire insider information on the New York and New Haven Railroad lines and exposed a secret that would raise fares by 20 percent.[citation needed][vague] He said during the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution: "A human soul, 'that God has created and Christ died for,' is not to be trifled with. It may tenant the body of a Chinaman, a Turk, an Arab or a Hottentot—it is still an immortal spirit."[29] He also acknowledged that he had owned slaves when he lived in the South: "I whipped my slaves. I ought to have been whipped a thousand times for this myself. But then I was a Democrat—one of those nondescript Democrats, who are Northern men with Southern principles."[31]

Barnum was elected for the next four Connecticut legislature sessions and succeeded senator Orris S. Ferry. He was the legislative sponsor of an 1879 law that prohibited the use of "any drug, medicinal article or instrument for the purpose of preventing conception" and also criminalized acting as an accessory to the use of contraception. This law remained in effect in Connecticut until it was overturned in 1965 by the U.S. Supreme Court in its Griswold v. Connecticut decision.[32][33] Barnum campaigned for the U.S. Congress in 1867 and lost to his third cousin William Henry Barnum. In 1875, he served as mayor of Bridgeport, Connecticut to improve the water supply, bring gas lighting to streets and enforce liquor and prostitution laws. He was instrumental in the inception of Bridgeport Hospital, founded in 1878, and was its first president.[6]

Profitable philanthropy Edit

 
Caricature of an elderly Barnum in the London magazine Vanity Fair, November 1889

Barnum enjoyed what he publicly dubbed "profitable philanthropy," saying: "If by improving and beautifying our city Bridgeport, Connecticut, and adding to the pleasure and prosperity of my neighbors, [and] I can do so at a profit, the incentive to 'good works' will be twice as strong as if it were otherwise."[34] He was appointed to the board of trustees to Tufts University prior to its founding, and he extended several significant contributions to the school, including a gift of $50,000 (equivalent to $1,570,357 in 2022) in 1883 to establish a museum (later known as Barnum Museum of Natural History) and hall for the department of natural history.[35] Tufts made Jumbo the Elephant the school's mascot, and Tufts students are known as Jumbos.[36]

Personal life and death Edit

On November 8, 1829, Barnum married Charity Hallett,[37] and they had four children: Caroline Cornelia (1833–1911), Helen Maria (1840–1915), Frances Irena (1842–1844) and Pauline Taylor (1846–1877).[38] His wife died on November 19, 1873,[38] and the following year, he married Nancy Fish, the daughter of his close friend John Fish and 40 years her senior.[39]

Barnum died from a stroke at home in 1891 at the age of 80.[30] He is buried in Mountain Grove Cemeteryin Bridgeport, Connecticut, a cemetery that he designed.[7]

Legacy Edit

Barnum built four mansions in Bridgeport, Connecticut: Iranistan, Lindencroft, Waldemere and Marina. Iranistan was the most notable, a Moorish Revival architecture designed by Leopold Eidlitz with domes, spires and lacy fretwork inspired by the Royal Pavilion in Brighton, England. It was built in 1848 but it was destroyed by fire in 1857.[40] The Marina was demolished by the University of Bridgeport in 1964 in order to build a cafeteria.[41]

 
P. T. Barnum, sculpted by Thomas Ball (1887), Seaside Park, Bridgeport, Connecticut
 
Obverse of the 1936 commemorative Bridgeport Centennial half dollar

At his death, critics praised Barnum for his philanthropy and called him an icon of American spirit and ingenuity. He asked the Evening Sun to print his obituary just prior to his death so that he might read it. On April 7, 1891, Barnum asked about the box-office receipts for the day, and a few hours later, he died.[30]

In 1893, a statue in Barnum's honor was erected by his former partners James Bailey, James A. Hutchinson and W. W. Cole at Seaside Park in Bridgeport.[42][43] Barnum had donated the land for the park in 1865. His circus was sold to Ringling Brothers on July 8, 1907 for $400,000 (equivalent to $12,562,857 in 2022).[6] The Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey circuses ran separately until they merged in 1919, forming the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus.

The United States Mint issued a commemorative coin in 1936 for Bridgeport's centennial celebration with Barnum's portrait for the obverse.[44] Cartoonist Walt Kelly, a Bridgeport native, named a character in Barnum's honor in his Pogo comic strip. An ongoing[45] annual multi-week Barnum Festival has been held since 1949[46] in Bridgeport.[47] The Bethel Historical Society commissioned a life-sized sculpture to honor the 200th anniversary of his birth, created by local resident David Gesualdi and placed outside the public library.[48] The statue was dedicated on September 26, 2010.[49]

Barnum cofounded the Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Steamboat Company in 1883 with Charles E. Tooker, a company that continues to operate across the Long Island Sound between Port Jefferson, New York and Bridgeport. The company owns and operates three vessels, one of which is named the M.V. PT Barnum.[50][51] The Barnum Museum in Bridgeport houses many of his oddities and curiosities.

In popular culture Edit

Films and television Edit

Theater Edit

  • Barnum (1980) – Broadway musical based on Barnum's life starring Jim Dale

Books Edit

  • The Great and Only Barnum; the Tremendous, Stupendous Life of Showman P. T. Barnum

Music Edit

Publications Edit

  • The Life of P. T. Barnum: Written by Himself. Originally published New York: Redfield, 1855. Reprint: Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 2000. ISBN 0-252-06902-1.
  • Struggles and Triumphs, or Forty Years' Recollections of P. T. Barnum. Originally published 1869. Reprint: Whitefish, MT: Kessinger, 2003. ISBN 0-7661-5556-0 (Part 1) and ISBN 0-7661-5557-9 (Part 2). 1882 edition at the Internet Archive.
  • Art of Money Getting, or, Golden Rules for Making Money. Originally published 1880. Reprint: Bedford, MA: Applewood, 1999. ISBN 1-55709-494-2.
  • The Wild Beasts, Birds, and Reptiles of the World: The Story of Their Capture. Pub. 1888, R. S. Peale & Company, Chicago.
  • Why I Am a Universalist. Originally published 1890. Reprint: Kessinger Pub Co. ISBN 1-4286-2657-3.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ North American Theatre Online: Phineas T. Barnum
  2. ^ a b Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. vi
  3. ^ Shapiro, Fred R. The Yale Book of Quotations. New Haven: Yale UP, 2006. p. 44
  4. ^ a b Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. 73
  5. ^ Barnum, Phineas (1888). The life of P. T. Barnum. Buffalo, N.Y.: The Courier Company. p. 237 – via Ebook and Texts Archive – American Libraries.
  6. ^ a b c Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995
  7. ^ a b Rogak, Lisa (2004). Stones and Bones of New England: A guide to unusual, historic, and otherwise notable cemeteries. Globe Pequat. ISBN 978-0-7627-3000-1.
  8. ^ Mansky, Jackie (December 22, 2017), "P. T. Barnum Isn't the Hero the 'Greatest Showman' Wants You To Think", smithsonianmag.com, Smithsonian
  9. ^ Freed, Robin. . MA candidate, University of Virginia American Studies Department. Archived from the original on May 18, 2002. Retrieved April 8, 2007.
  10. ^ Schweitzer, Marlis. "Barnum's Last Laugh? General Tom Thumb's Wedding Cake in the Library of Congress." Performing Arts Resources 2011; 28.: 116. Associates Programs Source Plus. Web. December 8, 2012.
  11. ^ Stabile, Susan M. (2010). "Still(Ed) Lives". Early American Literature. 45 (2): 371–95. doi:10.1353/eal.2010.0020. S2CID 201754107.
  12. ^ Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. 47
  13. ^ Martin, Gary. "'We are not amused' – the meaning and origin of this phrase". Phrasefinder.
  14. ^ "Peale's Philadelphia Museum". philadelphiaencyclopedia.org. Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia.
  15. ^ a b c d Rogers, Francis. "Jenny Lind", The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 3 (July 1946), pp. 437–48 (subscription required)
  16. ^ a b Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. 92
  17. ^ a b Miller, Philip L. "Review: P. T. Barnum Presents Jenny Lind: The American Tour of the Swedish Nightingale", American Music, Spring 1983, pp. 78–80 (subscription required)
  18. ^ a b Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. 99
  19. ^ a b Linkon, Sherry Lee. "Reading Lind Mania: Print Culture and the Construction of Eighteenth-Century Audiences", Book History, Vol. 1 (1998), pp. 94–106 (subscription required)
  20. ^ "Jenny Lind's Progress in America", The Observer, October 6, 1850, p. 3.
  21. ^ Hambrick, Keith S. "P. T. Barnum Presents Jenny Lind – The American Tour of the Swedish Nightingale", Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, Vol. 22, No. 2 (Spring, 1981), pp. 208–09 (subscription required)
  22. ^ "America", The Times, June 28, 1851, p. 5.
  23. ^ Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. 120
  24. ^ Kunhardt, Kunhardt & Kunhardt 1995, p. 138
  25. ^ Mosier, Jennifer L (1999). "The Big Attraction: The Circus Elephant And American Culture". Journal of American Culture. 22 (2): 7. doi:10.1111/j.1542-734x.1999.2202_7.x.
  26. ^ "The Shakespeare of Advertising's Rules for Jumbo Success", There's a Customer Born Every Minute, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., October 10, 2015, pp. 103–113, doi:10.1002/9781119201908.ch8, ISBN 9781119201908
  27. ^ Forest and jungle, or, Thrilling adventures in all quarters of the globe : An illustrated history of the animal kingdom, written in easy and instructive form for boys and girls.
  28. ^ The Art of Money-Getting
  29. ^ a b Barnum, Phineas (1888). The life of P. T. Barnum. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  30. ^ a b c "The Great Showman Dead". The New York Times. April 8, 1891. Retrieved July 21, 2007. Bridgeport, Connecticut, April 7, 1891. At 6:22 o'clock to-night the long sickness of P. T. Barnum came to an end by his quietly passing away at Marina, his residence in this city.
  31. ^ W., Cook, James (2001). The arts of deception : playing with fraud in the age of Barnum. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674005914. OCLC 876342914.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  32. ^ "P. T. Barnum, Justice Harlan, and Connecticut's Role in the Development of the Right to Privacy". Federal Bar Council Quarterly. December 13, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  33. ^ "Connecticut and the Comstock Law". Connecticut History. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  34. ^ Barnum, P. T. (1883). Struggles and Triumphs; Or, Forty Years' Recollections of P. T. Barnum. Buffalo, N.Y.: The Courier Company. p. 297.
  35. ^ Miller, Russell (July 16, 2008). . The Archives at Tufts University. Tufts University. Archived from the original on September 4, 2014. Retrieved September 3, 2014.
  36. ^ "Get to Know Tufts". April 22, 2010.
  37. ^ Barnum, Patrick W. . Barnum Family Genealogy (official website). Archived from the original on December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  38. ^ a b . Barnum.org. Archived from the original on February 20, 2020. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  39. ^ Barnum, Patrick W. . Barnum Family Genealogy (official website). Archived from the original on December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 10, 2017.
  40. ^ Barnum Museum Core Exhibits June 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  41. ^ "Marina Park Historic District, Bridgeport City, Fairfield County, Bridgeport CT, 06604". www.livingplaces.com.
  42. ^ "Barnum Statue Unveiled". The New York Times. July 4, 1893.
  43. ^ George Curtis Waldo (1917). History of Bridgeport and vicinity, Volume 1. S. J. Clarke. pp. 279–280. ISBN 978-1-144-35927-8.
  44. ^ Slater, Chuck (November 18, 2001). "A Coin True to Barnum, Controversy and All". The New York Times.
  45. ^ https://barnumfestival.org/
  46. ^ "History – the Barnum Festival | Celebrating Bridgeport CT and surrounding towns!".
  47. ^ Michael Knight, "Barnum Festival Revels in Hoopla and Humbug", The New York Times, June 20, 1975, p. 35.
  48. ^ Homayon, Marietta (July 8, 2004). "Town gets grant to promote Barnum". The Danbury News-Times.
  49. ^ FitzGerald, Eileen (July 15, 2010). "Barnum's Ivy Island to be showcased at celebration". Danbury News Times.
  50. ^ "A Look at the Fleet". The Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Steamboat Company. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  51. ^ "SHOWMAN BARNUM'S BARN ATTACHED". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, New York (1890/01/12): 9, col. 5. January 12, 1890. Four mechanic's liens have been filed by workmen, of Port Jefferson, against P.T. Barnum, the showman, for labor and materials on the new barn put up last Fall on the farm of P.T. Barnum at Port Jefferson.
  52. ^ Cachero, Paulina (December 20, 2017). "'The Greatest Showman': 8 of the Film's Stars and Their Real-Life Inspirations". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 4, 2018.
  53. ^ Kellem, Betsy Golden (December 22, 2017). "The Greatest Showman: The True Story of P. T. Barnum and Jenny Lind". Vanity Fair. Retrieved September 4, 2018.

Further reading Edit

  • Adams, Bluford. E Pluribus Barnum: The Great Showman and the Making of U.S. Popular Culture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8166-2631-6.
  • Alderson, William T., ed. Mermaids, Mummies, and Mastodons: The Emergence of the American Museum. Washington, DC: American Association of Museums for the Baltimore City Life Museums, 1992.
  • Barnum, Patrick Warren. Barnum Genealogy: 650 Years of Family History. Boston: Higginson Book Co., 2006. ISBN 0-7404-5551-6 (hardcover), ISBN 0-7404-5552-4 (softcover), LCCN 2005-903696
  • Benton, Joel. The Life of Phineas T. Barnum, [1].
  • Betts, John Rickards. "P. T. Barnum and the Popularization of Natural History", Journal of the History of Ideas 20, no. 3 (1959): 353–368.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Barnum, Phineas Taylor" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 03 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 417.
  • Cook, James W. The Arts of Deception: Playing with Fraud in the Age of Barnum. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-674-00591-0. Relates Barnum's Fiji Mermaid and What Is It? exhibits to other popular arts of the nineteenth century, including magic shows and trompe-l'œil paintings.
  • Harding, Les. Elephant Story: Jumbo and P. T. Barnum Under the Big Top. Jefferson, NC.: McFarland & Co., 2000. ISBN 0-7864-0632-1. (129 p.)
  • Harris, Neil. Humbug: The Art of P. T. Barnum. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1973. ISBN 0-226-31752-8.
  • Kunhardt, Philip B. Jr.; Kunhardt, Philip B., III; Kunhardt, Peter W. (1995). P. T. Barnum: America's Greatest Showman. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-679-43574-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Lott, Eric (1993). Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 76–78. ISBN 978-0-19-507832-9.
  • Reiss, Benjamin. The Showman and the Slave: Race, Death, and Memory in Barnum's America. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-674-00636-4. 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 0-231-05687-7.
  • Uchill, Ida Libert. Howdy, Sucker! What P. T. Barnum Did in Colorado. Denver: Pioneer Peddler Press, 2001. OCLC 47773817
  • Jefferson, Margo. On Michael Jackson. New York: Pantheon, 2006. ISBN 978-0-307-27765-7. Critique of Michael Jackson, including his obsession with P. T. Barnum and "Freaks."
  • 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 0-252-07295-2.
  • Woolf, John. The Wonders: Lifting the Curtain on the Freak Show, Circus and Victorian Age (London: Michael O'Mara, 2019) ISBN 1782439935

External links Edit

Digital collections
Physical collections
  • The Barnum Museum
  • The Lost Museum – A virtual reproduction of Barnum's American Museum; includes a collection of primary source materials
Biographical information
Scholarship and analysis
Other links
  • Facebook Page Bethel Historical Society, P. T. Barnum Monument, "P. T. Barnum – The Lost Legend" Documentary.
  • Tribute to Ringling Bros.and Barnum & Bailey Circus by brothers Charles Elias Disney & Daniel H. Disney
  • P. T. Barnum at the Internet Broadway Database

barnum, barnum, redirects, here, other, uses, with, name, barnum, barnum, disambiguation, phineas, taylor, barnum, ɑːr, july, 1810, april, 1891, american, showman, businessman, politician, remembered, promoting, celebrated, hoaxes, founding, barnum, bailey, ci. Barnum redirects here For other uses with the name Barnum see Barnum disambiguation Phineas Taylor Barnum ˈ b ɑːr n e m July 5 1810 April 7 1891 was an American showman businessman and politician remembered for promoting celebrated hoaxes and founding the Barnum amp Bailey Circus 1 with James Anthony Bailey P T BarnumBarnum in 1851Mayor of Bridgeport ConnecticutIn office 1875 1876Member of the Connecticut House of Representatives from the Fairfield districtIn office 1866 1869Personal detailsBornPhineas Taylor Barnum 1810 07 05 July 5 1810Bethel Connecticut U S DiedApril 7 1891 1891 04 07 aged 80 Bridgeport Connecticut U S Resting placeMountain Grove Cemetery BridgeportPolitical partyDemocratic until 1854 Republican after 1854 Spouse s Charity Hallett m 1829 died 1873 wbr Nancy Fish m 1874 wbr Children4OccupationShowmanentrepreneur entertainment as founder and promoter politicianauthorpublisherphilanthropistKnown forFounding the Barnum amp Bailey CircusSignatureHe was also an author publisher and philanthropist although he said of himself I am a showman by profession and all the gilding shall make nothing else of me 2 According to Barnum s critics his personal aim was to put money in his own coffers 2 The adage there s a sucker born every minute 3 has frequently been attributed to him although no evidence exists that he had indeed coined the phrase Barnum became a small business owner in his early twenties and founded a weekly newspaper before moving to New York City in 1834 He embarked on an entertainment career first with a variety troupe called Barnum s Grand Scientific and Musical Theater and soon after by purchasing Scudder s American Museum which he renamed after himself He used the museum as a platform to promote hoaxes and human curiosities such as the Fiji mermaid and General Tom Thumb 4 In 1850 he promoted the American tour of Swedish opera singer Jenny Lind paying her an unprecedented 1 000 equivalent to 35 176 in 2022 per night for 150 nights He suffered economic reversals in the 1850s from unwise investments as well as years of litigation and public humiliation but he embarked on a lecture tour as a temperance speaker to emerge from debt His museum added America s first aquarium and expanded its wax figure department Barnum served two terms in the Connecticut legislature in 1865 as a Republican for Fairfield Connecticut He spoke before the legislature concerning the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which abolished slavery and involuntary servitude A human soul that God has created and Christ died for is not to be trifled with It may tenant the body of a Chinaman a Turk an Arab or a Hottentot it is still an immortal spirit 5 He was elected in 1875 as mayor of Bridgeport Connecticut where he worked to improve the water supply bring gas lighting to streets and enforce liquor and prostitution laws He was also instrumental in the inception of Bridgeport Hospital in 1878 and was its first president 6 However the circus business begun when he was 60 years old was the source of much of his enduring fame He established P T Barnum s Grand Traveling Museum Menagerie Caravan amp Hippodrome in 1870 a traveling circus menagerie and museum of freaks that adopted many names over the years Barnum was married to Charity Hallett from 1829 until her death in 1873 and they had four children In 1874 a few months after his wife s death he married Nancy Fish his friend s daughter and 40 years his junior They were married until 1891 when Barnum died of a stroke at his home He was buried in Mountain Grove Cemetery Bridgeport which he designed himself 7 Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Career beginnings 3 Showman and promotions 3 1 Fiji mermaid and Tom Thumb 3 2 Jenny Lind 3 3 Diversified activities 4 Circus 5 Author and debunker 6 Role in politics 7 Profitable philanthropy 8 Personal life and death 9 Legacy 10 In popular culture 10 1 Films and television 10 2 Theater 10 3 Books 10 4 Music 11 Publications 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and family EditBarnum was born in Bethel Connecticut the son of innkeeper tailor and storekeeper Philo Barnum 1778 1826 and Philo s second wife Irene Taylor Barnum s maternal grandfather Phineas Taylor was a Whig legislator landowner justice of the peace and lottery schemer who had a great influence on him Career beginnings EditBarnum ran several businesses including a general store a book auctioning trade real estate speculation and a statewide lottery network He started a weekly newspaper in 1829 called The Herald of Freedom in Danbury Connecticut His editorials against the elders of local churches led to libel suits and prosecution and he was imprisoned for two months He sold his store in 1834 He began his career as a showman in 1835 at the age of 25 with the purchase and exhibition of a blind and almost completely paralyzed slave woman named Joice Heth whom an acquaintance was billing around Philadelphia as George Washington s 161 year old former nurse Slavery was already outlawed in New York but Barnum exploited a loophole that allowed him to lease Heth for a year for 1 000 borrowing 500 to complete the sale Barnum forced her to work for 10 to 12 hours per day and she died in February 1836 at no more than 80 years of age Barnum hosted a live autopsy of Heth s body in a New York saloon to demonstrate her actual age before spectators paying 50 cents each 8 9 Showman and promotions Edit nbsp Entertainers associated with Barnum Charles Stratton General Tom Thumb and his bride Lavinia Warren alongside her sister Minnie and George Washington Morrison Nutt Commodore Nutt Barnum had a year of mixed success with his first variety troupe Barnum s Grand Scientific and Musical Theater followed by the Panic of 1837 and three years of difficult circumstances He purchased Scudder s American Museum in 1841 located at Broadway and Ann Street in Manhattan Renaming it Barnum s American Museum he improved it upgrading the building and adding exhibits It became a popular showplace He added a lighthouse lamp that attracted attention up and down Broadway and flags along the roof s edge that attracted attention in daytime while giant paintings of animals between the upper windows drew attention from pedestrians The roof was transformed to a strolling garden with a view of the city where Barnum launched hot air balloon rides daily A changing series of live acts and curiosities were added to the exhibits of stuffed animals including albinos giants little people jugglers magicians exotic women detailed models of cities and famous battles and a menagerie of animals Fiji mermaid and Tom Thumb Edit nbsp 1866 newspaper advertisement for Barnum s American Museum located on Ann Street in ManhattanIn 1842 Barnum introduced his first major hoax a creature with the body of a monkey and the tail of a fish known as the Feejee mermaid He leased it from fellow museum owner Moses Kimball of Boston who became his friend confidant and collaborator 10 11 Barnum justified his hoaxes by calling them advertisements to draw attention to the museum He said I don t believe in duping the public but I believe in first attracting and then pleasing them 12 He followed the mermaid act by exhibiting the four year old dwarf Charles Stratton billed as the 11 year old General Tom Thumb Stratton was taught to imitate famous figures such as Hercules and Napoleon In 1843 Barnum hired the Indian dancer fu Hum Me the first of many Indians that he would present During 1844 45 he toured with General Tom Thumb in Europe and met Queen Victoria who was amused 13 failed verification but saddened by Stratton and the event was a publicity coup It opened the door to visits with royalty throughout Europe including the tsar of Russia and enabled Barnum to acquire many new attractions including automatons and other mechanical marvels During this time he bought other museums including that of artist Rembrandt Peale s in Philadelphia 14 the nation s first major museum By late 1846 Barnum s American Museum was drawing 400 000 visitors per year 4 Jenny Lind Edit Main article Jenny Lind tour of America 1850 52 nbsp Castle Garden New York venue of Lind s first American concertsBarnum became aware of the popularity of Jenny Lind the Swedish Nightingale during his European tour with Tom Thumb when her career was at its height in Europe Barnum admittedly unmusical had never heard Lind s voice 15 but he offered her the chance to sing in the US at 1 000 a night for 150 nights with all expenses paid 16 He wished to exploit Lind s reputation for morality and philanthropy in his publicity 15 Lind demanded the fee in advance and Barnum agreed She used the fee to raise a fund for charities principally endowing schools for poor children in Sweden 17 Barnum borrowed heavily on his mansion and his museum to raise the money to pay Lind 16 but he was still short of funds so he persuaded a Philadelphia minister that Lind would be a positive influence on American morals and the minister lent him the final 6 000 The contract also afforded Lind the option of withdrawing from the tour after 60 or 100 performances paying Barnum 50 000 1 29 million in 2021 if she did so 17 Lind and her small company sailed to the US in September 1850 but she was a celebrity before she arrived following Barnum s months of preparations Nearly 40 000 people greeted her at the docks and another 20 000 at her hotel and merchandise was sold 18 When Lind realized how much money stood to earn from the tour she insisted upon a new agreement which he signed on September 3 1850 This paid her the original fee plus the remainder of each concert s profits after Barnum s 5 500 management fee She was determined to accumulate as much money as possible for her charities 15 nbsp Parody of Lind s first American tour for Barnum New York City October 1850The tour began with a concert at Castle Garden on September 11 1850 and it was a major success recouping Barnum four times his investment Washington Irving proclaimed She is enough to counterbalance of herself all the evil that the world is threatened with by the great convention of women So God save Jenny Lind 18 Tickets for some of her concerts were in such demand that Barnum sold them at auction and public enthusiasm was so strong that the press coined the term Lind mania 19 The blatant commercialism of Barnum s ticket auctions distressed Lind 19 and she persuaded him to reserve a substantial portion of tickets at reduced prices 20 On the tour Barnum s publicity always preceded Lind s arrival and generated enthusiasm as he had as many as 26 journalists on his payroll 21 After New York the company toured the East Coast with continued success and later traveled through the southern states and Cuba By early 1851 Lind had become uncomfortable with Barnum s relentless marketing of the tour and she invoked a contractual right to sever her ties with him They parted amicably and she continued the tour for nearly a year under her own management 15 Lind performed 93 concerts in the US for Barnum earning her about 350 000 while Barnum netted at least 500 000 equivalent to 17 588 000 in 2022 22 Diversified activities Edit Barnum s next challenge was to change public attitudes about the theater which was widely regarded as a salacious enterprise He wanted theaters to become palaces of edification and delight as respectable middle class entertainment He built New York City s largest and most modern theater naming it the Moral Lecture Room Barnum hoped that this would avoid seedy connotations attract a family crowd and win the approval of the city s moral crusaders He started the nation s first theatrical matinees to encourage families and to lessen the fear of crime The theater opened with The Drunkard a thinly disguised temperance lecture Barnum had become a teetotaler after returning from Europe He followed it with melodramas farces and historical plays performed by highly regarded actors He edited Shakespearean plays and other works such as Uncle Tom s Cabin to render them more palatable for family audiences citation needed Barnum organized flower shows beauty contests dog shows and poultry contests but the most popular were baby contests In 1853 he started the pictorial weekly newspaper Illustrated News He completed his autobiography one year later which sold more than one million copies over the course of numerous revisions Mark Twain loved the book but the British Examiner thought it trashy and offensive and wrote that it inspired nothing but sensations of disgust and sincere pity for the wretched man who compiled it 23 In the early 1850s Barnum began investing to develop East Bridgeport Connecticut He extended substantial loans to the Jerome Clock Company to lure it to move to his new industrial area but the company went bankrupt by 1856 taking Barnum s wealth with it This began four years of litigation and public humiliation Ralph Waldo Emerson proclaimed that Barnum s downfall showed the gods visible again and other critics celebrated Barnum s public dilemma However Tom Thumb offered his services as he was touring on his own and the two began another European tour Barnum also started a lecture tour mostly as a temperance speaker By 1860 he emerged from debt and built a mansion that he called Lindencroft and he resumed ownership of his museum nbsp Barnum with Commodore Nutt photograph by Charles DeForest FredricksBarnum created America s first aquarium and expanded the wax figure section of his museum His Seven Grand Salons demonstrated the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World The collections expanded to four buildings and he published a museum guidebook that claimed 850 000 curiosities 24 Late in 1860 Siamese twins Chang and Eng emerged from retirement and appeared at Barnum s museum for six weeks Also in 1860 Barnum introduced Zip the Pinhead a microcephalic black man who spoke a mysterious language created by Barnum In 1862 Barnum discovered giantess Anna Swan and dwarf Commodore Nutt a new Tom Thumb with whom Barnum visited President Abraham Lincoln at the White House During the Civil War Barnum s museum drew large audiences seeking diversion from the conflict He added pro Union exhibits lectures and dramas and he demonstrated commitment to the cause He hired Pauline Cushman in 1864 an actress who had served as a spy for the Union to lecture about her thrilling adventures behind Confederate lines Barnum s Unionist sympathies incited a Confederate sympathizer to start a fire in 1864 Barnum s American Museum burned to the ground on July 13 1865 from a fire of unknown origin Barnum reestablished it at another location in New York City but this was also destroyed by fire in March 1868 The loss was too great the second time and Barnum retired from the museum business Circus Edit nbsp Book engraving of the winter quarters of Barnum s circus in Bridgeport Connecticut nbsp Share of the Barnum and Bailey Ltd issued January 24 1902Barnum did not enter the circus business until he was 60 years old He established P T Barnum s Grand Traveling Museum Menagerie Caravan amp Hippodrome in Delavan Wisconsin in 1870 with William Cameron Coup It was a traveling circus menagerie and museum of freaks that assumed various names P T Barnum s Travelling World s Fair Great Roman Hippodrome and Greatest Show on Earth and 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 after an 1881 merger with James Bailey and James L Hutchinson soon shortened to Barnum amp Bailey s This was the first circus to display three rings 25 The show s first primary attraction was Jumbo an African elephant that Barnum purchased in 1882 from the London Zoo The Barnum and Bailey Circus still contained acts similar to his Traveling Menagerie including acrobats freak shows and General Tom Thumb Barnum persisted in growing the circus in spite of more fires train disasters and other setbacks and he was aided by circus professionals who ran the daily operations He and Bailey parted ways in 1885 but they rejoined in 1888 with the Barnum amp Bailey Greatest Show on Earth later the Barnum amp Bailey Circus which toured the world Barnum was among the first circus owners to move his circus by train a suggestion by Bailey and other business partners and probably the first to own his own train He became known as the Shakespeare of Advertising because of his innovative and impressive ideas 26 In this new business venture Barnum leaned on the advice of Bailey and other business partners citation needed Author and debunker EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Hum Bug a cartoon by H L Stephens 1851 Barnum wrote several books including Life of P T Barnum 1855 The Humbugs of the World 1865 Struggles and Triumphs 1869 Forest and Jungle or Thrilling Adventures in All Quarters of the Globe 27 and The Art of Money Getting 1880 28 Barnum was often called the Prince of Humbugs and felt that entertainers and vendors perpetrating hoaxes or humbugs in promotional material were justified if the public received value in return However he was contemptuous of those who accrued money through fraud especially the spiritualist mediums popular in his day He testified against noted spirit photographer William H Mumler in his trial for fraud and he exposed the tricks employed by mediums to cheat the bereaved In The Humbugs of the World Barnum offered 500 equivalent to 9 559 in 2022 to any medium who could prove the power to communicate with the dead Role in politics EditBarnum was significantly involved in politics He mainly focused on race slavery and sectionalism in the period preceding the American Civil War He opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act of 1854 which supported slavery and left the Democratic Party because it had endorsed slavery Barnum joined the new anti slavery Republican Party Barnum claimed that politics were always distasteful to me but he was elected to the Connecticut General Assembly in 1865 as a Republican representing Fairfield 29 30 He hired spies to acquire insider information on the New York and New Haven Railroad lines and exposed a secret that would raise fares by 20 percent citation needed vague He said during the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution A human soul that God has created and Christ died for is not to be trifled with It may tenant the body of a Chinaman a Turk an Arab or a Hottentot it is still an immortal spirit 29 He also acknowledged that he had owned slaves when he lived in the South I whipped my slaves I ought to have been whipped a thousand times for this myself But then I was a Democrat one of those nondescript Democrats who are Northern men with Southern principles 31 Barnum was elected for the next four Connecticut legislature sessions and succeeded senator Orris S Ferry He was the legislative sponsor of an 1879 law that prohibited the use of any drug medicinal article or instrument for the purpose of preventing conception and also criminalized acting as an accessory to the use of contraception This law remained in effect in Connecticut until it was overturned in 1965 by the U S Supreme Court in its Griswold v Connecticut decision 32 33 Barnum campaigned for the U S Congress in 1867 and lost to his third cousin William Henry Barnum In 1875 he served as mayor of Bridgeport Connecticut to improve the water supply bring gas lighting to streets and enforce liquor and prostitution laws He was instrumental in the inception of Bridgeport Hospital founded in 1878 and was its first president 6 Profitable philanthropy Edit nbsp Caricature of an elderly Barnum in the London magazine Vanity Fair November 1889Barnum enjoyed what he publicly dubbed profitable philanthropy saying If by improving and beautifying our city Bridgeport Connecticut and adding to the pleasure and prosperity of my neighbors and I can do so at a profit the incentive to good works will be twice as strong as if it were otherwise 34 He was appointed to the board of trustees to Tufts University prior to its founding and he extended several significant contributions to the school including a gift of 50 000 equivalent to 1 570 357 in 2022 in 1883 to establish a museum later known as Barnum Museum of Natural History and hall for the department of natural history 35 Tufts made Jumbo the Elephant the school s mascot and Tufts students are known as Jumbos 36 Personal life and death EditOn November 8 1829 Barnum married Charity Hallett 37 and they had four children Caroline Cornelia 1833 1911 Helen Maria 1840 1915 Frances Irena 1842 1844 and Pauline Taylor 1846 1877 38 His wife died on November 19 1873 38 and the following year he married Nancy Fish the daughter of his close friend John Fish and 40 years her senior 39 Barnum died from a stroke at home in 1891 at the age of 80 30 He is buried in Mountain Grove Cemeteryin Bridgeport Connecticut a cemetery that he designed 7 Legacy EditBarnum built four mansions in Bridgeport Connecticut Iranistan Lindencroft Waldemere and Marina Iranistan was the most notable a Moorish Revival architecture designed by Leopold Eidlitz with domes spires and lacy fretwork inspired by the Royal Pavilion in Brighton England It was built in 1848 but it was destroyed by fire in 1857 40 The Marina was demolished by the University of Bridgeport in 1964 in order to build a cafeteria 41 nbsp P T Barnum sculpted by Thomas Ball 1887 Seaside Park Bridgeport Connecticut nbsp Obverse of the 1936 commemorative Bridgeport Centennial half dollarAt his death critics praised Barnum for his philanthropy and called him an icon of American spirit and ingenuity He asked the Evening Sun to print his obituary just prior to his death so that he might read it On April 7 1891 Barnum asked about the box office receipts for the day and a few hours later he died 30 In 1893 a statue in Barnum s honor was erected by his former partners James Bailey James A Hutchinson and W W Cole at Seaside Park in Bridgeport 42 43 Barnum had donated the land for the park in 1865 His circus was sold to Ringling Brothers on July 8 1907 for 400 000 equivalent to 12 562 857 in 2022 6 The Ringling Brothers and Barnum amp Bailey circuses ran separately until they merged in 1919 forming the Ringling Bros and Barnum amp Bailey Circus The United States Mint issued a commemorative coin in 1936 for Bridgeport s centennial celebration with Barnum s portrait for the obverse 44 Cartoonist Walt Kelly a Bridgeport native named a character in Barnum s honor in his Pogo comic strip An ongoing 45 annual multi week Barnum Festival has been held since 1949 46 in Bridgeport 47 The Bethel Historical Society commissioned a life sized sculpture to honor the 200th anniversary of his birth created by local resident David Gesualdi and placed outside the public library 48 The statue was dedicated on September 26 2010 49 Barnum cofounded the Bridgeport amp Port Jefferson Steamboat Company in 1883 with Charles E Tooker a company that continues to operate across the Long Island Sound between Port Jefferson New York and Bridgeport The company owns and operates three vessels one of which is named the M V PT Barnum 50 51 The Barnum Museum in Bridgeport houses many of his oddities and curiosities In popular culture EditFilms and television Edit A Lady s Morals 1930 played by Wallace Beery Jenny Lind 1932 played by Andre Berley The Mighty Barnum 1934 played again by Wallace Beery The Greatest Show on Earth 1952 centers on a fictionalized version of the contemporary Ringling Bros and Barnum amp Bailey Circus although Barnum is neither the subject of the film nor a character in it Jules Verne s Rocket to the Moon 1967 played by Burl Ives Barnum 1986 played by Michael Crawford a filmed version of the Broadway musical see below filmed in London Barnum 1986 played by Burt Lancaster made for TV movie P T Barnum 1999 played by Beau Bridges made for TV movie Gangs of New York 2002 played by Roger Ashton Griffiths The Greatest Showman 2017 a pop musical loosely based around Barnum and his circus Hugh Jackman plays Barnum and coproduced the film 52 53 I Didn t See You There 2022 a disabled filmmaker from Barnum s hometown of Bethel meditates on the ableist legacy of the freak showTheater Edit Barnum 1980 Broadway musical based on Barnum s life starring Jim DaleBooks Edit The Great and Only Barnum the Tremendous Stupendous Life of Showman P T BarnumMusic Edit U S Blues a song from the album From the Mars Hotel by the Grateful DeadPublications EditThe Life of P T Barnum Written by Himself Originally published New York Redfield 1855 Reprint Champaign University of Illinois Press 2000 ISBN 0 252 06902 1 Struggles and Triumphs or Forty Years Recollections of P T Barnum Originally published 1869 Reprint Whitefish MT Kessinger 2003 ISBN 0 7661 5556 0 Part 1 and ISBN 0 7661 5557 9 Part 2 1882 edition at the Internet Archive Art of Money Getting or Golden Rules for Making Money Originally published 1880 Reprint Bedford MA Applewood 1999 ISBN 1 55709 494 2 The Wild Beasts Birds and Reptiles of the World The Story of Their Capture Pub 1888 R S Peale amp Company Chicago Why I Am a Universalist Originally published 1890 Reprint Kessinger Pub Co ISBN 1 4286 2657 3 See also EditBarnum effect Barnum s Aquarial Gardens Boston Massachusetts 1862 1863 Cardiff Giant Carl Hagenbeck Colonel Routh Goshen Fedor Jeftichew Human zoo Isaac W Sprague Jenny Lind private railroad car Lucia Zarate Nellie Keeler The Greatest Show on Earth 1952 film Wild Men of Borneo Zip the PinheadReferences Edit North American Theatre Online Phineas T Barnum a b Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p vi Shapiro Fred R The Yale Book of Quotations New Haven Yale UP 2006 p 44 a b Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p 73 Barnum Phineas 1888 The life of P T Barnum Buffalo N Y The Courier Company p 237 via Ebook and Texts Archive American Libraries a b c Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 a b Rogak Lisa 2004 Stones and Bones of New England A guide to unusual historic and otherwise notable cemeteries Globe Pequat ISBN 978 0 7627 3000 1 Mansky Jackie December 22 2017 P T Barnum Isn t the Hero the Greatest Showman Wants You To Think smithsonianmag com Smithsonian Freed Robin Joice Heth MA candidate University of Virginia American Studies Department Archived from the original on May 18 2002 Retrieved April 8 2007 Schweitzer Marlis Barnum s Last Laugh General Tom Thumb s Wedding Cake in the Library of Congress Performing Arts Resources 2011 28 116 Associates Programs Source Plus Web December 8 2012 Stabile Susan M 2010 Still Ed Lives Early American Literature 45 2 371 95 doi 10 1353 eal 2010 0020 S2CID 201754107 Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p 47 Martin Gary We are not amused the meaning and origin of this phrase Phrasefinder Peale s Philadelphia Museum philadelphiaencyclopedia org Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia a b c d Rogers Francis Jenny Lind The Musical Quarterly Vol 32 No 3 July 1946 pp 437 48 subscription required a b Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p 92 a b Miller Philip L Review P T Barnum Presents Jenny Lind The American Tour of the Swedish Nightingale American Music Spring 1983 pp 78 80 subscription required a b Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p 99 a b Linkon Sherry Lee Reading Lind Mania Print Culture and the Construction of Eighteenth Century Audiences Book History Vol 1 1998 pp 94 106 subscription required Jenny Lind s Progress in America The Observer October 6 1850 p 3 Hambrick Keith S P T Barnum Presents Jenny Lind The American Tour of the Swedish Nightingale Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association Vol 22 No 2 Spring 1981 pp 208 09 subscription required America The Times June 28 1851 p 5 Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p 120 Kunhardt Kunhardt amp Kunhardt 1995 p 138 Mosier Jennifer L 1999 The Big Attraction The Circus Elephant And American Culture Journal of American Culture 22 2 7 doi 10 1111 j 1542 734x 1999 2202 7 x The Shakespeare of Advertising s Rules for Jumbo Success There s a Customer Born Every Minute John Wiley amp Sons Inc October 10 2015 pp 103 113 doi 10 1002 9781119201908 ch8 ISBN 9781119201908 Forest and jungle or Thrilling adventures in all quarters of the globe An illustrated history of the animal kingdom written in easy and instructive form for boys and girls The Art of Money Getting a b Barnum Phineas 1888 The life of P T Barnum a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b c The Great Showman Dead The New York Times April 8 1891 Retrieved July 21 2007 Bridgeport Connecticut April 7 1891 At 6 22 o clock to night the long sickness of P T Barnum came to an end by his quietly passing away at Marina his residence in this city W Cook James 2001 The arts of deception playing with fraud in the age of Barnum Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674005914 OCLC 876342914 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link P T Barnum Justice Harlan and Connecticut s Role in the Development of the Right to Privacy Federal Bar Council Quarterly December 13 2014 Retrieved May 9 2018 Connecticut and the Comstock Law Connecticut History Retrieved May 9 2018 Barnum P T 1883 Struggles and Triumphs Or Forty Years Recollections of P T Barnum Buffalo N Y The Courier Company p 297 Miller Russell July 16 2008 Light on the Hill Vol 1 The Archives at Tufts University Tufts University Archived from the original on September 4 2014 Retrieved September 3 2014 Get to Know Tufts April 22 2010 Barnum Patrick W A One Name Study for the Barnum Barnham Surname Notes for Phineas Taylor Barnum Charity Hallett Barnum Family Genealogy official website Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved December 10 2017 a b A One Name Study for the BARNUM BARNHAM Surname Barnum org Archived from the original on February 20 2020 Retrieved January 6 2020 Barnum Patrick W A One Name Study for the Barnum Barnham Surname Notes for Nancy Fish Barnum Family Genealogy official website Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved December 10 2017 Barnum Museum Core Exhibits Archived June 30 2007 at the Wayback Machine Marina Park Historic District Bridgeport City Fairfield County Bridgeport CT 06604 www livingplaces com Barnum Statue Unveiled The New York Times July 4 1893 George Curtis Waldo 1917 History of Bridgeport and vicinity Volume 1 S J Clarke pp 279 280 ISBN 978 1 144 35927 8 Slater Chuck November 18 2001 A Coin True to Barnum Controversy and All The New York Times https barnumfestival org History the Barnum Festival Celebrating Bridgeport CT and surrounding towns Michael Knight Barnum Festival Revels in Hoopla and Humbug The New York Times June 20 1975 p 35 Homayon Marietta July 8 2004 Town gets grant to promote Barnum The Danbury News Times FitzGerald Eileen July 15 2010 Barnum s Ivy Island to be showcased at celebration Danbury News Times A Look at the Fleet The Bridgeport amp Port Jefferson Steamboat Company Retrieved April 18 2021 SHOWMAN BARNUM S BARN ATTACHED The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Brooklyn New York 1890 01 12 9 col 5 January 12 1890 Four mechanic s liens have been filed by workmen of Port Jefferson against P T Barnum the showman for labor and materials on the new barn put up last Fall on the farm of P T Barnum at Port Jefferson Cachero Paulina December 20 2017 The Greatest Showman 8 of the Film s Stars and Their Real Life Inspirations The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 4 2018 Kellem Betsy Golden December 22 2017 The Greatest Showman The True Story of P T Barnum and Jenny Lind Vanity Fair Retrieved September 4 2018 Further reading EditAdams Bluford E Pluribus Barnum The Great Showman and the Making of U S Popular Culture Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1997 ISBN 0 8166 2631 6 Alderson William T ed Mermaids Mummies and Mastodons The Emergence of the American Museum Washington DC American Association of Museums for the Baltimore City Life Museums 1992 Barnum Patrick Warren Barnum Genealogy 650 Years of Family History Boston Higginson Book Co 2006 ISBN 0 7404 5551 6 hardcover ISBN 0 7404 5552 4 softcover LCCN 2005 903696 Benton Joel The Life of Phineas T Barnum 1 Betts John Rickards P T Barnum and the Popularization of Natural History Journal of the History of Ideas 20 no 3 1959 353 368 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Barnum Phineas Taylor Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 03 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 417 Cook James W The Arts of Deception Playing with Fraud in the Age of Barnum Cambridge Harvard University Press 2001 ISBN 0 674 00591 0 Relates Barnum s Fiji Mermaid and What Is It exhibits to other popular arts of the nineteenth century including magic shows and trompe l œil paintings Harding Les Elephant Story Jumbo and P T Barnum Under the Big Top Jefferson NC McFarland amp Co 2000 ISBN 0 7864 0632 1 129 p Harris Neil Humbug The Art of P T Barnum Chicago University of Chicago Press 1973 ISBN 0 226 31752 8 Kunhardt Philip B Jr Kunhardt Philip B III Kunhardt Peter W 1995 P T Barnum America s Greatest Showman Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 679 43574 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lott Eric 1993 Love and Theft Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class New York Oxford University Press pp 76 78 ISBN 978 0 19 507832 9 Reiss Benjamin The Showman and the Slave Race Death and Memory in Barnum s America Cambridge Harvard University Press 2001 ISBN 0 674 00636 4 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 0 231 05687 7 Uchill Ida Libert Howdy Sucker What P T Barnum Did in Colorado Denver Pioneer Peddler Press 2001 OCLC 47773817 Jefferson Margo On Michael Jackson New York Pantheon 2006 ISBN 978 0 307 27765 7 Critique of Michael Jackson including his obsession with P T Barnum and Freaks 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 0 252 07295 2 Woolf John The Wonders Lifting the Curtain on the Freak Show Circus and Victorian Age London Michael O Mara 2019 ISBN 1782439935External links EditThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references February 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Phineas Taylor Barnum nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to P T Barnum nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about P T Barnum Digital collectionsWorks by P T Barnum in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by P T Barnum at Project Gutenberg Works by or about P T Barnum at Internet Archive Works by P T Barnum at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Physical collectionsThe Barnum Museum Phineas Taylor Barnum papers 1818 1993 Barnum s American Museum The Lost Museum A virtual reproduction of Barnum s American Museum includes a collection of primary source materialsBiographical informationP T Barnum s genealogy Archived May 24 2018 at the Wayback Machine at the Barnum Family Genealogy website P T Barnum at Find a Grave P T Barnum at Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus Entry on P T Barnum in the Concise Encyclopedia of Tufts History Full text of The Life of Phineas T Barnum by Joel Benton from Project GutenbergScholarship and analysisBarnum s circus affiliation P T Barnum Ultrarunning Promoter 1874 House of Deception An article about Barnum s handwriting amp signature P T Barnum did not 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 Other linksFacebook Page Bethel Historical Society P T Barnum Monument P T Barnum The Lost Legend Documentary An 1890 recording of Barnum s voice Marina Mansion Tribute to Ringling Bros and Barnum amp Bailey Circus by brothers Charles Elias Disney amp Daniel H Disney P T Barnum at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title P T Barnum amp oldid 1178922688, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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