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by Jerry Apps


  29. Reynolds, correspondence with the author, December 22, 2002; cables and telegrams between Jordon and Ringling in September and October 1910, Milner; and Baraboo (Wisconsin) News, April 6, 1911, and May 4, 1911.

  30. Ringling Brothers Road Ledger, 1911, CWM

  31. Ringling Brothers Standard Daily Journal, 1911, Pfening collection.

  32. Ibid.

  33. Richard J. Reynolds III, correspondence with the author, December 19, 2002.

  34. Ringling Brothers Road Ledger, 1911, CWM.

  35. Baraboo (Wisconsin) News, November 9, 1911.

  36. Fred Pfening III, correspondence with the author, December 1, 2002; sales agreement for Adam Forepaugh and Sells Brothers Circus, 1911, Milner Library collection, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois.

  Chapter 12

  1. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Republic, November 16, 1911.

  2. Buenker, The History of Wisconsin, vol. 4, The Progressive Era, 1893–1914, pp. 553–554.

  3. Reprinted in Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, May 30, 1912.

  4. Ibid.

  5. Milwaukee Sentinel, February 5, 1888.

  6. Fred Pfening III, correspondence with the author, December 1, 2002.

  7. Sauk County (Wisconsin) Democrat, September 16, 1897.

  8. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, March 7, 1912.

  9. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Republic, April 18, 1912.

  10. Al Ringling to Charles Ringling, March 6, 1912, Pfening collection.

  11. Summary of information in regard to winter quarters at Chicago office, July 1, 1912, Pfening collection.

  12. Necedah (Wisconsin) Republic, April 18, 1912.

  13. “With the White Tops,” Show World, January 15, 1910, p. 17.

  14. Sauk County (Wisconsin) Democrat, April 25, 1912.

  15. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, May 30, 1912.

  16. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, April 25, 1912.

  17. Ibid.

  18. John Ringling to Al Ringling, January 27, 1912, Pfening collection.

  19. Al Ringling to John Ringling, February 1, 1912, CWM.

  20. John Ringling to Al Ringling, March 4, 1912, CWM.

  21. Charles Ringling to John Ringling, March 12, 1912, CWM.

  22. Ibid.

  23. Toledo (Ohio) Blade, June 14, 1912; Duluth (Minnesota) Herald, July 17, 1912.

  24. Ad in Toledo (Ohio) Blade, June 25, 1912.

  25. Toledo (Ohio) Blade, June 25, 1912.

  26. Duluth (Minnesota) Herald, July 17, 1912.

  27. Unidentified writer, Coliseum Building, Chicago, to John Ringling, April 10, 1912, Pfening collection.

  28. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, April 18, 1912.

  29. Findley (Ohio) Courier, August 23, 1912.

  30. Charles Ringling to Al Ringling, August 8, 1912, Pfening collection.

  31. Ibid.

  32. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, December 26, 1912.

  33. Ibid.

  34. Ringling Brothers, Baraboo, to various suppliers, January 24, 1912, November 8, 1912, November 13, 1912, Pfening collection.

  35. John H. Snellen to Al Ringling, December 12, 1912, Pfening collection.

  36. Display ad published by the News Publishing Co., Baraboo, Wisconsin, November 1, 1912, Pfening collection.

  37. Harry Humphrey to Ringling Brothers, December 30, 1912, Pfening collection.

  38. Al Ringling to Charles Ringling, February 6, 1913, Pfening collection.

  39. Contract between Ringling Brothers and Thomas Zingaro, November 9, 1911, Pfening collection.

  40. Thomas Zingaro to Al Ringling, December 9, 1912, Pfening collection.

  41. Al Ringling to Thomas Zingaro, December 12, 1912, Pfening collection.

  42. Al Ringling to John Ringling, December 16, 1912, Pfening collection.

  43. George Rapp to Al Ringling, February 3, 1913, Pfening collection.

  44. Al Ringling to C. W. and Geo. L. Rapp, February 5, 1913, Pfening collection.

  45. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, April 24, 1913.

  46. Ibid.

  47. Wisconsin was the first state to pass a Workmen’s Compensation Act (1911). Before the law, a worker who was injured had to sue his employer for compensation and prove that the employer was negligent. Under the new law no such proof was needed, and an injured worker could be promptly compensated, although with financial limits. Employers could choose whether to comply with the act. State of Wisconsin Office of the Commissioner of Insurance, http://oci.wi.gov/.

  48. Duluth (Minnesota) Labor World, December 28, 1912.

  49. Charles Ringling to Al Ringling, August 14, 1913, Pfening collection.

  50. See Fred D. Pfening Jr., “Ringling Bros. World’s Greatest Show: The 1913 Season,” Bandwagon, March–April 1993, pp. 6–7, for an extended discussion of the electric generator.

  51. Billboard, June 6, 1914, p. 22; Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, May 28, 1914; Sauk County (Wisconsin) Democrat, May 28, 1914; Cleveland (Ohio) Leader, May 26, 27, 1914.

  52. Three contracts between the Ringling Brothers (signed by Henry Ringling) and the Barney & Smith Car Company, May 29, 1914, CWM.

  53. Correspondence between Ringling Brothers and Barney & Smith Car Company, June 18, 1914, and June 22, 1914, CWM.

  Chapter 13

  1. “Deaths,” New York Clipper, January 8, 1916.

  2. Ringling Brothers to Eretto Trio, December 17, 1914, Pfening collection.

  3. Richard J. Reynolds III, correspondence with the author, December 29, 2002.

  4. New York Clipper, May 1, 1915.

  5. Fred Bradna, The Big Top (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1952), p. 306.

  6. Havirland list of railroad shows, 1915, CWM.

  7. Daily Receipts, Ringling Bros.’ World’s Greatest Shows, Season 1915, Pfening collection.

  8. Volksblatt, September 10, 1915, translation from German by Jon Romelton.

  9. Winter Quarters Ledger, 1915–1916, CWM.

  10. Sauk County, Wisconsin, Register of Deeds, recorded December 1, 1914, vol. 104, p. 301.

  11. “From Mud to the Field of the Cloth of Gold,” Show World, September 17, 1910, p. 12.

  12. North and Hatch, Circus Kings, p. 169.

  13. Charles Ringling to Fred Warrell (a Ringling employee), February 7, 1916, Pfening collection.

  14. Columbus Citizen, May 16, 1916.

  15. Charles Philip Fox, A Tribute to the Percheron Horse (Boulder, CO: Pruett, 1983), pp. 168–169.

  16. Ringling Brothers Receipts Book, 1916, Pfening collection.

  17. Official Route: Ringling Brothers World’s Greatest Shows, Season 1916, CWM.

  18. Sauk County (Wisconsin) Democrat, November 8, 1916.

  19. Thomas J. Knock, “World War I,” in Paul S. Boyer (ed.), The Oxford Companion to United States History, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2001), p. 844; Nash, Howe, Davis, Jeffrey, Frederick, and Winkler, American People, pp. 485–494; and Oscar Handlin, The History of the United States (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1968), pp. 329–340.

  20. Bradna, Big Top, p. 93.

  21. Chicago Herald and Examiner, April 5, 1917.

  22. Artist’s contract and release, The Clarkonians (three Clarke Brothers), April 7, 1917, Pfening collection.

  23. Havirland list of railroad shows, 1917, CWM.

  24. Official Route: Ringling Brothers World’s Greatest Shows, Season 1917, CWM.

  25. Daily Receipts: Ringling Bros. World’s Greatest Shows, Season 1917, CWM.

  26. Charles Ringling to the Strobridge Lithographing Company (Cincinnati, Ohio), July 20, 1917, Pfening collection.

  27. W. W. Dunkle, “Ringlings Ready to Ramble,” Billboard, March 23, 1918, p. 16.

  28. Havirland list of railroad shows, 1918, CWM.

  29. Dunkle, “Ringlings Ready to Ramble,” p. 16.

  30. The American Experience, “Influenza, 1918,” Public Broadcasting System, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/influenza/.

  31. World Almanac, The World Almanac and Book of Fac
ts (Mahwah, NJ: World Almanac Books, 2001), p. 448.

  32. “Circus Season Virtually Brought to Close,” Billboard, October 19, 1918, p. 26.

  33. Daily Receipts, Ringling Bros. World’s Greatest Shows 1918, Pfening collection.

  34. Richard Thomas, John Ringling (New York: Pageant Press, 1960), p. 126.

  35. “Still a Question: Nothing Definite as to Barnum & Bailey Wintering in Baraboo,” Billboard, May 25, 1918.

  36. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, October 17, 1918.

  37. C. P. “Chappie” Fox, interview by the author, Baraboo, Wisconsin, December 10, 2001.

  38. “Ringling Circus: To Winter at Bridgeport?” Billboard, October 5, 1918.

  39. “Circus Season Virtually Brought to Close,” Billboard, October 19, 1918, p. 54.

  40. North and Hatch, Circus Kings, p. 171.

  41. “Circus Season Virtually Brought to Close,” Billboard, October 19, 1918.

  42. Railroads and other seized carriers were returned to private control on March 1, 1920. See www.archives.gov/research_room/federal_records_guide/us_railroad_administration_rg014.html.

  43. Richard J. Reynolds III, correspondence with the author, July 21, 2001, and December 29, 2002.

  44. Thomas, John Ringling, pp. 125–126.

  45. According to the 1917 Barnum & Bailey Route Book, they showed in Toledo, Ohio, on June 13, 1917. 1917 Barnum & Bailey Route Book, CWM.

  46. Bradna, Big Top, p. 95.

  47. Fred Dahlinger Jr., correspondence with the author, February 10, 2004.

  48. Robert Barnes, interview with author, Madison, January 2002.

  Epilogue

  1. North and Hatch, Circus Kings, p. 174.

  2. Thomas, John Ringling, pp. 122–123.

  3. Havirland list of railroad shows, 1920, 1921, 1927, 1928, CWM.

  4. North and Hatch, Circus Kings, pp. 194–195.

  5. Sarasota Government homepage, “John Ringling, Dreamer,” http://www.co.sarasota.fl.us/.

  6. Jane Bancroft Cook Library, “The Charles Ringling Estate,” http://www.ncf.edu/library/speccoll/CREstate.htm.

  7. Peoria (Illinois) Journal Star, September 29, 1991.

  8. Chicago Tribune, October 11, 1987.

  9. Will of Charles E. Ringling, dated September 1, 1926, Sauk County, Baraboo, Wisconsin, Register of Deeds, vol. 140, p. 545.

  10. Richard J. Reynolds III, correspondence with the author, December 30, 2002.

  11. John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art, http://www.ringling.org/.

  12. Havirland list of railroad shows, 1929, CWM.

  13. North and Hatch, Circus Kings, p. 220.

  14. Ibid., pp. 222–226.

  15. Ibid., p. 251.

  16. David Lewis Hammarstrom, Big Top Boss: John Ringling North and the Circus (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1992), pp. 38–39.

  17. White Tops, May–June 1962, p. 23.

  18. John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art, http://www.ringling.org/.

  19. Reynolds, correspondence with the author, July 21, 2001.

  20. Fred Dahlinger Jr., correspondence with the author, February 11, 2004.

  21. Reynolds, correspondence with the author, July 21, 2001.

  22. Robert Barnes, interview with the author, Madison, January 2002.

  23. Baraboo (Wisconsin) News, March 2, 1939.

  24. Ibid.

  25. Baraboo (Wisconsin) Weekly News, June 15, 1939.

  Appendixes

  1. See Bob Dewel, “The Opulent Ringling Bros. Homes,” Baraboo (Wisconsin) News Republic, April 14, 1999, for a description of Ringling homes. Paul Wolter, Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, also provided information.

  Index

  Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations.

  A

  accidents, 35, 47, 65, 80, 95, 101–102, 111

  claims settlements, 125

  diversions during, 118

  parade mishaps, 79, 171

  as staged attractions, 96

  tent blow downs, 48, 98–99, 122, 127

  train wrecks, 59, 102, 128

  Adam Forepaugh and Sells Brother Circus.

  See Forepaugh-Sells Circus

  Adam Forepaugh Show, 66, 233n56

  admission prices, 31, 33, 46, 199

  advance agents, xviii, 14, 40, 132, 135

  advertising

  1887 handbill, 29

  advance agents and, xviii, 14, 40, 132, 135

  “Baby Boo” the elephant, 38, 38

  banners and bannermen, 134

  for “Caesar’s Triumphal Entry into Rome,” 50

  for Canadian tour, 94

  for Chicago indoor show, 69

  Chinese language handbill, 105

  circus heralds, xvii

  competition and, 132, 133, 134, 136, 155

  employees in advertising department, 72, 130

  for “Enormous Railroad Shows,” 45

  for “Field of the Cloth of Gold,” 122

  “five brothers” trademark, 70, 70, 169

  for Forepaugh-Sells Circus, 162

  giraffes featured in, 62, 94

  “Greatest Show on Earth” slogan, 89–90, 90

  Gus Ringling’s role in, 24, 40, 57, 72, 130

  for hall show, 12

  for harness making business, 2, 4

  hippopotamus featured in, 46, 68

  hyperbole in, 130, 136

  for “Jerusalem and the Crusades,” 108

  for “Joan of Arc” show, 178

  largest tent claim featured in, 75

  Lillian Leitzel featured in, 192

  lithograph posters described, 130

  for local businesses tied to Ringlings, 127

  for Madison Square Garden show, 157

  newspapers and, 10, 11–12

  for performers, 18

  posters, 9, 132, 133

  press agents, 72, 135

  rail cars for, 45, 57, 130–132, 131

  reputation featured in, 146–147

  Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, 208

  for Ringlings’ first circus, 19

  Saxon Trio featured in, 135

  for “World’s Greatest Shows,” 62

  World War I and shortages of paste, 198

  Alexander, Spencer “Delavan,” 40, 72, 73, 169

  Algona, Iowa, 48, 143

  Al Ringling Theatre, 174, 185, 203, 203–205, 204, 205

  American Circus Corporation, 211

  Andress, Charles, 49, 125

  Andro, Adolph, 215

  animals, 27, 156

  camels, 153, 153

  dog acts, 36

  escapes and runaways, 38–39, 57, 93, 121, 129

  kangaroos, 57

  lions, 46

  panthers, 93

  polar bears, 55

  “Pot Gang” of animal caretakers, 81

  rhinoceroses, 149, 149–150

  “sacred ox,” 121

  snakes, 17, 73, 93, 194

  tapirs, 55, 232n36

  training of, 36, 52–53, 53, 93, 109–110

  walruses, 88–89

  water buffalos (bovalapsus), 44, 46

  zebras, 93, 111, 170–171

  see also elephants; horses and ponies; menageries

  Appleton, Wisconsin, 127

  Army, circus studied as model of efficiency by, 189

  Asmus, Theodore, 26

  attractions

  automobile “thriller” act, 146, 147

  band concerts as, xxii, 69, 71

  bicycle acts, 115

  clowns and comedians, 26–27, 69, 81, 85, 118, 128

  free ascension acts, 35

  high dive acts, 69–70

  “human volcano,” 26

  motion pictures in “black tent,” 76

  strongwomen, 43

  technology as, 56–57

  audiences

  Alf T. on, 64

  convicts at prison, 80, 82

  crowds, 89

  Indians as, 90, 105

  la
ck of language barriers, 105

  patients at insane asylum, 74

  in Rock Springs, 76

  Aurora, Illinois, 127

  automobiles, 154, 161

  “thriller” act, 146, 147

  B

  Bailey, James, 115, 116, 127

  ballet dancers, 128, 199

  balloon contract, 184

  bands. See music

  Baraboo, Wisconsin,

  abandoned as winter quarters, 200–202

  Al Ringling Theatre in, 174, 185, 203, 203–205, 204, 205

  animal escapes in, 93, 121, 129

  bird’s eye view of, 28

  circus opens in, 25

  circus ownership offered to city, x

  circus records and properties abandoned in, 214–215

  Circus World Museum in, 212–213, 216

  construction at Ringlingville, 36, 60–61, 83–84, 97, 115, 159–160, 166, 174, 193

  described, 3, 15

  as home to Ringlings, x, 3, 9, 19–20, 49, 154, 194, 206

  local economy and circus business, 55–56, 65–66, 96, 154, 176, 206

  map of, vi

  Mrs. Potter’s land leased, 42

  press reports on circus, 137, 139

  “Ringling Day,” 57

  Ringling Hotel, 55–56, 196

  Ringling residences in, 140, 140, 225

  Ringlingville properties sold, 215–216

  Robert L. Parkinson Library and Research Center, 216

  as winter quarters, 27, 36, 42, 49, 92–93, 152, 166, 174–177, 180, 186

  barbershop, 86

  barns vs. houses, 36

  Barnum, P. T., xvi

  Barnum & Bailey Circus, xvi, 55, 67, 77, 89–90, 101, 115, 165, 179

  acquisition of, 126, 138–139, 141–142

  as competition, 112–113

  consolidation of circuses, 202, 205–206, 207–208

  noncompete agreements with, 66, 126

  under Ringling management, 186

  Barreda, Jorge, 110–111

  baseball, 47–48, 88

  Baskett, Thomas, 35

  bicycle acts, 115

  Black River Falls, Wisconsin, 56

  blacksmith shop, 86

  Blainey, Jas., 15

  Bode Wagon Company, 104, 106, 106

  Boise, Idaho, 111

  Bolivar, Missouri, 48

  Boston, Massachusetts, 73

  bovalapsus (water buffalos), 44, 46

  Braathen, Sverre, 214

  Bradna, Fred, 191–192, 197, 206

  Bridgeport, Connecticut, as winter quarters, xvi, 104, 181, 200–202

  Brodhead, 6

 

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