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Ringlingville USA

Page 32

by Jerry Apps


  Chicago indoor show, 70–71

  of early circus, 27

  Enormous Rail Shows (1890), 47

  of “Jerusalem and the Crusades,” 107, 114–115

  of “Joan of Arc” show, 179–180

  of menagerie, 149

  of “United Monster Shows,” 29

  Reynolds, Richard J., III, 113, 171, 190–191, 202, 206, 209–210, 214

  rhinoceroses, 149, 149–150

  Rice Lake, Wisconsin, 17, 27

  Richardson, James, 35

  Richardson, Vic, 26

  Richland Center, Wisconsin, 91

  Ringling, Albert “Al,” 2, 5, 6–7, 26, 90, 111, 194, 221

  as animal trainer, 36

  Baraboo residence, 140, 140

  death of, 193

  hall show and, 13, 15–16

  as head of performers, 72

  marriage to Eliza “Lou” Morris, 17, 18

  as performer, 6, 7, 8, 10, 13, 15, 158

  role in circus business, 23, 117, 184, 194

  theatre in Baraboo, 174, 185, 203–205

  Ringling, Alfred Theodore “Alf T.”, 3, 5, 23, 23, 26, 88, 209, 221

  on attendance, 64

  death of, 207

  Greenfield Township farm, 80

  hall shows and, 13, 15–16

  harness-making business and, 9

  on lots available for shows, 82

  as musician, 9, 11

  as press agent, 135

  on prison show, 80, 82

  role in circus business, 23, 72

  on winter season preparations, 92

  Ringling, Annie, 142, 169

  Ringling, Aubrey, 210, 211

  Ringling, August Albert “Gus,” 6, 12, 17, 24, 142, 221

  advertising and, 24, 40, 45, 57, 72, 130

  Ringling, August Frederich, 1–4, 2, 5, 6–7, 16–17, 42, 221

  death of, 77

  Ringling, Carl Edward “Charles,” 3, 23, 23, 23–24, 26, 78, 154, 182, 221

  death of, 209–210

  hall show and, 13, 15–16

  harness-making business and, 9

  on income taxes, 176

  letter planning 1914 season, 187–188

  as musician, 11, 24, 210

  role in circus business, 23–24, 107, 108, 179, 193, 207

  on shortages during WWI, 198

  shows written by, 199

  Ringling, Della, 95

  Ringling, Edith, 209–210, 211

  Ringling, Eliza “Lou” Morris, 17, 18, 81, 95, 111, 204

  Ringling, Henry William George, 3, 12, 24, 27, 170, 221

  Baraboo theatre and, 204

  death of, 200

  as partner in circus, 167–168

  role in circus business, 24, 72, 78

  Ringling, Ida Belle, 200

  Ringling, Ida Lorina Wilhemina, 8–9, 42, 81, 95, 221

  Ringling, John Nicholas, 3, 15, 26, 210, 221

  control of circus by, 210–211

  death of, 214

  hall show, 15–16

  as performer, 10, 26–27

  on psychology of the circus, x

  railroads constructed by, 24

  role in circus business, 24, 24, 142, 177, 181, 207

  Ringling, Martha “Mattie,” 142, 169, 170

  Ringling, Otto, 221

  Ringling, Richard, 95

  Ringling, Salome Marie Julia, 1–2, 2, 95, 137, 221

  Ringling, William Henry “Otto,” 3, 23, 23, 26, 167

  correspondence with “Butch” Parson, 159

  death of, 167–170

  financial role of, 23, 33–34, 72, 138–139, 161, 164

  as hall show agent, 15

  hall show and, 12, 15–16

  harness-making business and, 9

  managerial responsibilities, 141–142

  as musician, 9, 11

  on politics and the economy, 150–151

  role in circus business, 72, 88, 117, 120

  Ringling Brothers Carnival of Fun, 22

  “Ringling Day” in Baraboo, 57

  Ringling Hotel, 55–56, 196

  “Ringlingville,” 92, 215

  buildings and properties sold, 215–216

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

  as portable city, 183

  post office, 85

  on the road, 85–86

  shops and construction in, 55

  term first used, 42

  winter employees, 73

  River Falls, 99

  Robert L. Parkinson Library and Research Center, 216

  Robinson, Fayette Lodawick “Yankee,” 15, 18, 18, 19, 20, 22, 229n22

  Robinson, John G., 78

  Rock Springs, Wyoming, 76

  Rodems, A. M., 154

  Roeders (performers), 188

  Rooney, Elizabeth, 179

  Rooney, Mike, 52, 69

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 97

  Rowan, George, 15, 16

  Roy, Charles W., 72

  “rubes,” 21

  Rungeling, August Frederich. See Ringling, August Frederich

  S

  “sacred ox,” 121

  safety laws, 180

  St. Louis, Missouri, 71, 73, 78, 79

  Sam MacFlinn’s Great Eastern Circus, 55

  Samuel Nichols circus, xv–xvi

  sandstorms, 99–100

  Sandwina, Katie, 49

  San Francisco, California, 96, 105

  Sarasota, Florida

  Charles Ringling’s residence in, 182

  Ringling residences in, 208–209

  as winter quarters, 210–211

  Sauk City, Wisconsin, 12, 20, 35–36

  Scarff, Sally Veit, 6

  scheduling

  demands of schedule, 20

  of hall shows, 14

  rail travel and, 44

  Scofield, Edward and Agnes, 38

  Sedalia, Missouri, 98

  Sells Brothers Shows, 64

  Sells-Floto Circus, 163, 164

  Sensation Circus, 5

  Sherman, Texas, 128

  sideshows, 72

  Smith, Charles, 100

  Smith, Frank, 102

  Smith, Thomas, 156

  snakes, 17, 73, 93, 194

  Snellen, John “Happy Jack,” 72, 73, 169, 182

  Souder, Pearl, 38, 72, 73, 102–103, 109, 111, 129

  Spanish-American War, 77, 79

  Spanish Flu, 199–200

  Sparks, Frank, 26

  Speedy, human high diver, 69–70

  Spencer, Alexander “Delavan,” 171, 172

  Springfield, Illinois, 107

  stake-drivers, 124, 124–125

  Stanwood, Barry, 15

  Sterling, Illinois, 180

  Stevens Point, Wisconsin, 102

  Stillwater, Minnesota, 9

  Stoughton, Wisconsin, 29

  strongmen, 135

  success, measures of, 25, 58

  suffrage movement, 175

  Sullivan, John L., 156

  T

  Taft, William H., 151

  Tama, Iowa, 47

  tapirs, 55, 232n36

  Tattersall’s building, Chicago, 67–71, 73, 84

  taxes, x

  exemptions considered, 185

  relocation to Connecticut and, 202

  state income tax, 173–176, 185

  war tax, 199

  Taylor, F., 15, 16

  Taylor, Robert, 72

  technology

  as attraction, 56–57

  inventions, 45

  mechanical stake-driver, 124, 124–125

  tents

  blow downs, 48, 98–99, 122, 127

  canvasmen, xix, xx–xxi, 72

  collapse of, 20, 48, 74

  dining tent, 95

  dressing room and trapping room tents, 182

  erection of, xix, xx–xxi

  fires, 180

  hand
bills advertising largest tent, 75

  interior, xxii

  lowering of, xxii

  mechanical stake-driver, 124, 124–125

  motion pictures in “black tent,” 76

  sidewalls, 98

  size of, 29, 31, 48

  stake pounding, xx

  use of, xv

  Texas, 103, 104

  Thayer, Stuart, 5, 54

  theatre, see Al Ringling Theatre

  Thomas, Richard, 205–206

  Thuerer, G. T., 176, 204

  ticket department, 72

  Topeka, Kansas, 95–96

  train wrecks, 59, 102, 128

  transportation

  circus as model of efficiency, 188

  employees in transportation department, 72

  pre–Civil War circuses, 5

  railroads as, xviii, 40, 41–42, 59

  Ringlingville as portable city, 183

  see also wagons

  Trinkouse, William, 13

  Turnour, Jules, 85, 86, 86–87, 128

  U

  “United Monster Shows,” 29

  handbill for, 29

  V

  Van Amburgh, 40

  Viet, Charles L., Sr., 6

  violence, 35, 48, 111

  W

  W. B. Reynolds Circus, 74

  wages, for employees, 51, 54, 64, 128, 155, 187, 197

  wagons, 120

  bell wagon, 56, 56

  “cottage” wagons, 83

  parade wagons, 104, 106, 106

  pipe organ wagon, 118, 119

  teamsters, 73

  train transport of, xviii

  as transportation, 40

  wagon shows, 21

  Wahpeton, North Dakota, 99

  walruses, 88–89, 235–236

  Walters, C. E., 99

  wardrobe department, 72

  Washington, D. C., 91, 94

  water buffalos (bovalapsus), 44, 46

  Watertown, Wisconsin, 102

  Waupaca, Wisconsin, 58, 174

  weather, 98–100, 107

  blow downs, 98–99, 122, 127

  lighting strikes, 99

  rains and mud, 21, 33, 57, 82–83, 103, 127–128

  sandstorms, 99–100

  Weatherby, E. S., 13

  weddings, 102

  Weldon, William F., 54, 72

  westward expansion, 45

  Whitewater, Wisconsin, 48, 174

  Wilson, Woodrow, 196–197, 202

  winter quarters, 92, 93

  Bridgeport, Connecticut, xvi, 104, 181, 200–202

  communities offering facilities as, 175

  Delavan as, xv–xvi

  map, 186

  Sarasota, Florida, 210–211

  see also Baraboo, Wisconsin

  winter season activities, 92–93

  Wisconsin as home to early circuses, xv–xvii

  women

  ballet dancers, 128, 199

  employees of the circus, 43, 128

  suffrage movement, 175

  wages for, 128

  Workmen’s Compensation Act, 185, 242n47

  World’s Columbian Exposition, 61, 61

  “World’s Greatest Shows,” 50

  World War I, 190–191, 196–198

  Y

  Yankee Robinson and Ringling Bros. Great Double Shows, 18–22

  Yankee Robinson’s Double Show, 15

  Young, M. A., 13, 14, 15

  Youngstown, Ohio, 111

  Z

  zebras, 93, 111, 170–171

  Ziegfield Follies, 161, 163, 163

  Zingaro, Thomas, 184

  Jerry Apps is the author of more than thirty-five books on Wisconsin and U.S. history. He is especially known for his histories of rural and country life. He has won numerous awards for his writing from such organizations as the Wisconsin Library Association, the Wisconsin Council for Writers, the Robert F. Gard Foundation, the Upper Midwest Booksellers Association, and the Wisconsin Historical Society. In 2010 Jerry received the Distinguished Service Award from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. In 2012, he was elected as a fellow of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts & Letters. He splits his time between his home in Madison and his farm, Roshara, in Wild Rose, Wisconsin. His website is www.jerryapps.com.

 

 

 


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