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P. T. Barnum
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How P.T. Barnum Brought Beluga Whales to New York City
On museum ethics and animal welfare in 19th century America.
by
Monica Murphy
,
Bill Wasik
via
Literary Hub
on
April 25, 2024
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How Jumbo the Elephant Paved the Way For Jumbo Mortgages
The 11-foot-tall elephant reshaped our language, which has proved surprisingly apt.
by
Luke Fannin
via
Made By History
on
December 12, 2022
Circassian Beauty in the American Sideshow
Among P. T. Barnum's “human curiosities” was a supposed escapee from an Ottoman harem, marketed as both the pinnacle of white beauty and an exotic other.
by
Betsy Golden Kellem
via
The Public Domain Review
on
September 16, 2021
What P.T. Barnum Understood About America
Barnum called himself the “Prince of Humbugs,” which left open the possibility that one day there would arise a king.
by
Elizabeth Kolbert
via
The New Yorker
on
July 29, 2019
The Spectacular P. T. Barnum
The great showman taught us to love hyperbole, fake news, and a good hoax. A century and a half later, the show has escaped the tent.
by
James Parker
via
The Atlantic
on
July 19, 2019
Race and the White Elephant War of 1884
A bizarre episode in circus history became an unlikely forum for discussing 19th-century theories of race.
by
Ross Bullen
via
The Public Domain Review
on
October 11, 2017
The Circus Spectacular That Spawned American Giantism
How the “Greatest Show on Earth” enthralled small-town crowds and inspired shopping malls
by
Janet M. Davis
via
What It Means to Be American
on
March 17, 2017
The Creepy Clown Emerged from the Crass and Bawdy Circuses of the 19th Century
Today’s creepy clowns are not a divergence from tradition, but a return to it.
by
Madeline Steiner
via
The Conversation
on
October 25, 2022
Temperance Melodrama on the Nineteenth-Century Stage
Produced by the master entertainer P. T. Barnum, a melodrama about the dangers of alcohol was the first show to run for a hundred performances in New York City.
by
Betsy Golden Kellem
via
JSTOR Daily
on
September 21, 2022
The American Circus in All Its Glory
A new documentary tells the history of the big top.
by
Joseph Bottum
,
Justin L. Blessinger
via
Humanities
on
October 19, 2018
What Do We Do With Our Dead?
Our mortuary conventions reveal a lot about our relation to the past.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
October 16, 2017
The Reckless Creation of Whiteness
How an erroneous 18th-century story about the “Caucasian race” led to a centuries of prejudice and misapprehension.
by
Erin L. Thompson
via
The Nation
on
January 29, 2025
America’s Earliest Sports Stars Were … Professional Walkers?
Walking needs no publicist. The simplest, most accessible form of exercise has been around since humans first foraged and traveled on the ground.
by
Jackie Mansky
via
Zócalo Public Square
on
October 18, 2024
City on Fire
The night violent anti-government conspirators sowed chaos in the heart of Manhattan.
by
Betsy Golden Kellem
via
The Atavist
on
September 24, 2024
Our Pets, Our Plates
In defense of the furred and the hoofed.
by
Anne Matthews
via
The American Scholar
on
March 10, 2024
How U.S. Institutions Took an African Teen’s Life, Then Lost His Remains
Sturmann Yanghis, a 17-year-old South African, was put on stage in America as a “wild savage.” Harvard claimed his remains when he died. Then they disappeared.
by
Sally H. Jacobs
via
Retropolis
on
December 3, 2023
"The Comic Natural History of the Human Race" (1851)
These caricatures of well-known Philadelphians transpose human heads onto animal forms.
by
Hunter Dukes
via
The Public Domain Review
on
June 1, 2023
Tracing the Evolution of Celebrity Memoirs, from Charles Lindbergh to Will Smith
Creating a personal myth allows celebrities to create just that—a myth.
by
Landon Y. Jones
via
Literary Hub
on
May 9, 2023
When Deadly Steamboat Races Enthralled America
Already prone to boiler explosions that regularly killed scores of passengers, steamboats were pushed to their limits in races that valued speed over safety.
by
Greg Daugherty
via
Smithsonian
on
April 26, 2023
He Was an All-Time Genius at Finding Tyrannosaurus Rexes. His Story Will Break Your Heart.
Why Barnum Brown could not stop collecting.
by
David K. Randall
via
Slate
on
July 4, 2022
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