The phenomenon of sideshow “freaks” drew huge crowds in the 19th and 20th centuries, including the likes of Queen Victoria.
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The beginnings of unionized " freak " shows and human oddity exhibitions date back to the reign of England ’s Elizabeth I in the 16th century , but these sideshows truly took off in the square-toed era .
As a burgeoning public involvement in medicine and science bring interview out to see the unearthly — and sometimes grotesque — displays of our varied anatomies and biological curiosities , the phenomenon of sideshow " freaks " would brush the United States and England .
George Sherwood Stratton, better known as General Tom Thumb, standing on a chair between two guards. 1860.
But as skill grow and the unknown well do it , " freak " shows would go away into a dark fold of chronicle .
P.T. Barnum’s Sideshow “Freaks”
In the United States , famed carnival proprietorP.T. Barnumadded so - call " junkie " or biological anomalies to his travel show in 1835 .
Anyone with a marketable impairment , deformity , or otherwise oddity was added to his zoo . Fairgrounds provided the most popular venue for sideshows and brute of utmost size or a human - like talent became the main draws .
Julius Gertinger / Library of Congress / Corbis / VCG via Getty ImagesKrao Farini was a hairy and elastic cleaning lady establish in the Laotian hobo camp in 1885 who was then put on video display by P.T. Barnum as a " missing link . "
Barnum opened a human peculiarity exhibit in 1841 at the American Museum in Manhattan . After a fire destroyed it , he founded P.T. Barnum ’s Grand Traveling Circus and in 1881 , James Bailey and James Hutchinson strike partial ownership .
By 1887 , the show was called Barnum & Bailey ’s Greatest Show On Earth . They gave renown to masses likeChang and Eng Bunker , the original Siamese twins , General Tom Thumb , a distant congeneric of Barnum ’s who stood at just three ft when full grown , Annie Jones the Bearded Lady , William Henry Johnson or Zip the Pinhead , andmany others .
The Showmen And Their “Freaks”
Experienced showmen like Barnum fuck that to draw in crowds the story behind the attraction was more important than the attraction or sideshow " freak " itself .
" You could indeed demonstrate anything in those days . Yes anything from a needle to an anchor , a flea to an elephant , a bloater you could present as a giant . It was not the show ; it was the story that you told,“wroteEnglish showman Tom Norman .
Some famous sideshow performers like gnome General Tom Thumb distanced themselves finally from their performance . For others , likeJoseph Merrick , the Elephant Man , their malformation made life-time pretty unenjoyable even if they did get a bonnie share of the profits they helped to bring in for Barnum .
Bettmann / Getty ImagesConey Island " addict " show albino photographed with fat lady and a Flea Circus card in the scope . Date unspecified .
Managers , Barnum included , likelyexploitedtheir performers , though some showmen like Tom Norman wholeheartedly denied this .
" The big absolute majority of showmen are in the habit of treating their novelties as human beings … not like animate being . "
Indeed , members of travel sideshow often said they consider their fellow performers and employer as a folk . business relationship vary , but most seemed to make a fair salary probably more than they ’d make working in the regular humans . As early as 1851 , trading cards of popular " junkie " circulated throughout England and the United States , with all profits going right to performer themselves .
The End Of The Sideshow “Freak”
By the 1940s , however , the display of sideshow " nut " became a matter of the past .
Various factor including comprehend exploitation — even though Barnum did tend to have a reputation for paying his performer well — and the Parousia and popularity of television toy a role in the sideshow ’s virtual disappearance by the following decade .
The performing artist of past times do still appeal attending both for their brave spirits or grievous storey .
After this look at vintage sideshow " monster , " check out this gallery of the most famousvintage sideshow performersin chronicle . Then , get word all about the history of some superweird Olympic sport .
Julius Gertinger/Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty ImagesKrao Farini was a hairy and flexible woman found in the Laotian jungle in 1885 who was then put on display by P.T. Barnum as a “missing link."
Bettmann/Getty ImagesConey Island “freak” show albino photographed with fat lady and a Flea Circus poster in the background. Date unspecified.