Wednesday, June 10, 2020

When the Circus Came to Town



In an October 2018 issue of our local Pelham Reporter newspaper I found an ad for a one-day appearance November 3 in Columbiana by the Loomis Brothers Circus. You can see it near the end of this post. As fate would have it, I had watched a two-part "American Experience" documentary about the circus in the U.S. on Alabama Public Television not long before that. Somebody was trying to tell me something, so here we are.

In January 2017 the Ringling Brothers & Barnum & Bailey Circus made its final appearance in Birmingham. That circus had come through the city for many years; we took our young children to see it at the BJCC in 1988 and 1991. Sample tickets are below. On May 21, 2017, the circus ceased operations after some 146 years of touring under various names and owners. Declining attendance and high operating costs brought an end to one of America's--and the world's--classic entertainments. Much smaller circuses continue to tour the U.S., but an era seems to be winding down. I remember taking our kids once or twice to see one of those smaller outfits at the Riverchase Galleria back in the day. 

The modern circus dates from 1768 when Philip Astley began trick horse shows near London. Two years later he hired acrobats, jugglers, a clown and tightrope walkers to fill the time between the shows. On April 3, 1793, a Scotsman named John Bill Ricketts opened the first circus performance in the U.S. in Philadelphia. George Washington attended a performance. 

The glory years of the circus in the U.S. were roughly the 1830's until well into the 1950's. In the 1830's the first American to operate a major circus was Victor Pepin. In 1825 Joshuah Purdy Brown began the use of a large canvas tent for a circus. P.T. Barnum began touring a freak show with William Cameron Coup, who developed the multiple ring circus and circus travel by train.. Dan Rice became the most famous circus clown during this period. 

Thus by the Civil War most elements of the traditional circus were in place. After the war numerous circus organizations large and small toured America and much of the world for decades with their combinations of human and animal entertainment. Since the 1970's many groups with a different circus aesthetic, such as Cirque du Soleil, have developed. China, Russia and other nations have contributed to circus development and variation as well. Human desire for spectacular entertainment being what it is, the circus will no doubt survive in some form.

Written and other resources on circus history are vast. The American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress has put online oral histories from circus workers both inside and outside of the big top; you can find more information here and here. Steph Post's essay on great sideshow cons is here. A web site devoted to circus history is here. Susan Salaz has written about Peru, Indiana, the "Circus Capital of the World."

This blog post is by no means a history of the circus in Alabama; that remains to be researched and written. However, I do want to cover a few random things I've come across recently on that topic. Perhaps I'll return to it in the future.

You can find other photographs related to circuses in Alabama here. George Singleton's 1972 essay about a circus crossing the Alabama River at Claiborne in 1908 is here.





Source: The Daily Ardmoreite [Oklahoma] 26 January 1906, p. 3

The BhamWiki.com site has an entry on this circus/sale, but the story is different. According to that version, the circus ended its run in Sylacauga and wintered in Birmingham. Show receipts were stolen, and the management was forced to schedule an auction. James Bailey of Barnum & Bailey offered $150,000 for everything, and the auction was cancelled.



Montgomery Advertiser and State Gazette 26 Dec 1860




Circus by Zelda Fitzgerald

This oil on canvas painting, completed in 1938, is in the collections of the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. By this time Zelda was deep in the depths of her clinical depression and round-robin stays in various sanitariums. Perhaps the image is based on a memory of Zelda's about seeing the circus as a child in Alabama.






A circus parade on the square in Huntsville in 1913. In the left background is the First National Bank building supposedly robbed by Frank and Jesse James in 1876.






Legendary circus clown Emmett Kelly during a visit to Birmingham in 1955





Ringling Brothers Circus at Garrett Coliseum in Montgomery January 1958







Window of the New Idea Barbershop in Birmingham in 1937 as photographed by Arthur Rothstein. I've written a blog post about this photo here.





Gunther Gebel-Williams and his tigers with the Ringling Brothers Circus in Birmingham on February 10, 1979. He worked with the circus as an animal trainer from 1968 until 1990. 






Red Skelton in Birmingham at the Barnum Circus 10 February 1979





Elephants in the Dixie Circus performing at Garrett Coliseum in Montgomery 29 May 1970






Here's that ad I mentioned above for the Loomis Brothers circus. According to their web site, the circus has been touring for more than 20 years. 

Source: Pelham Reporter 31 October 2018, p. 1B




Remember those visits with the kids to the Ringling Brothers circus at the BJCC I mentioned?  I've got the ticket stubs. Dianne was pregnant with Becca during that first one in 1988.







Sunday, June 7, 2020

Alabama History & Culture News: June 7 edition




Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these articles are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!

Get an inside look at Alabama's 10 Natural Wonders 23 years later
Bartram's books about his travels around the south in the late 1700s provides us a glimpse of what Alabama and the southeast looked like 250 years ...

Montevallo celebrates community, history and nature through murals
Montevallo celebrates community, history and nature through murals. Move over Austin Texas. Check out Montevallo, Alabama's newest destination ...

Historic Theatres Among Businesses Damaged During Violent Protest
Cindy Mullins manages the Alabama and Lyric theatres, which were both hit. She said she was not surprised by the reaction of protesters, but she is ...

Journey through black history at these key places in Birmingham
Now, more than ever, is a time to educate ourselves on the history of black Americans, their ... Address: 520 16th St N, Birmingham, AL 35203

Brown releases book about her Bullock County ancestors
She knew her grandmother had one sister who lived in Montgomery, Alabama, named Arabelle. From time to time, her grandmother mentioned her ...

Davis credits small town for success in business, with best-selling book
Davis, a 1999 graduate of Holtville, attended the University of Alabama and began working at McKee and Associates where she was tasked with ...

OU professor's book runner-up for history journalism prize
The book covers how the high court overturned a libel suit filed by an Alabama police commissioner against The New York Times, freeing the ...


Winston Groom and Daniel Wallace contribute to 'Alabama Noir'
But the book “Alabama Noir” stalks a wooded golf course, traipses a rickety roadside attraction, ... “I love the books as a way to explore cities,” he said.

Mark Edwards: Dye's legacy reverberates in Auburn-Alabama annual game
Pat Dye, who died this week, made sure of that. You could make a case that he's the most influential figure in the history of the Auburn-Alabama game — ...

Alabama Theatre needs donations after damages from Sunday night
BIRMINGHAM, Ala (WIAT) — The historic Alabama Theatre in Downtown Birmingham has been around since 1927, but it's history didn't save it from ...


Auburn Legend, Pat Dye has passed away at the age of 80
... coaches in Auburn football history. His record on the Plains was 99-39-4. Among his achievements was moving the Iron Bowl game versus Alabama ...

The history of Birmingham monuments damaged during George Floyd protest
The Alabama Supreme Court in 2019 ruled that the city of Birmingham violated Alabama's monument protection law when it placed a plywood screen ...



As captain of the CSS Sumter and the better-known CSS Alabama, Semmes ... Veterans participated in a formal burial in Mobile's Magnolia Cemetery.

The harrowing true story of 'Just Mercy'
... writes in his 2014 book “Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption. ... He also said the Alabama Bureau of Investigation threatened the death ...


Bubba Thompson of 'Cowboy Way: Alabama' Is a Doting Dad of Two Kids — Meet the TV Star's ...
... used the instant and unexpected fame that he got from "Sweet Home Alabama" and published a book addressing how a lady should be treated.

Friday, June 5, 2020

The 1934 Lois Wilson Statue

In March 2015 I posted on this blog about Lois Wilson in the first of a continuing series about film actresses from the state whose careers started before 1960. Although born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1894, Wilson grew up in Birmingham and graduated from what is now the University of West Alabama. In 1915 after teaching for a brief period and then winning a beauty contest that made her the first Miss Alabama, she headed for Hollywood. 

Between 1915 and 1936 Wilson appeared in some 150 silent and sound films, mostly for Paramount. After 1936 she appeared in four more movies before retiring from films for good. She did perform on Broadway and in TV soap operas such as The Guiding Light [January 1954-December 1955] and The Secret Storm [1954]. She died in Reno, Nevada, on March 3, 1988. 

One of six films she made in 1934 was No Greater Glory. Directed by Frank Borzage, the movie is based on the 1906 novel The Paul Street Boys by Hungarian author Ferenc Molnar. The anti-war allegory follows two gangs of boys as they prepare to fight over an empty playground. Wilson plays the mother of one of the boys. Apparently, according to a New York Times article cited in the Wikipedia entry, the film was not a financial success. 

One viewer obviously taken with the film was George Bridges, a Birmingham sculptor. Bridges saw the film at a special preview at the Empire Theater and was so impressed by Wilson's performance he created this statue seen below.

Although born in Chattanooga, Bridges  spent much of his life in the Magic City. After World War I service he met and married Birmingham debutante Eleanor Massey. In 1921 the pair built a home in Homewood's Edgewood community that would serve as an artistic vortex for decades. They traveled far and wide from Paris to Greece and Morocco, but they always returned to host the salons at their home. Among other efforts, the city's Little Theatre originated in discussions there. 

Bridges' best known work is the Brother Bryan statue in Five Points South. He also created the monument to Tom Talbot, founder of the International Association of Machinists in Grant Park in Atlanta. Bridges died in 1976. Eleanor, herself a prolific painter, continued as an artistic and civic whirlwind until her death in 1987. Their pink stucco house remains in private hands; you can see many historical photographs of the house and Eleanor and George and their works here. You can read about the recent threats to the house and efforts to save it here.

Lois Wilson is described in the caption as "Birmingham's first picture star" and in "her greatest role in years" in this film. I wonder what happened to the statue?

See below for a bit more about Wilson. 




Source: Birmingham News 4 May 1934 via Newspapers.com



Source: Wikipedia




Lois Wilson in The Truth About the Movies edited by Laurence A. Hughes and published in 1924. Her statement is below.







In 1926 Wilson played Daisy Buchanan in the first film version of The Great Gatsby released just a year after the novel was published. Like so many silent films, this one has not survived but a one-minute trailer does exist. Thus we have an Alabama actress playing a character based on Alabama native Zelda Fitzgerald

Source: The Film Daily 1926 via Media History Digital Library





Tuesday, June 2, 2020

That Time Princeton Came to Marion, Alabama

Before he became Governor of New Jersey and then President of the U.S., Woodrow Wilson served as President of Princeton University from 1902 until 1910. He had graduated from the school in 1879 and received a PhD from Johns Hopkins in 1886. For the next sixteen years he taught at the college level and wrote books on history and political science. 

Wilson was a southerner by birth; born in Virginia, his family spent his early years in Augusta, Georgia, and South Carolina. That background may be why Wilson accepted an invitation that brought him to Marion, Alabama, in 1905. A Marion Military Institute web page tells us

"Woodrow Wilson is responsible for the current MMI colors and mascot. Wilson, then president of Princeton University, was the Government Day Speaker at the Institute in 1905. Following his speech, MMI’s colors were changed to orange and black and the athletic teams were called the “Tigers” in honor of Wilson and Princeton University."

At the time Marion was not the Perry County seat; that change from Perry Ridge  happened in 1909. At the time Wilson spoke the town had a population of about 1700. Marion Military Institute is one of only five military junior colleges in the U.S. and the oldest, founded in 1887. Over 200 graduates have become generals or admirals.

I did not find any more information about Wilson's visit; i assume the Institute's archive might have further information. Local or other newspapers in the state may have covered it. As far as I could determine, Wilson did not visit the state another time. Wilson Dam near Muscle Shoals is named after him, and what is now Linn Park in downtown Birmingham was previously known as Woodrow Wilson Park.

At one point William Howard Taft served as President of the MMI Board of Trustees. Maybe one day I'll cover his visit to Birmingham




Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924), Class of 1879.
Sidney Edward Dickinson (American, 1890-1980). Oil on canvas, 1929,  Princeton University, gift of William Church Osborn, Class of 1883, and friends. Photo: Bruce M. White




Marion Military Institute in 1907




Marion Military Institute postcard from the 1930's showing another view of the administration building






Football team at Marion Military Institute in 1912






Monday, June 1, 2020

Alabama History & Culture News: June 1 edition




Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these articles are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!



Tuskegee Airmen Nurse Second Lt. Irma “Pete” Cameron Dryden Celebrates 100th Birthday
“The Tuskegee Airmen were not the only ones making history at Tuskegee Army Air Field (TAAF) in Tuskegee, Alabama, during the 1940s,” read a ...

A Southern Vanguard
Mary Stanton's new book, Red, Black, White: The Alabama Communist Party, 1930–1950, helps recover this history through the story of one of the ...

What do you know about Birmingham's Quinlan Castle? Its history might surprise you.
By the year 1998, it was included on the Places in Peril list of the Alabama Historical Commission. Beginning in 1999, there were varying proposals of ...


Alabama quarterback Joe Namath poses with an Orange Bowl football at practice ... In 1963, Alabama went 9-2, losing to Florida and Auburn by a total of six ... after her husband's funeral at Elmwood Cemetery in Birmingham on Jan.

DON NOBLE: Children's book shows power of humanitarian spirit
Irene Latham is one of Alabama's foremost poets and the author of the novel “Leaving Gee's Bend,” and many picture books for children.


Book Reviews — Alabama missionary Addie Cox 'lit a fire' with stories from China
She also wrote a book about the history of Woman's Missionary Union — “We've A Story to Tell (125 Years of WMU) Woman's Missionary Union.”.

Book Reviews — Alabama missionary Addie Cox 'lit a fire' with stories from China
Other books on missionary work. Many more books are available detailing the stories of missionary heroes, including those by Alabama's own Rosalie ...


Can you name Alabama's 10 Natural Wonders? See how a movement was born
Much of the data and research for his book came from his initial work on the Natural Wonders Campaign. Developing Natural Wonders Champions. Yes ...

Lord Remember Me: Archiving Alabama's Folklife
Food for Thought 2012. 2 / 12 Alabama Department of Archives & History · 54:58. Portraits of Conflict: A Photographic History of Alabama in the Civil ...

Public Library Highlights The History Of Nursing In Alabama
Public Library Highlights The History Of Nursing In Alabama. In the early days of Birmingham, hospitals and infirmaries were being established and so ...

Maigen Sullivan awarded the 2020 Society of American Archivists Innovator Award for Invisible ...
... preserve and make accessible the LGBTQ history of the Deep South. ... collections of LGBTQ historical documents from Alabama, dating from 1912 ...

"The Cat Man of Aleppo" By: Irene Latham and Karim Shamsi-Basha
Irene Latham is one of Alabama's foremost poets and the author of the novel “Leaving Gee's Bend,” and many picture books for children. Her co-author ...

ALABAMA CEMETERY LAWS AND LEGISLATION
Existing laws concerning the use, care and protection of cemeteries are ... to Alabama's cemeteries, including penalties for desecrating grave sites.


Book review: 'Overturning Brown'
The founding director of the Alabama Civil Liberties Union, Suitts began his career as a staff writer for the Selma Project. A longtime adjunct professor at ...

Journey by the Book: Travel to Alabama and Portugal From the Comfort of Home
Photography books allow readers to visit the Shrine of the Blessed Sacrament in Hanceville, Alabama (clockwise from top left), as well as Fatima ...

Perdido Vineyards the first winery to open in Alabama since prohibition
PERDIDO, Ala. (WKRG)- Today is National Wine Day and there is one winery in Baldwin County that holds an authentic history. When prohibition ...

Alabama's Pop Culture Museum is a Wonderland of Nostalgia
You can email Hollis1963@aol.com or call 205-648-6110 to book your visit! Featuring old board games, lunch boxes, classic cartoon characters and ...

Mullen publishes first novel
“I would place this book squarely somewhere between Southern Gothic, tragedy, coming of age, black humor and satire. The basic premise of the novel ...
[Tristan Mullen, "Freddie and Andrew", set in Demopolis