Monday, October 30, 2006

Ringling-Barnum Circus 1941 #16

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Another clothes line?

GaryHill said...

Dutchess, it is called the backyard for a reason. LOL!

Anonymous said...

I know that Gary. Some one posted a comment several weeks ago that stated hanging clothes on a line at the circus was a NO NO. I have counted three different times where there were clothes lines tied on the guy lines. I hung many a pair of skivies and ballet slippers on these lines myself. No one ever told me not to. You have been making your self scarce lately, Missed ya.

GaryHill said...

Been inhaleing too much hoof smoke!

Anonymous said...

I have no idea what shows Rebecca has been on, but I can assure you that in the days when the circuses that I grew up on it was a NONO and if the shows you traveled with it was allowed it certainly should not have been. I can well imagine the reaction of Mr. V [Cliff Vargas] seeing something like your skivies promenently displayed.

Anonymous said...

There are three different circus pictures taken on different circuses and different years. One showing skivies. Not mine. So it was done. NO NO or Not. Where did you hang your laundry? I know there were no laundry matts way back then.

Anonymous said...

Ringling-Barnum 1941------Daily Bros 1949-------Bertram Mills 1930------Ringling-Barnum 1941 #9 Skivies in plain sight. They may not have been HOYTY- TOYTY. but they were wonderful clean people.

Anonymous said...

I can well imagine on any of the shows Rebecca mentions what would have happened to her laundry when the boss cavasman with crew guying out the top would have come to those guy lines. Yes before cable, vinyl and nylon straps they used to guy out the top twice a day.

Anonymous said...

On the railroad shows you left your laundry on your bed in the morning and when you came to the train at night it would be on your bed nicely packaged and startched. The head porter took care of that and by the way when tou woke up in the morning there would be your shoes nicely shined. I remember a clothes line I carried that tied off the rear view mirror to wherever that MR hung diapers, etc. It wasn't easy that's for sure. Laundry mats sure made a difference.

Anonymous said...

Someone had tied a clothes line between the guy ropes of the Beatty-Cole Big Top, and had hung out an entire uniform of Mr. Beatty's. He normally had his matinee uniform hung out to dry, and if it wasn't stained, he'd wear it again for the night show. The guy-out gang came through and the pristine whites were in the dust in a heap. Big Top guy ropes aren't good for stringing clotheslines.

Hoover had (Cindy Potter, correct me if I'm wrong) 4 or 5 55-gallon drums of water per day for his Cat Dept. I washed my clothes out of them and one day was challenged by the Water Wagon guy. Since Ned and I turned these drums over every closing night, with plenty of water left, and since clothesline are a traditional element of any circus backyard, I politely responded to the Water Wagon guy, and up went my clothesline on every lot.

24-HOUR-MAN said...

Trudy & I did the Kimris Act at the fair in Greenville S.C. and Stebbing Circus was set up just across the midway, all the performers were bitching because Billy wouldn't let them hang out their laundry, or let there dogs run loose. I was amazed that they even had to be told not to do those things. And at that time the were coin laundries.