Monday, December 10, 2007

H-W- Ready for Parade 1930's #4


Scan000010579 - Copy, originally uploaded by bucklesw1.

A confirmed glutton for punishment, I shall now proceed to identify these wagons, beginning with "The Lion's Bride Tableau".

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Buckles,
Boy is this wagon a beauty. What color was it, and where did it eventually go?
Wade Burck

Anonymous said...

Dear Buckles- In answer to Wades question it was (is) painted red with silver trim. It carries the number 37 and is presently on loan to CWM in Baraboo.
Steve

Anonymous said...

Sterve,
Thank you for the prompt reply. I was in Baraboo this summer, and don't recall ever seeing this beauty. What does the term "on loan" mean when talking about the circus wagon's.
Wade Burck

Buckles said...

It means that the rightful owner doesn't know what it is or what to do with it.

Anonymous said...

Since photos of the other wagons on loan have been explained--Feld has them on loan to CWM--it might be of interest to those that don't know that these wagons were all once at the Ringling Museum. When Chappie Fox left CWM to head Circus World, he knew that there might be a case of no clear title to the wagons at the Ringling Museum. The compromise resulted in the group being split with some clearly staying at the Ringling Museum (not on loan) and Chappie getting the others fulfilling his need for some historic wagons at Circus World. He'd been so successful in gathering all the known (and many previously unknown!) surviving parade wagons that this was the tact he took.
Dick Flint
Baltimore

Anonymous said...

Dick,
Thank's for the info. Does Feld own "all" the wagon's that we see today? Would you have a list/pictures of what they are, if it isn't too extensive? I alway's udnderstood that he owned just the "nursery rhyme" wagon's. Why didn't we see this one on exhibit at Baraboo? Thank's for your time once agian.
Wade Burck

Anonymous said...

Wade, not every wagon in the Circus World Museum collection is on display. The Deppe Wagon Pavilion and the Fox Wagon shop do not have sufficient space to display everything.

Anonymous said...

The people of Florida got robbed of their wagons. McKennon got no support or funding to try to keep these at the Ringling. You can still find copies of his account "Rape of an Estate" from time to time on E-bay. Betty Jean DeFazio may have copies of it also.

Anonymous said...

From Eric:

The carving on the right appears to have been inspired by a famous Victorian-era print called "The Lion's Bride." In 1919, C.B. DeMille recreated this in his film MALE AND FEMALE using Gloria Swanson and a real lion.

Anonymous said...

John,
Where do they keep the additional wagon's, and how do they decide which to put on display, and which to keep in storage? Thank's for the information. Wade Burck