Cheerful Gardner at left and Emory Stiles at extreme right. |
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
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7 comments:
In that day and age, was there alot of professional jealousy and jockeying to get on bigger better shows, or did most of the elephant men get along?
At one point the Sells-Floto, Hagenbeck-Wallace and John Robinson elephant herds all shared the same elephant barn during the winter in Peru.
I would be surprised if there wasn't some sort of competitive agitation.
Would the corporations like this or even the more modern Beatty, King, and Sells, have something like a captain of the captains that made most of the decisions as far as what elephants went where and with who? Or were the herds considered to belong to the show that they were on?
The American Circus Corporation was a very well organized operation.
Rarely were elephants swapped around. An exception might be if a show was taken off the road, the elephants would be absorbed into the remaining shows.
Buckles,
I like "competitive agitation" plus it is easier to say than "Gold medal shit stirring." May I use it now and again, if I credit you. LOL
Wade Burck
Looks like "Laughing George Davis" cookhouse operator next to Gardner. My Dad told me that as a young punk in Peru Quarters Louie Reed was the head elephant honcho and Jules Jacqot was the cat honcho. I could be wrong about my memory, but I guess it could be. Seems like someone would be the lead, so to speak. On a smaller scale would be Rex and Beatty-Cole, King Bros. and Sells-Gray.
The man next to "Laughing George" is John West, don't know what he did.
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