Tuesday, March 14, 2017

#2 More Elephants


5 comments:

Harry Kingston said...

Capt Fred C Logan, one of the best in the business and Harry Locker another long time friend.
Harry was manager of the ringling retirement center in Florida up near the panhandle way the heck out in the woods.
Bill Biggerstaff and I got the grand tour of it and too our amazement was an old lettered Beatty Cole semi.

JIM ELLIOTT said...

That Semi was mine at one time, Harry. I bought #61&#62 along with the old Donnicker Wagon from Johnny Pugh a LONG time ago. I enturn, sold one of the Elephant trailers and the Donnicker Wagon to Ted Svertsky. Eventually I sold the other Elephant Semi to Circus Pages. Ted sold the Donnicker Wagon to someone and Patty finally scrapped the semi. Pages used the other semi for hay storage for years and finally sold it to a scrap dealer about. Those two Elephant Semi's originated on Dailey Bros. Circus.

Harry Kingston said...

Jim,
Thank you a million as I like circus history and you made my day by the history on the Beatty Cole semi trailer.
Now this is what Buckles blog is all about and you added to it today.
And going back to Dailey Bros they must have seen good use though the years.
I enjoyed going through the D R Millers scrap yard at his winter quarters and seeing all those old trailers still lettered from shows long since gone with the wind.
Ted Bowman told me some Dailey Bros railroad show stories about what went on.
Universol circus played here one time and went out to see the set up and met the 24 hour man and he showed me the old Beatty Cole ticket wagon semi they were given from Pugh as they had bought some other semi's from him.
He told them if you could get it out of where it was it was there's free.

Roger Smith said...

HARRY'S story coincides with what Johnny Pugh told me about the ill-advised sale of the DeLand Winterquarters by his ex-partner Doug Holwadel. Johnny raced back from the show to re-buy what he could, but some new property owners wouldn't sell. The Beatty-Cole quarters was then so reduced, as Johnny said, "We have to move something to move something." One might see that if you could get a semi out of there, you could have it.

Harry Kingston said...

Doug Holwadel, he was something else but a real business person and all those cases in the back of his Lincoln car.
To me he had attitude problems as the way he acted and hell I just told him did I do anything wrong or what and he said Harry that is just me and do not worry about it as you are always welcome on Beatty Cole.
We took him out to a well know Cajun eatery and they played that bayou music.
He stared drinking and I learned more about Beatty Cole than I needed to know.
He wanted to go back by the lot and see as it had rained hard. Doug was all decked out and looked like he was ready for a golf game.
Well Jean Hecker was laying it out in the dark and Doug was not happy with what Jean had done.
Well I knew Jean for years and had helped him layout lots before.
Well Doug came to me and told his story about Jean.
Then Jean came to me and told me about Doug was not happy.
I told my wife that Doug owned half of Beatty Cole and he could lay it out any darn way he wanted to.
What a show it was as both were real HOT under the collar.
But the next day my wife and I had a great time on Beatty Cole and all worked out great and Doug gave us the VIP treatment.
I bet Johnny Pugh was darn glad to get Doug out of the picture.