A man I never met, and still among the most respected I've known of. A story compares his management skills to another old-time boss. On a tough tear-down, an entire crew quit a boss who broke down and cried, begging the men to load the show. They did, but never respected that boss again. Another crew decided one night to walk out on Cap Curtis. He said, "You sons-of-bitches ain't quitting me." He took a tent stake, beat the crap out of a sufficient number of them for the others to get the idea, and made them go back to work.
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A man I never met, and still among the most respected I've known of. A story compares his management skills to another old-time boss. On a tough tear-down, an entire crew quit a boss who broke down and cried, begging the men to load the show. They did, but never respected that boss again. Another crew decided one night to walk out on Cap Curtis. He said, "You sons-of-bitches ain't quitting me." He took a tent stake, beat the crap out of a sufficient number of them for the others to get the idea, and made them go back to work.
Over the years I talked to a lot of oldtimers and they all mentioned that Cap Curtis was a dangerous man to cross.
I remember one morning on the Cole Show when an altercation broke out among the canvasmen and suddenly ended then I noticed Curtis holding a pistol.
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