The Old Showmen, and The Old London Fairs
The Old Showmen, and The Old London Fairs
The Old Showmen, and The Old London Fairs
AND THE
BY
THOMAS FKOST,
AUTHOB OF
LONDON :
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTEE II.
CHAPTER III.
PAGE
Strolling the Seventeenth Century
Players in Southwark
Fair Bartholomew Fair Pepys and the Monkeys Poli-
chinello Jacob Hall, the Eope-Dancer Another Bearded
Woman Richardson, the Fire-Eater The Cheshire
Dwarf Killigrew and the Strollers Fair on the Thames
The Irish Giant A
Dutch Eope-Dancer Music
Booths Joseph Clarke, the Posturer William Philips,
the Zany William Stokes, the Vaulter A
Show in
Threadneedle Street . . . . .36
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
PAGE
A new Race of Showmen Yeates, the Conjuror The Turkish
Rope-Walker Pan and the Oronutu Savage The Cor-
sican Fairy Perry's Menagerie The Riobiscay and the
Double Cow A Mermaid at the Fairs Garrick at Bar-
tholomew Fair Yates's Theatrical Booth Dwarfs and
Giants The Female Samson Riots at Bartholomew
Fair Ballard's Animal Comedians Evans, the Wire-
Walker Southwark Fair Wax-work Show Shuter, the
Comedian Bisset, the Animal Trainer Powell, the Fire-
Eater Roger Smith, the Bell-Player Suppression of
Southwark Fair . .147
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
PAGE
Performer Oxberry, the Comedian James Wallack
Last Appearance of the Irish Giant Miss Biffin and the
Earl of Morton Bartholomew Fair Incidents Josephine
Grirardelli, the Female Salamander James England, the
Flying Pieman Elliston as a Showman Simon Paap,
the Dutch Dwarf Bollard's Menagerie A
Learned Pig
Madame Gobert, the Athlete Cartlich, the Original
Mazeppa Barnes, the Pantaloon Nelson Lee Cooke's
Circus The Gyngell Family .
.
\ . . . .213
CHAPTEE X.
CHAPTEE XI.
CHAPTEE I.
century.
The description of this fair will serve, in a great
"
One cried ribs of beef, and many a pie ;
insignificance ;
but the others survived to a very
recent period in the sheep and cattle fair, held in
latter times on the 2nd of October and the two
it.
According to the report made by the city
solicitor to the Markets Committee in 1840,
" at the
zens of that City for the time being and for ever,
the town of Southwark, with its appurte-
1"
nances.
The origin of Camberwell Fair is lost in the mist
of ages. In the evidence adduced before a petty
sessions held at Union Hall in 1823, on the subject
of its suppression, it was said that the custom of
(
holding it was mentioned in the Domesday Book/
but the statement seems to have been made upon
insufficient grounds. It commenced oh the 9th of
family.
The ceremonies observed in opening fairs evince
"
What should my knave advance
To draw this company ? He hung out no banners
Of a strange calf with five legs to be seen,
Or a huge lobster with six claws."
presently to be quoted.
We cannot suppose absent from the metropolitan
fairs the celebrated performing horse, Morocco, and
of whom Sir Walter Raleigh says,
his instructor,
" If Banks had lived in older
times, he would have
shamed all the enchanters in the world ;
for who-
soever was most famous among them could never
master or instruct any beast as he did." That
down unto it, and not this only, but also to rise
time looks very fair, and puts out her best clothes,
with the wrong side outward, so turned for their
better turning off; and Cloth Fair is now in great
me!"
The puppets and "motions" alluded to in the
lows :
D2
CHAPTEE III.
as a craftsman.
Southwark ;
the fiddlers and the ballad- singers
" I saw in
Southwark, at St. Margaret's Fair,
monkeys and apes dance, and do other feats of
activity, on the high rope ; they were gallantly clad
a la monde, went upright, saluted the company,
bowing and pulling off their hats ; they saluted one
another with as good a grace as if instructed by a
"
Sept. '2. To Bartholomew Fair, and our boy with
us, and there showed him the dancing on ropes, and
several others the best shows."
" 7. With Sept.
Creed walked to Bartholomew this being the
Fair,
last day, and there saw the best dancing on ropes
I
"
dancer, Jacob Hall. August 27. With my wife
and W. Batelier and Deb. ; carried them to Bar-
tholomew Fair, where we saw the dancing of the
" 29. Met
ropes, and nothing else, it being late."
my wife in a coach, and took her and Mercer [her
maid] and Deb. to Bartholomew Fair; and there
did see a ridiculous obscene little stage-play called
Marry Audrey [Merry Andrew], a foolish thing,
but seen by everybody and so to Jacob
: Hall's
wards, as we shall
presently find
Pepys doing,
drinking in a public-house with a rope-dancer,
reputed to be the paramour of a lady of rank, whom
our supposed secretary may have met the evening
before at Buckingham Palace.
"
Pepys relates that he went, in the same year, to
Southwark Fair, very dirty, and there saw the
And the Old London Fairs. 45
'
moirs was engraved from an unnamed picture by
Van Oost, first said to represent the famous rope-
dancer by Ames, in 1748.
A passage in one of Davenant's poems affords
some information concerning the character of the
shows which formed the attraction of the fairs at
this period.
"
Now vaulter good, and dancing lass
On rope, and man that cries, Hey, pass !
day.
Among the shows of this period was another
bearded woman, whom Pepys saw in Holborn, to-
And the Old London Fairs. 47
Dyan ;
about forty years old ; her voice like a little
girl's ;
with a beard as much as any man I ever
any part of her, onely the head, yet she hath all her
senses to admiration, and discourses, reads very well,
" At Mr.
Saury's, a Dutch-woman's Booth, over
against the Greyhound Inn, in West Smithfield,
during the time of the fair, will be acted the
E 2
52 The Old Showmen^
houses afforded."
54 The Old Showmen,
you must know there are customers for all these mat-
ters, and it wou'd be a pleasing sight cou'd we see
"
Be of your patron's mind whate'er lie says ;
monkey.
Clark was the "whimsical fellow, commonly
known by the name of the Posture-master," men-
tioned by Addison in the '
Guardian/ No. 102. He
was the son of a distiller in Shoe Lane, who
designed him for the medical profession, but a brief
experience with John Coniers, an apothecary in
Fleet Street, not pleasing him, he was apprenticed
to a mercer in Bishopsgate Street. Trade suited
him no better than medicine, it would seem, for he
afterwards went to Paris, in the retin-ue of the Duke
of Buckingham, and there first displayed his powers
60 The Old Showmen,
" THOMAS
DALE, Drawer at the Crown Tavern at
Aldgate, keepeth the TURK'S HEAD Musick Booth, in
Smithfield Bounds, over against the Greyhound Tnn
mediately.
On the 4th of June, in the following year, the
F 2
68 The Old Showmen,
slightest degree.
The theatrical booths attending the London fairs
stillborn child.
Bullock and Simpson, the former an actor of
some celebrity at Drury Lane, joined Penkethman
this year in a show at Bartholomew Fair, in which
Jephtha's Rash Vow was performed, Penkethman
playing the part of Toby, and Bullock that of
Ezekiel. Bullock is described in the pamphlet
attributed to Gildon as
" the best comedian who
has trod the stage since Nokes and Leigh, and a
fellow that has a very humble opinion of himself."
And the Old London Fairs. 79
part of Sparrow.
Penkethman from his salary as an
at this time,
siderable income.
" He is the darling of Fortuna-
Bill.
" And as no such Collection was ever shewn in
QUEEN/'
The proprietors of menageries and circuses are
jackal, but
''
a strange monstrous female creature "
defies recognition, even with the addition that it
performances."
Powell, the famous puppet-showman mentioned
Spectator/ in humorous contrast with the
(
in the
" At
Crawley's Booth, over against the Crown
Tavern in Smithfield, during the time of Bartho-
lomew Fair, will be presented a little opera, called
the Old Creation of the World, yet newly revived ;
with the addition of Noah's flood; also several
fountains playing water during the time of the play.
The last scene does present Noah and his family
had one muzzle and one iron chain, to hold that bear
without the water, and one long and strong cord to
hold the same bear when fishing in the river of
Thames."
Other mandates, relating to an elephant, were
issued in the same reign, in one of which it is di-
" that
rected, ye cause, without delay, to be built at
our Tower of London, one house of forty feet long,
and twenty feet deep, for our elephant ; providing
that it be so made and so strong that, when need be
it may be and necessary for other uses." We
fit
grancy.
In 1719, Bullock's name appears alone as the
Othello, etc.
The theatres at this time were closed during the
continuance of Bartholomew Fair, the concourse of
all classes to that popular resort preventing them
from obtaining remunerative audiences at that time,
while the actors could obtain larger salaries in
booths than they received at the theatres, and some
realised large amounts by associating in the owner-
ship of a booth. The Hay market company pre-
And the Old London Fairs. 97
cessively as a nuisance
;
and the county magistrates
then presented an address to the Crown, praying
for its suppression by royal proclamation. Pennant,
who says that he remembered the last May Fair,
describes the locality as ". covered with booths,
barrow.
1 '
He always finished his address by singing
this fag-end of some popular ballad :
Ti-tid-dy, ti-
green.
Fielding and Reynolds drew -their company from
the Haymarket, and produced the Beggars' Opera,
with "all the songs and dances, set to music, as
parts themselves.
Gates having joined Miller and Mills, Fielding
io8 The Old Showmen,
Pepys' time ;
the gentleman with the star on his
coat in Setchel's print was said to be Sir Robert
Walpole.
Gibber, Griffin, Bullock, and Hallam again ap-
representation.
Ryan, Laguerre, Chapman, and Hall gave what
appears a long programme for a fair, and suggests
more than the ordinary amount of " cutting down."
The performances commenced with Don John, in
which the libertine prince was played by Ryan, and
Jacomo by Chapman. After the tragedy came a
ballad The Barren Island, in which Hall
opera,
played the boatswain, Laguerre the gunner, and
Penkethmaii the coxswain. The performances con-
cluded with a farce, The Farrier Niched, in which
and to begin at six o' clock. Pit 2s. 6d. Gallery Is.
Tickets to be had at Mr. Chenevix's toy-shop, over
wife.
upon a bed.
An wax, a daughter of the famous Mrs.
artist in
"
Let tliis small monument record the name
Of Cadman, and to future times proclaim
pictures.
CHAPTEE VI.
where they
theatrical booth facing the hospital gate,
" To the
Nobility and Gentry, and to all who are
Admirers of the Extraordinary Productions of
Nature.
"There isbe seen in a commodious Apart-
to
MARIA TERESIA,
the Amazing CORSICAN FAIEY, who has had the
Honour of being shown three Times before their
Majesties.
"IJST She was exhibited in Cockspur Street,
Haymarket, at two shillings and sixpence each
Person; but that Persons of every Degree may have
a Sight of so extraordinary a Curiosity, she will be
shown to Gentry at sixpence each, and to
the
''
For the entertainment of all lovers and en-
couragers of the sword in its different uses, and for
158 The Old Showmen,
"
To be seen, at the Flying Horse, near the
London workhouse, Bishopsgate Street, from eight
in the morning till nine at night, the largest col-
lection of living wild creatures ever seen in Europe.
1. A beautiful large he-tiger, brought from Ben-
"To
be seen, at the White Swan, near the Bull
and Gate, Holborn, a collection of the most curious
living wild creatures just arrived from different parts
of the world. 1. A large and beautiful young camel
from Grand Cairo, in Egypt, near eight feet high,
though not two years old, and drinks water but once
in sixteen days. 2. A surprising hyaena, from the
coast of Guinea. 3. A beautiful he-panther, from
Buenos Ayres, in the Spanish West Indies. 4. A
young Riobiscay, from Russia : and several other
And the Old London Fairs. 161
with six legs and two bellies/' " the beautiful pan-
ther mare," "the noted fire-eater, smoking out of
red-hot tobacco pipes, champing lighted brimstone,
and swallowing his infernal mess of broth," "the
most amazing new English Cliien Savant," "the
little woman that weighs no more than twenty-
"
My master keeps me well, 'tis true,
And justly pays whatever is due ;
"
The time is approaching, if not already come,
That all British subjects may freely pass on ;
Make you pay for your passage, with all you bring near.
When once it is try'd, ever after depend on,
'Twill incur the same fate as on Finchley Common.
Give Csesar his due, when by law 'tis demanded,
And those that deserve with this halter be hanged."
"
singly as the director of the company of comedians
from both the theatres" that performed in the
concert-room at the Greyhound, while an advertise-
ment of one of the minor shows of the fair describes
ff
it as located in
George Yard, leading to Mr.
Shuter's booth." I have not, however, been able
" "
Ah, sir !
responded Shuter, shaking his head,
" looks
you must know, sir, that, three
are deceitful ;
" "
Now, your honour, what's the matter ?
"
On slender cord Volante treads ;
more surprised.
" To whom
my own company, than none can be
poorer/' replied Breslaw.
" This is a trick " exclaimed the in-
!
Mayor
dignantly.
" returned the " we live
Sir/' conjuror, by
tricks."
" On
the part of Mr. Ambroise, the manager of
the Ombres Ckinoises, will be performed all those
scenes which, upon repeated trial, have had a
"
It will make you laugh, it will drive away gloom,
To see how the egg it will dance round the room ;
192 The Old Showmen,
"
You are the Man !
'
man the card that they fix on, without asking any
century.
The good or evil arising from the amusements of
any can only be fairly judged by
class of the people
"
Saturday being Bartholomew Fair day, it was,
according to annual custom, ushered by Lady in
"
Let others boast of stature, or of birth,
This glorious Truth shall fill our souls with mirth :
'
That we now are, and hope, for years, to sing,
'
"
TOST Admittance to Ladies and Gentlemen, Is.
public.
" This
couple are, beyond contradiction, the
little
required."
Flockton died in 1794, at Peckham, where he
had lived for several years in comfort and respecta-
"
it, Muster Saunders," rejoined Kichard-
That's
" You did
son. pay me that money, and I was
never more surprised in my life and I mean to
;
Amphitheatre.
"I was passing down Great Surrey Street one
" when
morning," Davis is reported to have said,
just as I came to the place where the Riding
House now stands, at the corner of the
Magdalen as
they call it, I saw Master Saunders packing up his
The Old Showmen,
Q
226 The Old Showmen,
night/'
It is singular that Richardson does not mention
Carey, his chief actor, in this communication ; but
the words 'c
the whole of his family
" must be
sup-
posed to include Carey and, I believe, a daughter.
In every bill of the period the names of Mr. H.
pride to deserve."
The scenery of the drama comprised a Gothic hall
in the Baron's castle, a rocky pass in Calabria, a
covery.
Miss Biffin was still attending the fairs, painting
232, The Old Showmen,
Street. She
without the least symptoms of
will,
aquafortis
; put boiling oil in her mouth ! The
above are but a few of the wonderful feats she is
fore, for the first time that season; but when the
overture had been performed, and the occupants of
the gallery were beginning to testify impatience,
Elliston appeared before the curtain, looking grave
and anxious, as on such occasions he could look to
perfection.Evincing the deepest emotion, he in-
formed the expectant audience that the perfidious
Bohemian had disappointed him, and had not
arrived.
"
Here/' said he, producing a number of letters
scription :
with a panorama,
" taken from the
minating spot,
"
They are all sugar and brandy !
" The
strongest woman in Europe, the celebrated
French Female Hercules, Madame Gobert, who will
lift with her teeth a table five feet long and three
feet wide, with several persons seated upon it ; also
ternity, who
lacked means to pay for space and
furnish out a tempting display. The fronts of these
And the Old London Fairs. 251
carriage-way.
Then, with occasional distances of three or four
feet for footways from the road to the pavement,
regulations displeased.
The shows were very numerous this year. There
were four menageries, the proprietors of which are
not named in the newspapers of the day, which
inform us further that there was "the usual
velling Menagerie.
Wombwell never missed Bartholomew Fair, as
ground.
Atkins heard by some means of his rival's loss, and
s2
260 The Old Showmen,
ble situation.
"
The Piece concludes with the DEATH OF OESINA,
and the Appearance of the
ACCUSING SPIRIT!
" The Entertainments to conclude with a New
Comic Harlequinade, with New Scenery, Tricks,
OR, THE
DEVIL WILL HAVE HIS OWN.
" Daemon Amozor, after-
Luciferno, Mr. Thomas.
wards Pantaloon, Mr. Wilkinson. Daemon Ziokos,
afterwards Clown, Mr. Hayward. Violencello Player,
Mr. Hartem. Baker, Mr. Thompson* Landlord,
Mr. Williiii.*.Fisherman, Mr. Rae. Doctor Faus-
tus, afterwards Harlequin, Mr. Salter. Adelada,
afterwards Columbine, Miss Wilmot. Attendant
Daemons, Sprites, Fairies, Ballad Singers, Flower
Girls, &c., &c.
The Pantomime will finish with
A SPLENDID PANORAMA,
Painted by the First Artists.
cottage ;
the next scene was a castle ; the third was
another scene in the forest. The second act com-
menced with a scene of an old church and a market-
place. The second scene was a prison, and a ghost
appeared to the tune of the evening hymn. The
third scene was the castle that formed the second
scene in the first act, and the performance was here
enlivened by a murder. The fourth scene was rocks,
with a cascade, and there was a procession to an
unexecuted execution; for a ghost appeared, and
saved the Wandering Outlaw from a fierce-looking
headsman, and the piece ended. Then a plump
little woman He loves, and he rides away/
sang,
'
'
and no The little boy will stand on his
farther.
theatre."
At the show last mentioned was a man who
balanced chairs on his chin, and holding a knife in
his mouth, balanced a sword on the edge of the
''
painted, was inscribed, Nero, the Great Lion, from
Caffraria."
elephant is here ;
also the only lion and tigress in
one den to be seen in the fair, or I'll forfeit a thou-
"
sand guineas ! Walk up ! walk up !
be displayed :
278 The Old Showmen,
"MORE WONDERS IN
G. R.
being divided ;
such is the general outline of this
ELEPHANT,
Upwards of ten feet high ! ! Five tons weight ! !
injuries ;
in short, the sagacity and knowledge of this
extraordinary animal are beyond anything human
imagination can possibly suggest. He will lie down
and get up at the word of command, notwith-
standing the many fabulous tales of their having no
and replace it ;
and by the command of his keeper,
will perform so many wonderful tricks that he will
body, (which is
larger,) slenderness of the legs, and
lustre of the hair. The only one now alive in
England.
" Two
Zebras, one full grown, the other in its
infant state, in which it seems as if the works of art
282 The Old Showmen,
t(
The Coatimondi, or ant-eater.
" A of those extraordinary and rare
pair birds,
PELICANS of the wilderness ; the only two alive in the
three kingdoms. These birds have been represented
on all crests and coats of arms, to cut their breasts
they were well taken care of. The elephant, with his
head protruded between the stout bars of his house,
whisked his proboscis diligently in search of eat-
degree of intelligence.
" The " showed
keeper/' says Hone, every animal
And the Old London Fairs. 285
and the lion on his left, and, all three being thus
nursery.
" Of the beasts there is not room to say more than
that their number was surprising, considering that
they formed a better selected collection, and showed
in higher condition from cleanliness and good feed-
I now come
to the minor exhibitions, of which
the from Hosier Lane, where it stood at the
first
U
290 The Old Showmen ,
A l '
female giant was one of the attractions of this
printed bill :
u2
292 The Old Showmen,
" To
Sportsmen and Naturalists. Now exhibiting,
one of the greatest living natural curiosities in the
world ; namely, a thorough-bred chesnut MARE, with
seven legs four years of age, perfectly sound, free
!
Boston, in Lincolnshire/'
The next show announced, for one penny, " The
Black Wild Indian Woman The White Indian
Youth and the Welsh All Alive !
" There
Dwarf
was this further announcement on the outside :
" The
Young American will Perform after the Manner
of the French Jugglers at Vauxhall Gardens, with
Balls, Rings, Daggers, fyc" The Welsh dwarf was
William Phillips, of Denbigh, fifteen years of age.
The ((
White Indian youth )} was an Esquimaux ; and
the exhibitor assured the visitors upon his veracity
that the " black wild Indian woman
" was a Court
The girl, who had the flat nose, thick lips, and
his tiny legs, and held his head aloft with not less
marshal."
The next show was announced as an " exhibition
of real wonders," and the following bill was put
forth by its proprietor :
TOBY,
The Swinish Philosopher, and Ladies' Fortune
Teller.
Exhibition."
Richardson introduced this boy several seasons,
between the drama and the pantomime ; and became
so much attached to him that he directed, by his
Natural History."
Most of the shows enumerated in the list of 1828
attended Bartholomew Fair in 1830, and there were
a few additional ones, making the total number
about the same. They comprised the menageries
of Wombwell, Atkins, and Ballard, the first con-
" the Siam elephant, and the two
taining great
smallest elephants ever seen in Europe," and the
last offering an unique attraction in a seal,
pences.
In 1832, the charge for admission to Clarke's
circus was reduced from sixpence to threepence.
" The
performance began by tight-rope dancing
by Miss Clarke, with and without the balance pole,
(
through hoops, with flip-flaps/ standing on chairs,
&c. Slack-rope vaulting by a little boy named
Benjamin Saffery, eight years of
age ; he exhibited
several There was also some very
curious feats.
1
war-
bling and dancing, a real Indian executed the
dance of his tribe; the Chinese jugglers; and a
single string.
WombwelPs menagerie extended from the hos-
preserved."
Ana tlie Old London Fairs. 311
"
Let Albion's Fail* superior soar,
ing announcement :
not find it so
amusing himself.
day being The first
similarly dressed ;
and a constable on duty in High
Street, seeing a seeming policeman whom he did
32,6 The Old Showmen,
June, 1838.
J. M. MALLALIEU,
Supt.
ing all
expenses, and this sum was awarded to
Johnson and Lee but they did not apply for it, and
;
night.
Then came the principal booths, wherein eating
and drinking was the order of the day, and dancing
that of the night. The largest and best appointed
of these was the Crown and Anchor, well known to
fair-goers for half a century, the name of Algar
being "familiar in their mouths as household
words," as that of an experienced caterer for their
entertainment. There was a tolerable quadrille
band in attendance from eve till midnight, and, in
the best days of the fair, the sons and daughters of
the shopkeepers of the town and the farmers of the
z
338 The Old Showmen }
interests of trade, it is
quite clear that no prescrip-
tive right can be set up to commit any nuisance
z 2
34-O The Old Showmen,
though the fair had for many years been held 011
two days only, the charter by which it was held
allowed three days. Lee had taken care to obtain
a copy of the charter, and on the superintendent of
this time grown to be, not only the largest and best
EXTRAORDINARY PHENOMENON ! ! !
SMITHFIELD,
A FEMALE CHILD WITH Two PERFECT HEADS,
Named Elizabeth Bedbury, Daughter of Daniel and
Jane Bedbury, Born at Wandsworth, Surrey, April
17th, 1842. The public is respectfully informed
that the Child is now LIVING; and hundreds of
No Deception ;
if dissatisfied, the Money Eeturned.
Nelson Lee played a trick at Croydon Fair this
year which can only be defended on the principle
that "all is time."
Finding that the
fair at fair
"
Miss Hales and her Brother are here to be seen,
come let us visit the sweet lovely Queen ;
"
Here's the smallest of women creation can show,
"
Here's a silver-haired Lady, with skin white as snow,
Whose eyes are like rubies that roll to and fro !
" to us be of use
Exhibitions like this may
What a contrast of creatures this world can produce !
ejected. A
number of soldiers, witnessing the dis-
comfiture of their comrade, immediately rushed up the
and began an indiscriminate attack upon every-
steps,
3
thousands of pounds worth of property. Nelson
Lee, resisting with all his might the destruction of
had a rope made fast round his body,
his property,
by way of compensation.
separate them.
worthy of remark, in connection with the
It is
had attacked
first him. A
second partition was
ornithological beauties.
Proceeding to the larger mammals, the auctioneer
knocked down a male nylghau to Mr. Van Amburgh,
the great American menagerist, for twenty-six
-a
dog.
Tigers are little used as performing animals,
attract visitors.
night.
Fairs are becoming extinct because, with the
PAGE
Abbott's theatrical booth 358
Adams, the dancer 154
African dwarfs 80
Albinoes 295, 310, 313
Albion dancing- booth 263
Algar's dancing-booth 263, 328, 333, 355
Allen, the dwarf 205
Ambroise, the showman 189
Amburgh, Yan, the lion-tamer 260
American juggler 294
Annesley, Mrs., the dancer 164
Appleby, the showman 63
Arthur, the comedian 144
Astley, the equestrian 211
Aston, the comedian 109, 121
Atkins's menagerie 258, 277, 302, 304
23
Barnes, the showman 63
pantaloon 246
Barnett, Mrs., the actress 349
Basil, the showman 191
Baudouin, the comic dancer 131
380 Index.
PAGH
Bearded women 33,47
Belzoni's feats of strength 216
Berar's optiJcali illusio
Biffin, Miss, the armless portrait painter
Billington, the comedian
.... 311
210, 231
349
Birds, performing 178, 182, 188
Bisset, the animal trainer 177
Blacker, the dwarf 167
Blight, Helen, the lion- performer 337
Boh erne, the tragedian . 96
Booth, the theatrical manager 94
Bradshaw, Miss, the actress 144
Breslaw, the conjuror 187, 192
Bridge's theatrical booth 152, 163
Broomsgrove, the showman 313
Brown, the showman 272, 300
Brown's theatre of arts 315
Brunn, the juggler 189
Bullock, the comedian . .
.78, 95, 105, 107, 114, 119, 132
Burchall, the showman 314
Burnett, the trapezist 359
PAGE
Clarke, Miss, the rope-dancer 308
Clarkson, the showman 191
Clench, the whistling man 80
Coan, the dwarf 167
Cooke's circus 249
Corder, the murderer, head of 303
Cornwell, the showman 61
Corsican dwarf 155^ 188
Cousins's theatrical booth 154
Cow, a double 161
Cox, the comedian 37
Crawley, the puppet-showman 88
Crockett, the showman 341
Crocodile, the first exhibited 167
Crowther, the actor 322
Cushings, the pantomimists 150, 165
PAGE
Farnham, the dwarf 313
Faucit, the actor 221
Fawkes, the conjuror 110, 112, 117
showman 11(5, 123, 139, 150
Ferguson's wax-work exhibition 310
Fielding, the novelist . .
103, 107, 110, 113, 119, 124, 127
Finch, the posturer 313
Finley, the acrobat 73
Mary, the rope-dancer 73, 78
Fitzgerald, Mrs., the actress 110, 123
Fives Court drinking booth 333
Flemish giantess 47
Flockton, the juggler and showman . .
191, 200, 202. 206
Ford, the gingerbread vendor 99
Fossett's circus 358
Frano, MdUe. de, the dancer 131
Frazer, the conjuror 303
Frazer's acrobatic entertainment 341
Freer, the tragedian . 344
French, the single-stick player 158
.
.
....
96, 103, 109, 111, 114, 118, 137
182
Index. 383
PAGE
Harris, the showman 313
Hay don's theatrical booth 320
Heads, lecture on 186
Heidegger, Master of the Revels 139
Herring, the pantomimist 322, 336
Hewet, the comedian 109
Hilton's menagerie 336, 341, 359
Hilton, Miss, the lion-performer 336
Hind, the actor 121
Hippisley, the tragedian . 108, 110, 113, 119, 127, 132, 138, 143
Miss, the actress 162
Hipson, Miss, the fat girl 289
Hoare, the showman 243
Hocus Pocus,
Hog, enormous
the
.........
King's conjuror
....
..........
Inchbald, Elizabeth, the actress
Irish giant
.196
52
Italian rope-dancer 40
sword-dancers 154
Ives, the showman 191
pi.au
Ladder dance 85
Laguerre, the actor 119
Lane, the conjuror 191
Laskey, the showman 341
Lee, Nelson, the theatrical manager . 247, 254, 320,
. 346
Lee's theatrical booth . .
102, 106, 108, 111, 114, 119, 121,
132, 138, 152, 163
, unlicensed theatre . . 255
Legar, the actor . 132
Leigh, the comedian . 95
Leopard, escape of a . 232
a tame 287, 310
Leopards, performing 368, 371
Lincolnshire dwarf , 294
Lion, a tame 32, 274, 285
baiting with dogs 261
Lioness, escape of a 241
Lion-tiger cubs 277, 285, 304
Little, the comedian-hawker 324
Living skeleton, the 305
Lorenzo, the lion performer 368
Lorme, Madlle. de, the dancer 106
Luce, the dancer 106
PACE
Monkeys, performing . .
.20,
23, 40, 169, 178, 314
Monstrosities . 22, 32, 60, 161, 204, 217, 291, 310, 314, 346
Morgan, the comedian 121
Miss, the dwarf 205
Morgan's menagerie 287, 302
Morosini, the rope-dancer 115
Mullart, the tragedian Ill
Mussulmo, the rope-dancer 151
Mynn's theatrical booth 86
PAGE
Pig-faced lady 303, 305
Pigs, learned 178, 243, 297, 301, 314
Pike's theatrical booth 303
Pinchbeck, the mechanist . . .
110, 116, 123, 134, 139
Pinkethman, the puppet showman 83
Polito's menagerie 187, 209
Powell, the comedian 105
fire-eater 179
puppet showman .83
Price, the equestrian 309
Pritchard, Mrs., the actress . . . . . 1 13, 120, 127
Pullen's theatrical booth 105
Punch and Judy shows
Punchinello, the puppet showman
Purden, Mrs., the actress
......
.......
27
29
121
.......
. . . . . . .131
104
105
the tumbler 149
,, Miss, the rope-dancer . . . . . .149
Reader, the showman .341
Reed, the actor 225, 317
Reed's theatrical booth 350
Reverant, Madlle. de, the rope-dancer
Reynolds, the comedian.
showman
......
......
. . . . .115
104, 106
151, 154
Richardson, the fire-eater 48
showman .
217, 230, 235, 239, 248, 264, 302,
306, 316
River, the tumbler . .115
Roberts, the tragedian 121
Roberts, Mrs., the actress 114
Robinson, the conjuror
Robson, the comedian .......
.
.....
Rose's, Miss, imitations of actresses
. . . . . . 191
.
356, 358
187
Rossignol, the bird trainer 188, 193
Roy, Madlle. le, the dancer
Rudderford, the mountebank
Ryan, the comedian
....... 131
50
95, 119, 127
VAGK
Samwell, the showman
the
.....
Saunders, Sarah, actress and acrobat
showman 209, 219, 221,
270, 309
323
231
Scotch dwarf
giant ..........
...... 303
61
Serpents, performing
230, 316
349
190
Settle, the dramatist 86
the harlequin
Shuter, the comedian
........
Shaw, Miss, the beautiful albino
.... .
310
344
174, 179, 182
Silver-haired lady
Simmett, the showman
Simpson, the vaulter
........ 301, 351
313
80
Skeleton, the living 305
Slater, Miss, thecolumbine 349
Smith, the hand-bell ringer 179
Spanish youth, wonderful 61
Spellman, Mrs., the actress
Spiller, the comedian
Mrs., the actress
........ 110
PAGE
Walker, the comedian 94
Wallack, the actor 221
Walpole, Lydia, the dwarf 290, 313
Warner's theatrical booth 150, 163, 174
Waterloo giant 299
Wax-work exhibition, the first 31
Webber, Eliza, the dwarf 313
Wells, the actor 225
Welsh dwarf 167
Weston, Priscilla and Amelia, the twin giantesses . . .313
Whitehead, the fat boy 298
Whiteland, the dwarf 203
Wignell, the poet 179
Williamson, Mrs., the actress 109
Wombwell's Menagerie 257, 273, 302, 305, 307, 310, 337,
.
341,
THE END.