Friday, July 31, 2015

In Search of Eden - Chapter 3


The Circus Menagerie                                   


Before zoos began to develop in North America, there was the circus menagerie. Traveling, tented circuses became popular in America in the early years of the nineteenth century, and their story was chronicled in William Cameron Coup’s 1901 book, Sawdust & Spangles: Stories & Secrets of the Circus. Coup was born in 1837 and ran away to join the circus as a teenager. He was an eye witness to its early history, which he wrote about in his book.
The circus and the menagerie, in those days, were separate and distinct attractions and, while the menagerie had the greater drawing power, it was only exhibited in the daytime. The circus, on the other hand, was presented at night. In the 1850's, according to Coup, proprietors began to merge and exhibit circuses and menageries together and their popularity exploded.
The supply of rare and exotic creatures for these traveling menageries fueled a robust, international trade in animals. According to Coup, there were at least two features of the animal business before the turn of the twentieth century which were seldom exaggerated. These features were the huge cost of stocking a menagerie and the danger inherent in the capture and handling of the wild animals. Coup found it thrilling to consider “the lives that have been lost, the sufferings and hardships endured, the perils encountered, and the vast sums of money expended in the capture and transportation of wild animals for the menageries, museums and zoological gardens”.
After he became the head of a circus, Coup had extensive dealings with the Reiche Brothers animal importers. Charles Reiche ran the New York office while his brother, Henry, operated a large supply farm in Germany that handled animals from around the world. Their most extensive field operations were in Africa where they had numerous stations, with sheiks or chiefs in their employ, and standing rewards offered to natives for choice specimens of rare birds or beasts. 

Jumbo
One of the most famous circus menagerie animals of all time was killed at 9:30 in the evening on September 15th, 1885 when Jumbo the elephant was struck by a freight train while crossing the tracks in St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada. Jumbo’s story began twenty-four years earlier in Northern Africa when he was captured, sold to an animal dealer, and transported across the Mediterranean. He spent time at the zoo in Paris and, in 1865, he was shipped to England where he became a popular fixture at the London Zoo. He eventually reached a height of about twelve feet at the shoulder and a weight of about seven tons.
In 1881, Jumbo came to the attention of circus magnate P.T. Barnum. Jumbo's size had become
legendary and Barnum wished to acquire the largest elephant in the world. He purchased Jumbo from the zoo for ten thousand dollars. In March of 1882, after considerable difficulty, Jumbo was packed into an enormous crate and left England for America. He arrived in New York on April 9th with much fanfare, and the next day he was displayed at Madison Square Garden. Jumbo spent the next three years crisscrossing the Continent, transported in his own train car. He drew huge crowds for Barnum, even though he performed no tricks like the other elephants – merely his presence was enough.

From Circus to Zoo
By the turn of the twentieth century, circus menageries were the primary animal exhibitors in America. Few American zoos had large animals, like elephants, since most zoos were little more than deer parks. Circuses had far better collections and, of course, reached larger and geographically broader audiences. In fact, the first elephants, lions, rhinos, and hippos at many early American zoos came from circuses, and the zoo enclosures these animals entered were eerily like the ones I encountered at the beginning of my career at the old Toronto Zoo, nearly seventy years later.

Next #FridayBlog - the Toronto Zoo, Frank Buck, and "Bring Em Back Alive"

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