John Ringling - Ringling Brothers Birth site

John Ringling - Ringling Brothers Birth site John Ringling was born here in May 31 1860's. He later died of pnemonia later in life. In New York. Built and a mansion in Florida.

The first circus was here as children. first tent circus was later down town Mc Gregor in what was the sand lot.

The sandlot where the Ringling brothers had there first đŸŽȘ tent circus. MC Gregor, iowa
03/17/2025

The sandlot where the Ringling brothers had there first đŸŽȘ tent circus. MC Gregor, iowa

03/17/2025

So glad to see I got my page back. I wasn't ignoring any of you.. someone messed with everything.

06/20/2024

Hey, does any one have any old banners? I don't mind if they need touch up. I can do that. I would just like some for display at the house.

Interesting.
04/24/2024

Interesting.

Blends interviews with historians, the stories told by descendents of homesteaders, and dramatic readings from pioneer diaries & letters to paint a picture o...

By accident my grandson put ashes in the wrong black container with a lid. I am so happy my daughter and grandkids got o...
12/09/2021

By accident my grandson put ashes in the wrong black container with a lid. I am so happy my daughter and grandkids got out in uninjured. There is a fire fund at central state bank in Marquette Iowa. You can also send money for me to the bank. I am going to need a small home to be built. On property I own next to it. Till Sunday I am at motel 6 in Prairie Du Chien Wisconsin.

A accident in places ashes in the wrong container started this fire on the outside of the Ringling's Birth-site. Please ...
12/06/2021

A accident in places ashes in the wrong container started this fire on the outside of the Ringling's Birth-site. Please donate so we can save it. Mostly the porch and kitchen were affected. Rest is water damage. A fire fund is set up at:
Central State Bank
Marquette Iowa. 52158

I love history!
11/01/2021

I love history!

Source: AT THE CIRCUS Practice Book Series by Rod Everhart, WJU #1351 The American circus is a unique form of entertainment that has been a key part of U.S. c

10/15/2019

I am feeling better. Thank you all fir the well wishes.

08/16/2019

I found this on line. Like the way it was wrote.

LOST MASTERPIECES
Before His Circus, P.T. Barnum Opened The World’s Craziest Museum In NYC
Allison McNearney
Updated 10.28.18 12:34AM ET Published 10.27.18 11:52PM ET

Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast
On July 13, 1865, the curtains went up on a spectacular show that was filled with all the strange sights and odd wonders for which the great entertainer P.T. Barnum had become known. This time, however, a veil of horror overlaid the drama.

At around 12:30 p.m., a fire was reported in the downstairs engineering rooms at Barnum’s American Museum.

In just forty minutes, the blaze ripped through the entire five-story structure and produced a scene straight out of a nightmare. While all the humans successfully escaped the burning structure, many of the animals, along with Barnum’s hoards of inanimate treasures, were doomed.

As crowds gathered outside the popular attraction, some of the animals who had not been confined to enclosures when the panic began attempted to jump out of burning windows.

Some got away; others were shot by waiting policemen. Those creatures locked in place—including a pair of white whales held in a giant aquarium—burned or boiled alive while certain members of the crowd who were not content to merely watch the spectacle indulged in a little looting.

“The fire which yesterday destroyed Barnum’s American Museum, while greatly injuring and materially impoverishing its enterprising and public-spirited proprietor, did a damage to this and the adjacent communities, which neither time nor money can replace,” read the lead of the piece that took over the entire front page of the New York Times on July 14, 1865.

WISHFUL THINKING
PT Barnum Makes Trump Look Like a Clown
Gil Troy

The Times was right that a national treasure and its many priceless curiosities had been utterly destroyed, but it proved wrong about the museum’s general irreplaceability.

A year later, Barnum would reopen in a new location, although it, too, burnt to the ground after only two years. It would be the third time that was the charm, but by then, Barnum’s American Museum had been overshadowed by his traveling circus.

While Barnum is best know as the godfather of the three-ring circus, he got his start in the world of fantastic sights and brazen humbuggery as a museum proprietor.

In 1841, when Barnum bought Scudder’s American Museum, he had lost his job as a lottery salesman and store owner and decided to try his hand full-time at the showmanship that seemed to come so naturally.

The Greatest Showman, the 2017 Hugh Jackman-led musical blockbuster, dramatized this early era of Barnum’s rise to fame.

What the film got right was that Barnum engaged in a little hoodwinking to acquire the money for his museum. But his machinations were a bit more complicated than passing off a drowned fleet of merchant ships as his own flotilla that still sailed the seas.

Barnum instead arranged to be hired as the manager of a rival institution, Peale’s Museum, under the condition that they would buy out Scudder’s, according to Eric D. Lehman in Becoming Tom Thumb.

Next, he went behind his new employer’s back and made a deal with Scudder’s that if the sale fell through, they would sell him their museum at a reduced cost. Once Peale’s defaulted, Barnum absconded from his new job with his early wages and acquired a stage of his very own.

Now that he had a five-story palace on the corner of Broadway and Ann Street in downtown Manhattan, Barnum set about building out his fantastic collection.

At this time, the concept of museums was still being established, and they were something of a catch-all for entertainment, education, and spectacle, or as the blog Messy Nessy Chic puts it, “museum/zoo/freak show/lecture hall/theatre/wax museum doesn’t even cover everything there was to see and do there.”

“There were displays of U.S. national history, exotic fossils and taxidermied specimens of natural history that were gathered from Barnum’s international travels”
In the over 20 years that the first and greatest iteration of Barnum’s American Museum entertained the New York masses, the top showman gathered wonders both real and concocted from around the world.

There were displays of U.S. national history (relics from the Revolutionary War and War of 1812), exotic fossils and taxidermied specimens of natural history that were gathered from Barnum’s international travels (think birds, insects, reptiles, and animals), and a collection of precious stones and rare coins. Wax figures of important historical characters were exhibited as well as newfangled inventions to delight the viewing public.

Barnum, the king of fabulist creations, also assembled a few more creative displays, like a fossil of a Feejee Mermaid that was really the head of a monkey sewn onto the tail of a fish.

Part and parcel of ginning up excitement (and entry fees) for the museum was creating an aura of skepticism around the novelties displayed. After all, if debate raged about the legitimacy of an outlandish new find, one should probably go check it out for herself.

Barnum was happy to join in the fun and plant a little counter-programming of his own. In the P.T. Barnum Reader, James W. Cook characterizes Barnum’s signature marketing move as, “If your product lacks a buzz, make one up. Invent expert testimonials. Pretend previous triumphs. and for the piĂšce de rĂ©sistance, hire fake rivals to accuse you of doing so.”

In addition to the exhibition halls, a carnival-esque atmosphere was created by way of a funhouse and performing animals (the museum served as something of a proving ground for the acts that would eventually go on the road in the circus). There were also live animals on display, including giraffes and the aforementioned white whales.

When not walking the exhibition halls, visitors who had paid a precious quarter to be shocked and awed by Barnum’s treasures could watch performances by glass blowers, magicians, fortune tellers, and that most despicable of 19th-century pseudoscientists, phrenologists.

Or they could enjoy the oyster saloon, rooftop garden, or museum shop, where they were welcome to bring in their beloved and recently deceased pets to be taxidermied. Barnum was a mastermind at wringing additional coins out of his patron’s pockets at every turn.

But not all was fun and games. The freakshow was becoming an integral part of American entertainment in the early 1800s, and Barnum, who became the godfather of mass entertainment in the U.S., eagerly gathered up his own troupe of performers. Today, many of his practices are seen for what they were: exploitative and often abhorrent.

Barnum’s early performers at the American Museum included the conjoined twins Chang and Eng, Charles Stratton, better known as the famous Tom Thumb, who began performing at the museum when he was only around five, but who was advertised as 11, and Josephine Clofullia, known as the Bearded Lady.

As Bowery Boys, a blog on the history of NYC, describes it, Barnum’s museum had the city’s “most famous, most imaginative and most politically incorrect attractions.”

Critics and even the public might have known that they were being duped by at least some of the “treasures” inside Barnum’s American Museum, but that didn’t stop it from becoming one of the must-visit attractions in the city.

The New York Mercury reported on December 8, 1860 that the museum was the “only place of amusement in America voluntarily visited by the Prince of Wales” during his trip to the states.

It also made Barnum a pretty penny, though he was quick to downplay his wealth. In a piece he wrote for the New York Atlas during his European travels in August 1844, Barnum immodestly described himself as a “decidedly modest individual” while at the same time boasting of his entertainment prowess and his success in business.

“I am determined to gratify my own pride and the pleasure of my patrons at the same time, by making that institution the most attractive and valuable establishment of the kind in the world”
He wrote, “While I neither now have, nor never expect to possess quite ‘enough’ [money], it is obvious that the pecuniary profits of the museum are small compared to what I can make in other ways
but I pledge my honor that I would give up all other hopes of emolument which I possess in the world, rather than part with the American Museum; for now, having secured an independence, I am determined to gratify my own pride and the pleasure of my patrons at the same time, by making that institution the most attractive and valuable establishment of the kind in the world.”

Just over 20 years later, this dream would go up in flames.

The cause of the fire has never been determined with certainty. In the days following the inferno, many blamed it on a faulty furnace in a neighboring building. (This explanation would in part lead Barnum to install a newfangled boiler in his second museum, which would tragically be the cause of that institution’s fiery demise.)

But with the hindsight of history, many suspect that the fire was deliberately set by a person or group in those early post-Civil War days who opposed Barnum’s abolitionist stance.

Barnum’s relationship to the fight to end slavery and to promote racial equality is a complex one. He got his start in the world of entertainment with a despicable and racist act; in 1835, he purchased an old woman who was blind and paralyzed and “exhibited” her for a small fee as a 160-year-old slave who used to be George Washington’s nanny.

And while he later advertised his museum as open to all, there is some evidence that African Americans were only allowed to visit during specific and separate times, at least until the 1860s, according to Lehman.

But his attitudes towards slavery began to change in the late 1850s, and in 1865, he campaigned to be elected to Connecticut’s Congress on an abolitionist platform.

Whether the tragedy was caused by a deliberate act of sabotage or one that was purely misfortune, Barnum responded like the entertainment visionary he was and refused to be stopped. He would go on to create new museums and the even more innovative traveling circus.

But Barnum’s first temple to curiosity and wonder set the scene for him to become the entertainment don that he was and it earned its own place in the annals of history.

As the New York Times wrote in its report of the fire: “Granting the innumerable sensations with which the intelligent public were disgusted and the innocent public deluded, and the ever patent humbuggery with which the adroit manager coddled and cajoled a credulous people, the Museum still deserved an honorable place in the front rank of the rare and curious collections of the world.

10/02/2018

Good morning everyone! Season is almost over for most. Hope it has been a good year for all! Please post who has started new shows this year and who has closed. I think it is important to keep better track.

04/01/2018

Happy easter from all of us at the Ringling brothers birthsite!

03/19/2018

Rest in peace Mr. paul Ringling. You will always be remembered by me. God bless you.

01/04/2018

As many of you know Nosey the elephant has not been retuned to her owners yet. The saddest thing is while the state has had custody they have managed to brake her tusk!. How I have no idea! I am worried if the elephant is not returned soon what will be come of Nosey? Nosey's family took great care of Nosey! They need to return Nosey to her family that can offer Nosey a great, safe place! I have seen their place in Flordia! It is large and Nosey can walk around freely there and not be scared!. Please god make the state return Nosey before she ends up sick or dead!

Thanks to all that took part in making this a great show!
01/01/2018

Thanks to all that took part in making this a great show!

01/01/2018
01/01/2018

Happy new year to everyone! Be safe out there! God bless you all!

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14463 Great River Road
McGregor, IA
52157

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