Antique LIVING SKELETON Isaac Sprague CIRCUS SIDESHOW Freak Show CDV PHOTO

Antique LIVING SKELETON Isaac Sprague CIRCUS SIDESHOW Freak Show CDV PHOTO
Antique LIVING SKELETON Isaac Sprague CIRCUS SIDESHOW Freak Show CDV PHOTO

Antique LIVING SKELETON Isaac Sprague CIRCUS SIDESHOW Freak Show CDV PHOTO
Rare original antique cdv circus/sideshow photo of Isaac W. Sprague, billed as the “Original Thin Man” and Living Skeleton. The cdv is in good condition with some fading and light foxing to the photo and a little damage to the card on the backside. It measures approximately 4 1/8 inches by 2 1/2 inches and most likely dates to sometime around the 1870’s. Please look at the scans to further note the condition. Sprague (May 21, 1841 – January 5, 1887) was an entertainer and sideshow performer, billed as the living human skeleton. He was born on May 21, 1841, in East Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Although normal for most of his childhood, Sprague began irreversibly losing weight at age 12 after feeling ill after swimming. The weight loss continued throughout his life despite having a healthy appetite. His condition has been described by historians as extreme progressive muscular atrophy. This ultimately led to his death. Sprague bounced around from job to job during early adulthood. He worked as both a cobbler for his father and a grocer. However, his illness kept him from continuing down either of those career paths. His parents died and Sprague could not work enough to support himself, so he was left unemployed. In 1865, he was offered a job at a circus. Where he became known as “the Living Skeleton” or “the Original Thin Man”. The next year P. The director of the circus, hired Sprague to work at his (newly reopened and successful) American Museum Freak show. Sprague remembered the moment Barnum offered him the job: Mr. Barnum stood very near me, and I overheard him say to his agent,’Pretty lean man, where did you scare him up? Barnum’s Museum burned down in 1868 and Sprague managed to escape with his life. At this point, Sprague took time off to marry his wife, Tamar Moore. They had three sons who lived healthy, normal lives. Sprague made attempts to stay away from the sideshow, but he could not escape financial distress. It is rumored that in addition to being financially responsible for his wife and their three sons, Sprague had a gambling problem. His condition also kept him from finding real work anywhere other than Barnum’s, so he continued to tour off and on throughout the country and eventually overseas. By the age of 44, he was 5 feet and 6 inches (168 cm) tall with a weight of only 43 pounds (19.5 kg). Sprague’s condition required him to be constantly taking in nutrients. His health was in such a poor state that he often carried milk in a flask around his neck. He would sip this from time to time to keep himself up and conscious. He died on January 5, 1887, in poverty, of asphyxia. Sprague was the first of many more Living Skeleton acts to come. In a result of forced promotion and work pressure, it was not uncommon for the Living Skeleton act to marry the Fat Lady act.
Antique LIVING SKELETON Isaac Sprague CIRCUS SIDESHOW Freak Show CDV PHOTO

George Price The Living Skeleton- Scarce CDV of a Circus Sideshow Freak

George Price The Living Skeleton- Scarce CDV of a Circus Sideshow Freak
George Price The Living Skeleton- Scarce CDV of a Circus Sideshow Freak

George Price The Living Skeleton- Scarce CDV of a Circus Sideshow Freak
“George Price, The Living Skeleton”. A Scarce CDV of a Thin Man Sideshow Exhibit. Scarce CDV of George Price, ” The Living Skeleton” also know as George Prise, “The Living Skeleton” – Age 29 Yrs. 7 Inches Weight 40 lbs. Photographed by Star Photography Gallery, C. Weed, 120 Michigan Ave. Commercial Work A Specialty. A Scarce CDV of a Thin Man exhibit in near fine condition, with slight age toning with a printed mount as shown in the photographs. Circus Sideshow Freak – Dime Museum – P. Nsured with Signature Required. Rom a smoke free environment.
George Price The Living Skeleton- Scarce CDV of a Circus Sideshow Freak

John Logan Patching Up The Republican Jumbo Elephant Skeleton Circus Wagon

John Logan Patching Up The Republican Jumbo Elephant Skeleton Circus Wagon

John Logan Patching Up The Republican Jumbo Elephant Skeleton Circus Wagon
Antique Engravings, Prints, Maps and Newspapers sells only original/authentic material. Museums, Historical Societies, Universities, Educators, Movie sets. JOHN LOGAN PATCHING UP THE REPUBLICAN JUMBO ELEPHANT SKELETON CIRCUS WAGON MONKEY WHITELAW REID GEORGE HOAR. This genuine antique color chromolithograph is titled “AS NATURAL AS LIFE – PATCHING UP THE REPUBLICAN JUMBO FOR 1888″, published in PUCK, March 1886. This chromolithograph from the year of 1886 is a big 12 x 20 inches in size with wide margins. It is highly displayable, ready to frame, in very good condition and guaranteed to be as described. Puck was America’s first successful humor magazine and first magazine to publish color lithographs on a weekly basis. This beautiful and decorative antique chromolithograph would make a great addition to any Home, Office or Restaurant decor! I have provided Antique Engravings, Prints, Maps & Newspapers globally to museums, Institutions, art dealers, researchers, genealogists, movie sets, interior designers, curators, authors, knowledgeable collectors and beginners too. The comments buyers have made in my “feedback” file are an indication of the quality product and exceptional service I deliver. Authenticity of all items, as described in each listing, and the accuracy of that description, is guaranteed unconditionally. At your fingertips here at this website you have a gallery of many thousands of Antique Engravings, Prints, Maps and Newspapers. Find the subject matter you are looking for using my Store Search engine provided. Every item I sell is genuine/original, NOT reproductions and guaranteed to be as described. Thank you very much for taking the time to stop in and look at these remarkably well preserved historical relics of the past! About ENGRAVINGS PRINTS MAPS NEWSPAPERS. Add our store to your favorites to receive newsletters about new items & special promotions! Thank you For visiting our Store. Listing and template services provided by inkFrog. This item is in the category “Art\Art Prints”. The seller is “nls” and is located in this country: US. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
  • Material: Lithograph, Paper
  • Date of Creation: 1886
  • Year of Production: 1886
  • Subject: Politics, HISTORY
  • Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
  • ARCHIVES OF HISTORY, LLC: ORIGINAL AUTHENTIC MAPS ENGRAVING PRINTS
  • Features: ORIGINAL AUTHENTIC HISTORY, ORIGINAL AUTHENTIC ENGRAVINGS PRINTS MAPS
  • Theme: History
  • Type: Print
  • Style: VINTAGE

John Logan Patching Up The Republican Jumbo Elephant Skeleton Circus Wagon

Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO

Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO
Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO
Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO

Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO
Up for sale is this rare antique cdv photo of Isaac W. Sprague, the Living Skeleton. The cdv is in good condition with some light wear and a little fading to the photo. It measures approximately 4 1/8 inches by 2 3/8 inches. Please look at the scans to further note the condition. Sprague (May 21, 1841 January 5, 1887) was an entertainer and sideshow performer, billed as the living human skeleton. He was born on May 21, 1841, in East Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Although normal for most of his childhood, Sprague began irreversibly losing weight at age 12 after feeling ill after swimming. The weight loss continued throughout his life despite having a healthy appetite. His condition has been described by historians as extreme progressive muscular atrophy. This ultimately led to his death. Isaac bounced around from job to job during early adulthood. He worked as both a cobbler for his father and a grocer. However, his illness kept him from continuing down either of those career paths. His parents died and Sprague could not work enough to support himself, so he was left unemployed. In 1865, he was offered a job at a circus sideshow, where he became known as “the Living Skeleton” or the Original Thin Man. The next year P. Barnum hired Sprague to work at his (newly reopened) American Museum. Sprague remembered the moment Barnum offered him the job: Mr. Barnum stood very near me, and I overheard him say to his agent,’Pretty lean man, where did you scare him up? Barnum’s Museum burned down in 1868 and Sprague managed to escape with his life. At this point, Sprague took time off to marry his wife, Tamar Moore. They had three sons who lived healthy, normal lives. Sprague made attempts to stay away from the sideshow, but he could not escape financial distress. It is rumored that in addition to being financially responsible for his wife and their three sons, Sprague had a gambling problem. His condition also kept him from finding real work anywhere other than Barnum’s. So he continued to tour off and on throughout the country and eventually overseas. By the age of 44, he was 5 feet and 6 inches tall with a weight of only 43 pounds. Sprague’s condition required him to be constantly taking in nutrients. His health was in such a poor state that he often carried milk in a flask around his neck. He would sip this from time to time to keep himself up and conscious. He died on January 5, 1887, in poverty, of asphyxia in Chicago, Illinois. Sprague was the first of many more Living Skeleton acts to come. In a result of forced promotion and work pressure, it was not uncommon for the Living Skeleton act to marry the Fat Lady act. The item “Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO” is in sale since Thursday, July 23, 2020. This item is in the category “Collectibles\Photographic Images\Vintage & Antique (Pre-1940)\CDVs”. The seller is “nevermore_antiques_and_books” and is located in Wallingford, Connecticut. This item can be shipped to United States.
  • Original/Reprint: Original Print
  • Time Period Manufactured: Vintage & Antique (Pre-1940)
  • Subject: Celebrities & Musicians
  • Date of Creation: 1870-1879
  • Size Type/Largest Dimension: Small (Up to 7″)
  • Region of Origin: US
  • Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
  • Photo Type: CDV
  • Color: Sepia

Antique LIVING SKELETON Circus Sideshow ISAAC W SPRAGUE Freak Thin Man CDV PHOTO

The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction

The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction

The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction
The School for Scandal. Follow Us on Instagram /theschoolforscandal/. A new paper cutting,, advertisement of Claude-Ambroise Seurat a freak show attraction from Troyes, France. He was known as “the anatomical man or the living skeleton”. Seurat was also the subject of an anatomical drawing of Francisco Goya after the Spanish painter met him in 1826 at a circus in Bordeaux. Seurat’s toured across Europe aroused controversy and because of the publicity, there was extensive interest in his life, particularly from the medical establishment. An account, for instance, cited that Seurat was born healthy and was normal like other children except for his depressed chest. By age 14, his health dwindled so that his frame already became skeletal in form. When he visited London for a tour in 1825, Seurat was described having normal height, being between 5 feet 7 inches (1.70 m) and 5 ft 712 in (1.71 m), but with an emaciated body; at the time, he weighed 78 pounds (35.4 kg). The circumference of his upper arms was 4 inches, his waist was less than 2 feet (0.61 m) around, while his neck was short, flat, and broad. Later, in 1832, he was stated to have weighed 43 French pounds and was 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m) tall. Seurat’s last recorded performance was in 1833 at Dinan in Brittany. And apparently died in 1868. The newspaper cutting is dated Sunday, August 14th 1825 and some faint writing reading Bell’s Life in London, which was a London newspaper and by repute “Bell’s Life became Britain’s leading sporting newspaper, without which no gentleman’s Sunday was quite complete”. Housed later in Chinoiserie style frame, 37.5/15cm. The newspaper cutting depicts Seurat with the blurb reading. The public exhibition of this extraordinary being commenced on Thursday, in Pall Mall, and, as might have been expected, attracted a considerable number of visitors. The following account of his peculiarities is from the pen of a medical gentleman by whom he was visited for scientific purposes:- The name of this curious being is Claude Ambroise Seurat, born on the 10th of April, 1797, at Troyes, in Champagne. His mother was a woman of good health, and experienced neither fright nor accident during the term of parturition; so that no part of his malformation and consequent state can be accounted for by external causes. According to the statement of his father (the mother is dead), he presented nothing extraordinary in his appearance at the time of birth; though, in my own mind, I have no doubt but the same malformation was existent then, which is so apparent now. He continued growing until the usual term of life, and concomitant with that growth were his depletion and loss of muscular power. Upon entering the room, a stopping posture of sitting, attenuated hands, sunken eyes, and meagre face, tend strongly to impress the mind of the visitant with an idea, that he has just emerged from the couch of long continued illness. With regard to individual features, they are, however, perfect, and such, as, it lit by health and excitation, would afford a face of considerable attraction; his eye is dark and full, and the tunica conjunctiva of a beautiful whiteness; but the effect of this organ is rendered painful to the beholder, by that expression of anxiety and glaziness so generally observed in persons labouring under phthisis; his teeth are good, and his capability of mastication suited to his need, preferring for his diet that which calls for the least effort of the masticatory muscles. On Sunday last I was with him at the time of dining l, when he took soup (vermicelli, I believe) to about the amount of four table spoonful, eating the eight of a penny French roll with it; this, with the half of a small glass of cider, constituted the whole of his repast. He appeared anxious for the meal, but by the time he had eaten half the specified quantity, his appetite evidently decreased. He is able to feed himself by bending his head down halfway to the table, where the fore arm rests, but when requiring drink, his mother-in-law (who is most kindly attentive to him) must supply him, as he cannot raise the glass to mouth. His sleep is mostly sound and good, occasionally, only, interrupted by nightmare; his digestive powers seem quite efficient to the task assigned to them, and his state of body is regular. The pulse, whenever I have examined it, has been full and soft, and of a natural acceleration. On Sunday it was increased a few beats after his dinner. He converses in good french, and with considerable vivacity, appearing, however, exhausted of continued many minutes: he did not, according to his own account, experience the slightest inconvenience from sea-sickness, during the passage over: indeed, I almost doubt whether he has muscular power sufficient to eject the contents of the stomach; at any rate, the effort would be attended with great risk to himself. His general health they state to have been good, but he has laboured formerly (five years since) with a liver complaint, and also an attack of pleuritis. At present he is perfectly free from any bodily affection; though I much fear the inequities of temperature experienced in a English winter, and he frequent exposure he is threatened with by exhibition, will tend to produce disease of the lungs. Please get in contact as that can be arranged. If you wish to view any items that are currently for sale please feel free to arrange a day and time with myself. I would recommend viewing if you are able. Responsibility for the safety and security of the goods/items pass to the purchaser as soon as the goods/items are removed from our premises. Any disputes concerning carriage are therefore to be conducted by the purchaser with the carrier, and the vendor accepts no liability arising out of the appointment of such contractor. All items on this site are antiques and vintage pieces and are, by their very nature, imperfect. The cost of return is not refundable. Cancellation of orders must be made within 3 days. The item “The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction” is in sale since Wednesday, April 3, 2019. This item is in the category “Collectables\Memorabilia\Circus & Fairground”. The seller is “the-school-for-scandal” and is located in norfolk. This item can be shipped to United Kingdom, Antigua and barbuda, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Australia, United States, Canada, Brazil, Japan, New Zealand, China, Israel, Hong Kong, Norway, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Singapore, South Korea, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Bangladesh, Belize, Bermuda, Bolivia, Brunei darussalam, Dominica, Ecuador, Egypt, Guernsey, Gibraltar, Guadeloupe, Grenada, French guiana, Iceland, Jersey, Jordan, Cambodia, Saint kitts and nevis, Saint lucia, Liechtenstein, Macao, Monaco, Maldives, Montserrat, Martinique, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Peru, Paraguay, Reunion, Turks and caicos islands, Aruba, Saudi arabia, United arab emirates, Chile, Bahrain, Bahamas, Costa rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica, Kuwait, Panama, Philippines, Qatar, Trinidad and tobago, Uruguay, Viet nam.
The Living Skeleton 1825 Cuiro Circus Antique Oddidty Freak Show Attraction