Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited

Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited

Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited
Antique Hand Painted Limoges. 3-Piece Circus Caravan Numbered & Marked. These pieces are believed to have been produced between 1920 and 1930, around the same time that traveling circus groups had begun their transition from trains and horse drawn carts to motorized transport vehicles. The 1920s saw a sudden and fierce uptick in circus-themed items, with this set being one of the finer examples. You’ll note a number of beautifully painted images on each circus car, including a mermaid, monkey, and lion. Each car contains a “secret” hand painted detail on the interior. These pieces are hand signed and numbered. The underside of each circus car bears Limoges’ distinctive “Peint Main” line, indicating that these cars belong to a higher tier of hand decorated pieces, typically worked by one of only a handful of Limoges’ expert artisans. In full, the lead car’s underside is signed with the words Limoges France, Peint Main, No. These pieces are well and truly unique. They sport gorgeous detailing, brass lips and feet, and some of the finest hand-fired hard paste porcelain to have come out of the 20th century. Each car is in a state of remarkable preservation. There are no cracks, chips, or areas showing visible degradation. The original brass chains linking the circus cars together are entirely intact and mount/dismount as intended. The brass lip and foot around the middle caravan has accumulated a fair bit of green patina. Likewise, the brass lion clasp on the middle car is a tad loose. The paints used for these pieces were specially chosen by Limoges’ artists to last the test of time, with the pigments maintaining their original “pop” and colour without any signs of fading. According to a Limoges historian, these paints were kept in a powder form right up until their use, being mixed with a proprietary combination of oils to achieve the perfect shade and consistency. Best as we can tell, this is one of only two Limoges circus caravan sets on the open market. Dimensions: Car #1 and #2 – 1.5″ L x 1″ W x 2″ H Last Tent Car – 1.5″ L x 1″ W x 1.25″ H. Collective Weight: 4.375 oz. We will respond to you within 24 hours and do our best to help you out! Item condition is reflected in the listing photos. Any condition statement given, as a courtesy to a client, is only an opinion and should not be treated as a statement of fact.
Antique 1920s Limoges Circus Caravan Boxes Hand Painted Rare/Limited

Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print

Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print
Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print
Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print
Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print

Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print
It depicts a lion who has just killed a beautiful woman circus performer as her boyfriend looks on from outside the cage. The caption reads: Le Lion Jaloux which roughly translates to: The jealous lion. It is very large (folio size), measuring approximately 10.5 x 14.5 inches (26.5 x 36.5 cm). The picture fills most of it, with a French caption below and text surrounding it. The page is in excellent condition for its age. There is text/photos on the back of the print. See scan for an accurate view of the condition. This print will come with a Certificate of Authenticity. Powered by SixBit’s eCommerce Solution.
Lion Attacks Circus Performer in Cage, Large 1870s Antique Engraving Print

Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO

Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO

Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO
CIRCUS SIDESHOW MIDGETS MAJOR LITTLEFINGER & WIFE C. This is a rare cabinet card of a famous Circus sideshow performer. Wonderful cabinet card of Major Littlefinger and Wife. It is signed on the back by the Major. Condition as shown- slight scuff marks on Mrs. Photo taken by Goldsmith of St. Dwarf, circus, vaudeville, sideshow. Please see pictures for details and thanks for looking. Description : Antique Cabinet Card Photo Photographer – Goldsmith Photography, 1012 Olive Street, St. Major Littlefinger & Wife, (Possibly his second Wife, because of his age in the photo) Performer for circus freak, sideshow, carnival, vaudeville Midgets (Dwarf) Image #4 enhanced Size: approx. 4 ¼ x 6 ½ inches Good Condition -light smudges around some edges and some marks on the photo. Please use the scans to form your own opinion of the condition. I make every effort to carefully describe the condition of the item, please see pictures for your opinion. Background Info: In the entertainment world of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, few achondroplasic dwarfs achieved the same popularity as true “midgets” (pituitary dwarfs). A rare exception was Major Littlefinger, born Robert H. Huzza in Boston in 1864. As early as age seven, Huzza was performing, and his impressive circus and museum resume would come to include Sheldenburger & Co. Circus, Great Eastern Circus, Van Armburgh & Co. Circus, John Robinson Circus, Signor Sautelle’s Circus, Huber’s Museum, Sanger’s Greater Combined European Shows and the Midget City at Coney Island’s Dreamland Circus Sideshow. Often he was dressed in a policeman’s uniform, earning him the nickname “The Little Cop”. Around 1880, Huzza met Mollie McDougal, “The Lilliputian Queen”, of Osceola, Iowa. Also an achondroplasic dwarf, Mollie had recently divorced her first husband, General Frank “Shorty” Shade. Shade remarried to a female dwarf named Sarah, twenty years younger than he, around 1890, and changed his billing from military to royalty, becoming Chief Debro and Wife, the Eskimo Midgets. The so-called Eskimos settled in Frank’s hometown of Kendalville, Indiana. Littlefinger on June 5, 1881 in a circus ring in her hometown, and several months later became pregnant with the Major’s baby. She died giving birth to their daughter, Dollie, in Kendalville on June 24, 1882. Huzza had achondroplasia like her parents. Evidently the Shades and the Littlefingers remained close, as census records from around 1900 show that she lived in Kendalville with Frank and Sarah. She died in 1901 of unknown causes. Less than a year later, while visiting Hartford, Connecticut on circus tour, Robert Huzza met Ida Hosmer. Born in 1855, Ida was the only little person in a family of thirteen children. A public wedding soon followed at Bunnell’s Museum in Brooklyn, New York, on March 7, 1883. The couple established a permanent home in Jersey City, where Robert worked as a messenger during the off-season, dressed in his policeman’s costume. In 1891 he was elected master of Brooklyn’s Zeredatha Lodge. After Ida died in 1910, the Major married yet again. His third wife, Anna K. Littlefinger, gave birth to their son Edmond “Buster” Providence Littlefinger in 1913. The Littlefingers moved to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1920 so that Buster could attend school there. Buster was said to enjoy playing marbles and aspired to be a Singer midget after seeing the famous troupe on the Orpheum circuit. Robert Huzza died in Jacksonville, Florida in 1929 and Anna in 1942.
Circus Performer? MIDGET MAJOR LITTLEFINGER AND WIFE- AUTOGRAPHED-ST. LOUIS, MO

Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card

Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card

Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card
An amazing ephemeral find, this old circus advertising trade card dates from the late 1800s. Die cut into the shape of a butterfly, the antique Victorian era advertisement is packed with spectacular information about W. Cole’s Great Circus. The small paper ad proclaims the W. Cole circus is “The Largest on Earth” and “Boundless as the Universe” and promises the attendee. 500 snakes, Great Manager of Wild Beasts, 1000 Men, A Gallery of Wax Statuary, Aerial Bicycle Riding, Daring Sensational Feats, 500 Horses, Menagerie of Trained Beasts.. It’s astonishing it has survived well-over 125 years. The only other reference I can find to this antique circus ad is in the Victorian trade card collection of the Florida State University Library. The small colorful die cut butterfly is printed on paper. The vintage circus advertisement shows wear consistent with its age and use. A tiny tip of one wing has chipped away, there is a small tear on a “W” near the butterfly’s head, and some tape residue along the top edge. 5 3/8″ x 2 3/4″.
Old Circus Advertisement W W Cole Antique Ephemera Victorian Trade Card

RARE Cole Bros Circus 1939 P. G. Lowery Band Black African American Photo

RARE Cole Bros Circus 1939 P. G. Lowery Band Black African American Photo
RARE Cole Bros Circus 1939 P. G. Lowery Band Black African American Photo

RARE Cole Bros Circus 1939 P. G. Lowery Band Black African American Photo
An original 10×7 vintage Photo from a large archive of circus photos acquired from the estate of circus historian and collector Robert F. Houston acquired a massive archive of circus memorabilia over a period of more than 50 years. He was also involved in building and repairing circus related items and was a member of Circus Model Builders International. Photo Overview An exceptionally rare shot! This photograph features the P. Lowery’s Sideshow Band, an integral part of the Cole Bros Circus. The band members, dressed in formal musical attire, including jackets and hats, are posed with their instruments, including trombones, saxophones, and a drum set. Two female performers are seated in the center, wearing stage costumes. This image was captured outdoors, evident by the grass underfoot, with a plain backdrop helping focus attention on the group. Lowery was a well-known African American band leader and cornet soloist who rose to fame in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His bands were fixtures in circus and vaudeville shows, bringing high-quality music to these venues. Lowery’s contributions helped to showcase African American talent and culture in mainstream entertainment, influencing the development of American popular music. Text Present Cole Bros Circus 1939 P. Lowery’s Sideshow Band Condition: Good to fair vintage condition. Please see photos for scans of the surface. Photo may have natural curling or other imperfections from age. The back of the photo may have remnants from being taped or glued into an album.
RARE Cole Bros Circus 1939 P. G. Lowery Band Black African American Photo