Visual Materials
The Barnum & Bailey greatest show on Earth : Imre Kiralfy’s Columbus and the discovery of America
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Columbus at the court of Barcelona
Visual Materials
Image of Christopher Columbus presenting treasures, goods, and Native American Indians to King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain in a richly appointed throne room surrounded by courtiers and onlookers; print produced for the World's Fair Columbian Exhibition.
priJLC_PRG_002090

The Barnum Bailey greatest show on Earth
Visual Materials
Image of head-and-shoulder portraits of P.T. Barnum and J.A. Bailey with a branch with leaves and berries separating the oval frames.
priJLC_ENT_000058

Barnum & Bailey greatest show on Earth
Visual Materials
Image of two vignettes with head-and-shoulder portraits of circus owners P.T. Barnum, at upper right, and J. A. Bailey, at lower left.
priJLC_ENT_001318
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Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth
Visual Materials
Printer: Central Printing and Engraving Co., 221 Institute Place, Chicago Show location: Marysville, California
priJLC_ENT_Circus

The Barnum & Bailey greatest show on Earth : the great Florenz Troupe 12 in number
Visual Materials
Image of a cartouche containing a group portrait of the Florenz Troupe, comprised of two female and ten male acrobats dressed in formal dress, centered within a large outdoor scene of the group performing two acrobatic routines simultaneously at left and right.
priJLC_ENT_000008
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The Barnum & Bailey greatest show on earth : the Dunbar trio. (Barnum & Bailey)
Visual Materials
This collection contains more than 650 printed items that relate to circuses in the United States from the 1850s to the 1990s. The collection consists of advertising and promotional materials, business records, and illustrations produced for or pertaining to circuses, their tours and shows, staff and performers, acts and exhibits, and animals. Materials are arranged in three series: small-size prints and ephemera (11 x 14 inches or less); large-size prints and ephemera (more than 11 x 14 inches); and broadsides and handbills. The collection has 206 large-size items comprised mainly of lithographic posters containing brightly colored images of featured circus acts, performers, and animals that were typically posted outdoors in advance of the circus coming to town. Small-size items in the collection number more than 320 and are comprised mainly of advertising and promotion ephemera and business documents such as trade cards, programs and souvenir books, route cards, envelopes, tickets, songsters, and printed billheads and letterheads. The 130 broadsides, handbills, and related advertisements consist primarily of long, narrow broadsides printed on newspaper paper in black ink using letterpress type that advertised upcoming circus shows and were intended to be distributed by hand, left in stacks in public places, or posted on walls, fences, or in windows in advance of the circus's arrival in a town. This collection provides a resource for studying the history of the American circus and its impact on popular entertainment and advertising in the 19th and 20th centuries. As graphic materials, the items offer evidence of the development of printmaking techniques and trends, and of the artists, engraves, lithographers, printers, and publishers involved in the creation of these prints.
priJLC_ENT_005069