Bizarre Images from Vintage Sideshows That Weird You Out
Bizarre Images from Vintage Sideshows That Weird You Out
You could indeed exhibit anything in those days

47 Bizarre Images from Vintage Sideshows That Weird You Out

The beginnings of organised "freak" shows and human oddity exhibitions date back to the reign of England's Elizabeth I in the 16th century, but these sideshows truly took off in the Victorian era. As a burgeoning public interest in medicine and science brought audiences out to see the weird — and sometimes grotesque — displays of our varied anatomies and biological curiosities, the phenomenon of sideshow "freaks" would sweep the United States and England.

But as science matured and the unknown better known, "freak" shows would disappear into a dark fold of history.

In the United States, famed circus proprietor P.T. Barnum added so-called "freaks" or biological anomalies to his travelling show in 1835.

Anyone with a marketable disability, deformity, or otherwise oddity was added to his menagerie. Fairgrounds provided the most popular venues for sideshows and animals of extreme size or a human-like talent became the main draws.

Barnum opened a human curiosities exhibit in 1841 at the American Museum in Manhattan. After a fire destroyed it, he founded P.T. Barnum's Grand Travelling Circus and in 1881, James Bailey and James Hutchinson assumed partial ownership.

By 1887, the show was called Barnum & Bailey's Greatest Show On Earth. They gave fame to people like Chang and Eng Bunker, the original Siamese twins, General Tom Thumb, a distant relative of Barnum's who stood at just three feet when fully grown, Annie Jones the Bearded Lady, William Henry Johnson or Zip the Pinhead, and many others.

Experienced showmen like Barnum knew that to draw in crowds the story behind the attraction was more important than the attraction or sideshow "freak" itself.

"You could indeed exhibit anything in those days. Yes anything from a needle to an anchor, a flea to an elephant, a bloater you could exhibit as a whale. It was not the show; it was the tale that you told," wrote English showman Tom Norman.

Some famous sideshow performers like dwarf General Tom Thumb distanced themselves eventually from their performances. For others, like Joseph Merrick, the Elephant Man, their deformities made life pretty unenjoyable even if they did get a fair share of the profits they helped to bring in for Barnum.

Managers, Barnum included, likely exploited their performers, though some showmen like Tom Norman wholeheartedly denied this.

"The big majority of showmen are in the habit of treating their novelties as human beings...not like beasts."

Indeed, members of travelling sideshows often said they regarded their fellow performers and employers as a family. Accounts vary, but most seemed to make a fair salary probably more than they'd make working in the regular world. As early as 1851, trading cards of popular "freaks" circulated throughout England and the United States, with all profits going right to performers themselves.

By the 1940s, however, the display of sideshow "freaks" became a thing of the past. A variety of factors including perceived exploitation — even though Barnum did tend to have a reputation for paying his performers well — as well as the advent and popularity of television played a role in the sideshow's virtual disappearance by the following decade.

The performers of yesteryear do still attract attention both for their courageous spirits or heartbreaking stories.

After this look at vintage sideshow "freaks," check out this gallery of the most famous vintage sideshow performers in history. Then, learn all about the history of some super weird Olympic sports.

Krao Farini was a hairy and flexible woman found in the Laotian jungle in 1885 and then put on display by P.T. Barnum as a "missing link." 1889.

Coney Island "freak" show albino photographed with fat lady and a Flea Circus poster in the background. Date unspecified.

What's your reaction?

Facebook Conversations

Disqus Conversations