Strange Photos from the Golden Age of Sideshows
Go back to when show business was simply the weirdest thing a showman could take on the road.
Published 7 months ago in Wow
Today, we have streaming, video games, concerts and movie theaters - but back in the day, America’s favorite pastime was seeing freaks of nature.
The tradition of sideshows goes all the way back to the 1700s in England, when performers would go around displaying their strange and wondrous skills. It evolved into circuses and sideshows, which traveled around England and the United States showcasing “freaks” and various other wonders of nature, such as “The World’s Largest Rat”, and the “Abominable Snowman”. These were often just exotic animals, or people with disabilities - but life in the early 20th century was bleak enough, so who could blame these impresarios for trying to add a little magic and wonder to the mix?
Check out some oddities and living curios that probably wouldn’t fly today.
1
I Guess Your Age
Lee Bennet, England circa 1940
2
“Death by a Hundred Swords”
Banner for a magic show performed by Orson Welles
3
Human Freaks Alive
A freak show in Rutland, Vermont, 1941
4
The House of Nonsense
Funhouse in Blackpool, England, 1911
5
The Gorilla Girl
Proving Darwin right
6
The Devil Snake
Show advertising a 20-foot-long python
7
America’s Fattest Man
“22 pounds at birth!”
8
The Headless Woman
“She is still alive”
9
Big Cleo
The World’s Tallest Girl
10
The Abominable Snowman
“Biggest Feet in the World!”
11
The World’s Largest Steer
Show featuring a massive bull
12
The Living Doll
Show featuring “Princess Lena”
13
Cavalcade of Oddities
A sideshow of “freaks”
14
Largest Rat in the World
Show advertising Chinese bamboo rats
15
The Mystery Museum featuring “Nature’s mistakes”
Featuring “Nature’s mistakes”