by Carmen Doyle
It isn’t the sort of thing you want to brag about now. But
at the end of the 19th century, dime museums were popular
entertainment. Known as dime museums because of the admission price, the
museums offered all sorts of attractions. According to Fort Wayne's News and Sentinel,
Geary’s World Museum featured many unusual “acts”- mainly people who were
different due to physical characteristics.
A January 1891 newspaper account in the News and Sentinel contains a notice mentioning “a fat women’s
convention” had started at Geary’s. “Some of the biggest women in the U.S. are
booked for the exhibit.”
Another popular attraction was Abraham Gump, who was paid
$1000 to fast for 30 days. Allowed only water to drink, Gump lost 17 pounds in
two weeks. Gump stopped fasting before the 30 days was up, as doctors told him
“to eat or die; he chooses the former.” A few months later, History of… A.H. Gump, champion faster of
Indiana was published.
Some of the “exhibits” were even more disturbing. Jonathon
Bass, an ossified man, was “shown at Geary’s Museum”. An ossified man was a person
whose bones had fused together, making it impossible for him to walk or even
move on his own. Someone had to feed and move him.
Even more extreme than an ossified man was the “exhibition”
of a “two-bodied living baby, with one head, four limbs, and three arms.” The
child was less than a year old when exhibited. A notice later in the same month
read, “The two-bodied baby at the World’s Museum dies. The baby was born at
Winamac, Indiana, June 30, 1890 and was the child of L.C. Hatfield and wife.”
Sadly, neither notice mentions the child’s name or even if the child was a boy
or girl.
Not everything at Geary’s World Museum was voyeuristic.
Peter Carmont Campbell exhibited his airship at the museum. Campbell had received
advice and encouragement from Samuel Morse and Horace Greeley. Campbell had
recently patented his invention.
Among the congratulatory letters was one from President
Cleveland.
In his book Twenty-five
years fighting fate, Samuel Shockey
describes his work at the museum as practicing “phrenology and palmistry”. Shockey
claims he made “more cash than the entire museum” and that “every morning the
different papers would have a very large account” of his “performance” at the
museum. Shockey also gave private examinations in his office at the museum. (According
to About.com, “phrenology (is) a discipline that involved linking bumps on a
person's head to certain aspects of the individual's personality and
character.”)
Today we are appalled or amused at some of the exhibits at
Geary’s World Museum. But in 1891, Col. James Geary’s museum was one of the
most popular activities in Fort Wayne. While there are few mentions in newspapers
of the World’s Museum after 1892, it is clear that the museum kept operating,
with its exhibitions varying from physically disabled people to inventions and
pseudo-science.
Ancestry.com has drawings from the Geary's World Museum on its website.
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