*P T Barnum's Jumbo Rare 1882 Color Die Cut*

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Seller: authorjbsa ✉️ (6,825) 100%, Location: New York, New York, US, Ships to: US & many other countries, Item: 363275200353 *P T BARNUM'S JUMBO RARE 1882 COLOR DIE CUT*.

A rare original die cut circa 1882 of P. T. Barnum's Jumbo, the most famous elephant in the world. Dimensions three by two and three quarters inches. Light wear otherwise good. See Jumbo's extraordinary biography below. 

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From Wikipedia:

Jumbo  (about December 25, 1860 – September 15, 1885), also known as Jumbo the Elephant  and Jumbo the Circus Elephant , was a 19th-century male African bush elephant  born in Sudan . Jumbo was exported to Jardin des Plantes , a zoo in Paris , and then transferred in 1865 to London Zoo  in England. Despite public protest, Jumbo was sold to P. T. Barnum , who took him to the United States for exhibition in March 1882.

The giant elephant's name has spawned the common word "jumbo ," meaning large in size.[2]  Examples of his lexical impact are phrases like "jumbo jet ", "jumbo shrimp," "jumbo marshmallows," and "jumbotron ." Jumbo's shoulder height has been estimated to have been 3.23 metres (10 ft 7 in) at the time of his death,[1]  and was claimed to be about 4 m (13 ft 1 in) by Barnum.

Jumbo is the Tufts University mascot ,[3]  and is referenced by a plaque outside the old Liberal Hall, now a Wetherspoons  pub, in Crediton.

Jumbo was born around December 25, 1860 in Sudan ,[citation needed ] and after his mother was killed by hunters, the infant Jumbo was captured by Sudanese elephant hunter Taher Sheriff and German big-game hunter Johann Schmidt.[4]  The calf was sold to Lorenzo Casanova, an Italian animal dealer and explorer. Casanova transported the animals that he had bought from Sudan north to Suez , and then across the Mediterranean Sea  to Trieste .

This collection was sold to Gottlieb Christian Kreutzberg's "Menagerie Kreutzberg"[5] [circular reference ][6]  in Germany.[7]  Soon after, the elephant was imported to France and kept in the Paris zoo Jardin des Plantes . In 1865, he was transferred to the London Zoo  and arrived on 26 June.[8]  In the following years, Jumbo became a crowd favorite due to his size, and would give rides to children on his back, including those of Queen Victoria. London zookeeper association leader Anoshan Anathajeyasri gave Jumbo his name; it is likely a variation of one of two Swahili  words: jambo , which means "hello"; or jumbe , meaning "chief".[9]  If Anathajeyasri was from India, he possibly named Jumbo after a gigantic rose-apple tree called jambu  (which at that time would be transliterated as 'jumboo'), which grows on the mythical Mount Meru  and whose fruits were said to be as large as elephants.

While in Mexico, Jumbo broke two tusks, and when they regrew, he ground them down against the stonework of his enclosure.[8]  His keeper in London was Matthew Scott, whose 1885 autobiography details his life with Jumbo.[8]

In 1882, Abraham Bartlett, superintendent of the London zoo, sparked a national controversy with his decision to sell Jumbo to the American entertainer, Phineas T. Barnum of the Barnum & Bailey Circus  for £2,000 ($10,000 USD).[7]  This decision came as a result of concern surrounding Jumbo's growing aggression and potential to cause a public disaster. The sale of Jumbo, however, sent the citizens of London into a panic, because they viewed the transaction as an enormous loss for the British empire. 100,000 school children wrote to Queen Victoria  begging her not to sell the elephant.[a]  John Ruskin , a fellow of the Zoological Society , wrote in The Morning Post  in February 1882: "I, for one of the said fellows, am not in the habit of selling my old pets or parting with my old servants because I find them subject occasionally, perhaps even "periodically," to fits of ill temper; and I not only "regret" the proceedings of the council, but disclaim them utterly, as disgraceful to the city of London and dishonourable to common humanity."[10]  Despite a lawsuit against the Zoological Gardens alleging the sale was in violation of multiple zoo bylaws, and the zoo's attempt to renege on the sale, the court upheld the sale.[7]  Matthew Scott elected to go with Jumbo to the USA.[8]  The London Daily Telegraph begged Barnum to lay down terms on which he would return Jumbo; however, no such terms existed in the eyes of Barnum.

In New York, Barnum exhibited Jumbo at Madison Square Garden , earning enough in three weeks from the enormous crowds to recoup the money he spent to buy the animal.[7] [11]  In the 31-week season, the circus earned $1.75M, largely due to its star attraction.[7]  On May 17th 1884, Jumbo was one of Barnum's 21 elephants that crossed the Brooklyn Bridge  to prove that it was safe after 12 people died during a stampede caused by mass panic over collapse fears a year earlier.[12]

Death

Jumbo after being hit by a locomotive on September 15, 1885, in St. Thomas, Ontario An 1889 photograph of Jumbo remains at Barnum Hall Poster of Jumbo's skeleton Surviving fragments of Jumbo from the conflagration[13]

Jumbo died at a railway classification yard  in St. Thomas, Ontario , Canada, on September 15, 1885. In those days the circus crisscrossed North America by train. St. Thomas was the perfect location for a circus because many rail lines converged there. Jumbo and the other animals had finished their performances that night, and as they were being led to their box car, a train came down the track. Jumbo was hit and mortally wounded, dying within minutes.[14] [15] [16]

Barnum told the story that Tom Thumb, a young circus elephant, was walking on the railroad tracks and Jumbo was attempting to lead him to safety. Barnum claimed that the locomotive hit and killed Tom Thumb before it derailed and hit Jumbo, and other witnesses supported Barnum's account. According to newspapers, the freight train hit Jumbo directly, killing him, while Tom Thumb suffered a broken leg.[17] [18]

Many metallic objects were found in the elephant's stomach, including English pennies , keys, rivets, and a police whistle .[b]

Ever the showman, Barnum had portions of his star attraction separated, to have multiple sites attracting curious spectators. After touring with Barnum's circus,[20]  the skeleton was donated to the American Museum of Natural History  in New York City , where it remains.[21] [22]  The elephant's heart was sold to Cornell University . Jumbo's hide was stuffed by William J. Critchley and Carl Akeley , both of Ward's Natural Science , who stretched it during the mounting process; the mounted specimen traveled with Barnum's circus for two years.[20]

Barnum eventually donated the stuffed Jumbo to Tufts University , where it was displayed at P.T. Barnum Hall  there for many years. The hide was destroyed in a fire in April 1975.[21]  Ashes from that fire, which are believed to contain the elephant's remains, are kept in a 14-ounce Peter Pan Crunchy Peanut Butter  jar in the office of the Tufts athletic director, while his taxidermied tail, removed during earlier renovations, resides in the holdings of the Tufts Digital Collections and Archives.[16]

Legacy

Remaining in the United Kingdom are statues and other memorabilia of Jumbo. The elephant – or rather his statuette in the Natural History Museum  – was made holotype  of Richard Lydekker 's proposed subspecies  (Loxodonta africana rothschildi ) for the large elephants of the eastern Sahel . Modern authorities do not recognize this (or any other subspecies of African bush elephants), considering its purportedly diagnostic large size and peculiarly shaped ears to be individual variation.

While Jumbo's hide resided at Tufts' P.T. Barnum Hall, a superstition held that dropping a coin into a nostril of the trunk would bring good luck on an examination or sports event.[3]  Although the hide was destroyed by a major fire,[21]  Jumbo remains the mascot of Tufts, and representations of the elephant are featured prominently throughout the campus.[3]

Jumbo statue in St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada

A life-sized statue of the elephant was erected in 1985 in St. Thomas, Ontario, to commemorate the centennial of the elephant's death. It is located on Talbot Street on the west side of the city. In 2006 the Jumbo statue was inducted into the North America Railway Hall of Fame  in the category of "Railway Art Forms & Events" as having local significance.[23]

Jumbo was the inspiration of the nickname of the 19th-century Jumbo Water Tower  in the town of Colchester  in Essex , England.

Lucy the Elephant , a Jumbo-inspired building in New Jersey

Lucy the Elephant , a six-story structure in Margate City, New Jersey , was modeled after Jumbo.[citation needed ] Built by James V. Lafferty  in 1881, Lucy is the oldest surviving roadside tourist attraction  in America and a National Historic Landmark . Lafferty also made other Jumbo-shaped structures, including Elephantine Colossus , on Coney Island .[24]

Jumbo has been lionized on a series of sheet-music covers from roughly 1882–83. The four-colour lithograph of Jumbo was created by Alfred Concanen  of England, with the music title "Why Part With Jumbo",[c]  a song by the lion comique  of Victorian British  music halls , G. H. MacDermott . It pictured children zoo visitors riding, somewhat precariously, on Jumbo's back. Multiple American lithographic music covers were done, including by J. H. Bufford 's Sons.

Canadian folk singer James Gordon  wrote the song "Jumbo's Last Ride", which recounts the story of Jumbo's life and death. It is on his 1999 CD Pipe Street Dreams .[26]

Canadian professional ice hockey player Joe Thornton  (b. 1979) from St. Thomas, Ontario is nicknamed Jumbo Joe as a homage to Jumbo.[27]

More evidence

A television program about Jumbo, Attenborough and the Giant Elephant , presented by the naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough , was transmitted on BBC One  in the United Kingdom on 10 December 2017.[8]  An international team of scientists examined the skeleton and found:

  • Jumbo's molar teeth were malformed and out of line as a result of a long-term soft diet that did not wear his molar teeth down enough, obstructing the forward eruptive movement of the next molar.
  • Jumbo's nightly rages were probably caused by toothache, rather than musth , as his keeper thought at the time.
  • A post mortem  photograph of Jumbo shows skin abrasions consistent with an illustration produced just after his death of the freight train hitting him on a hip from behind as he was being led across to his traveling carriage, and said that the likeliest cause of death was internal bleeding from his injuries.
  • Examination of Jumbo's limb bones showed overgrown tendon attachment areas consistent with a long-term history of being overloaded at his work.
  • Jumbo was still growing at the time of his death, as is normal for African male elephants of his age, and might eventually have attained the size claimed by Barnum.

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