• Book: "Tom Thumb’s Three Years Tour Around the World" (front and back covers only)
Book: "Tom Thumb’s Three Years Tour Around the World" (front and back covers only)
Book: "Tom Thumb’s Three Years Tour Around the World" (front and back covers only)

Book: "Tom Thumb’s Three Years Tour Around the World" (front and back covers only)


September 1872 (Date manufactured/created)
Paperbound book titled “Tom Thumb’s Three Years Tour Around the World, “ written by tour manager Sylvester Bleeker and published in September 1872.  This record includes images of just the front and back covers; the text pages from another example of this book have been digitized for inclusion in the P. T. Barnum Digital Collection (see EL 1988.087.001). The book was very popular in its day, and many versions were printed with variations in the cover.  Here the paper covers are now faded blue-green , with the printing in black.  The cover features elaborate decoration around a central circle, in which are depicted Charles S. Stratton (General Tom Thumb) standing arm-in-arm with his wife M. Lavinia Warren.  To the right of Lavinia is her sister, Minnie Warren, standing arm-in-arm with George Washington Morrison Nutt (Commodore Nutt.)  The back cover features a a street scene showing Stratton's home in Bridgeport, Connecticut, with horses and carriage, pedestrians, and a dog on the road in front of the elegant mansion.

Following the celebrated marriage of Charles S. Stratton to M. Lavinia Warren, popularly referred to as the Fairy Wedding, the couple went on a three year world tour.  Lavinia's sister Minnie Warren, and George Washington Morrison Nutt (known as Commodore Nutt), who served as bridesmaid and best man at the wedding, accompanied them on the world tour.  The celebrity group was managed by Sylvester Bleeker who, among other things, was a prompter, actor, writer, stage manager, agent of P. T. Barnum’s, and a museum superintendent, filling a great number of roles in the management of the Barnum's American Museum in New York City.

Charles S. Stratton (January 4, 1838  July 15, 1883), known as General Tom Thumb, was an entertainer and Bridgeport Conn. native who got his start with P. T. Barnum as a very young child in 1842.  Stratton took quickly to performing, and he entertained audiences worldwide, including nobility such as Queen Victoria.  Stratton's performances brought him considerable renown and wealth, and he became one of the biggest celebrities at the time. Stratton married fellow performer M. Lavinia Warren, also a little person, and the two had a happy marriage, and continued touring abroad and in North America.  On July 15, 1883, Stratton suffered a stroke and passed away.  He is buried at Mountain Grove Cemetery in Bridgeport, Connecticut, with his wife beside him.

Mercy Lavinia Warren Bump (October 31, 1841 - November 25, 1919), was a well known entertainer during the 1800s. She began her show business career on a river boat, as exhibiting those with dwarfism was profitable at the time.  Warren signed with P. T. Barnum at age 21, along with her younger sister Minnie Warren, who also had the same condition of proportionate dwarfism.  On February 10, 1863, Lavinia married fellow Barnum performer Charles S. Stratton (General Tom Thumb) after a whirlwind romance.  They worked and toured together as celebrities, and had a happy marriage.  Following Stratton’s death, Lavinia married Primo Magri, an Italian entertainer who was also a little person, on April 6, 1885.   The two toured together, and later, they operated a roadside stand in Middleboro, Mass.  Lavinia died on November 25, 1919, and is buried besides her first husband, Charles Stratton, at Mountain Grove Cemetery.
George Washington Morrison Nutt (April 1, 1848 - May 25, 1881), known as Commodore Nutt, was an entertainer who worked for P.T. Barnum.  Nutt was exhibited for his small stature at a young age, and he signed with Barnum at age 13.  He became a new star at the American Museum but never rose to the level of celebrity that Charles Stratton had.  Nutt was sometimes paired with Charles S. Stratton, and later he joined with Stratton, and Stratton's wife Lavinia and Lavinia’s sister Minnie to do a world tour.  After their return to America in 1872, he quit the company, but his own attempts to start a company never quite took off, and his financial resources dwindled.  Nutt died of Bright's disease on May 25, 1881 in New York City.
Huldah Pierce Warren Bump Newell, known better as Minnie Warren (June 2, 1849 - July 23, 1878) was a performer associated with P. T. Barnum.  She was the younger sister of M. Lavinia Warren, and the two sisters had an excellent relationship.  Minnie married fellow little person Edmund Newell in 1877, who was also a Barnum performer.  The two had one child together, but the infant died at the time of birth. Minnie herself died as a result of delivering a normal size the baby.  She passed away on July 23, 1878, a loss which devastated her sister.  Minnie is buried in Nemasket Hill Cemetery in Middleboro, Massachusetts.
EL 1988.086.001