Ticket: Complimentary ticket to "P. T. Barnum's Roman Hippodrome"

Ticket: Complimentary ticket to "P. T. Barnum's Roman Hippodrome"


Unknown creator, American (created by)
Barnum's Roman Hippodrome (associated with)
1874 – 1875 (Date manufactured/created)
2 in H X 4 in W
Complimentary ticket for P.T. Barnum's Roman Hippodrome, printed in black ink on off-white card stock. The ticket is undated but is from the brief period of his New York Hippodrome's existence, from April 1874 to the end of 1875. The rectangular ticket reads "P.T. Barnum's / Roman Hippodrome, / (Except Benefits and Holidays) / Complimentary. / Good at all times to Family Circle or exchangeable at Ticket Office for / Reserved Seats, if presented prior to the opening of the doors."

Barnum is best known today for the Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth, but his circus ventures did not come about until he was in his early 60s.  Prior to this time, he was the proprietor of the American Museum located in Lower Manhattan in New York City.  His first circus, in the early 1870s, was called P. T. Barnum’s Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan and Circus.  Barnum subsequently opened the Roman Hippodrome in New York with similar acts.  In the 1880s, competition from other circuses increased.  A merger between Barnum’s show and the Great London Show of Cooper, Bailey, and Hutchinson formed the circus called Barnum and London.  Barnum's partnership with James A. Bailey in 1887 formed Barnum & Bailey, which continued to be managed by Bailey after Barnum's death in 1891.  After Bailey's death in 1906, the Ringling Brothers bought Barnum & Bailey and operated it separately from their own circus.  In 1919 the two were combined to form Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth.  This circus gave its final performance on May 21, 2017.
 
El 1988.022.005