NOSE AMPUTATION IN CONNECTICUT
Splendid amusement! Startling feats of legerdemain! Mr. a. walker, Respectfully announces to the Ladies and Gentlemen of this place that he will entertain them at [blank] on [blank] Evening [blank] 1855 With a variety of novel, original and startling Feats of Natural magic! All of the most unexceptional character, together with the extremely Laughable Performance of punch and judy consisting of Ten Beautiful Mechanical Figures! Introducing laughable incidents & comical adventures &c., of mr. punch! To conclude with the celebrated nose amputation! Large noses preferred!...
Hartford [Connecticut].
Calhoun Steam Printing Co., [1855].
Dimensions 200 x 460 mm.
Single leaf broadside. With blank spaces left for insertion of location, time, and day of performance. A trifle creased, several small holes.
A provincially published American broadside advertising an evening of preeminent prestidigitation presented by Connectican multipotentialite Albert Walker (1836-1902).
Born in Glastonbury to a family of agricultural labourers, Walker entertained a multifarious variety of vocations and enthusiasms, including, but not limited to, cutlery manufacture, clock cleaning, wagon repair, cock-fighting, and horse racing. He maintained a life-long passion for magic and ventriloquism, constructing his own props for use in performances across the state throughout the mid-nineteenth century.
Designed - as evidenced by the blank spaces - to be used in multiple locations, with the time, date and location to be completed in manuscript, this broadside nevertheless is not short on detail of the programme, involving sleight of hand, 'feats of natural magic', a Punch and Judy performance, and Walker's 'celebrated nose amputation'.
OCLC records copies at just six locations (AAS, Brown, Connecticut Museum, LCP, Michigan, and Virginia); COPAC adds no further.
£ 250.00
Antiquates Ref: 33661
Born in Glastonbury to a family of agricultural labourers, Walker entertained a multifarious variety of vocations and enthusiasms, including, but not limited to, cutlery manufacture, clock cleaning, wagon repair, cock-fighting, and horse racing. He maintained a life-long passion for magic and ventriloquism, constructing his own props for use in performances across the state throughout the mid-nineteenth century.
Designed - as evidenced by the blank spaces - to be used in multiple locations, with the time, date and location to be completed in manuscript, this broadside nevertheless is not short on detail of the programme, involving sleight of hand, 'feats of natural magic', a Punch and Judy performance, and Walker's 'celebrated nose amputation'.
OCLC records copies at just six locations (AAS, Brown, Connecticut Museum, LCP, Michigan, and Virginia); COPAC adds no further.
