Tag Archives: elephant

Jumbo at Tufts

By Russell Working

Recently a very smart communications expert reminded me of the great elephant Jumbo’s connection with Tufts University in Massachusetts.

When the famed showman P.T. Barnum imported Jumbo from London to the United States in 1882, no one had ever seen an African elephant in North America, Canada’s CBC reports. He was an animal superstar. An estimated 20 million people visited the prodigious pachyderm during his times in zoos, parades, and circuses.

Barnum knew how to get his great elephant into the news. Encyclopedia Britannica reports: “In May 1884 Barnum engineered a bounty of publicity for the circus by parading Jumbo, 20 other elephants, and 17 camels across the recently constructed Brooklyn Bridge to prove its structural integrity.”

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Larder for elephants

By Russell Working

HOWEVER BAD YOUR MONDAY may be, at least an elephant (presumably) didn’t smash through your kitchen wall and snitch from your larder.

In a video posted June 21, an elephant prowls around in a kitchen in Thailand. Apparently this sort of elephantine rascality happens from time to time where elephants share habitat with humans.

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The Elephant Box

Burying the great tuskers at sea

In 1903 a behemoth elephant named Jingo was buried at sea. Over the centuries of transporting the great pachyderms, many others have been committed to the deep.

This is the first post of my relaunched blog, focusing on circuses. Why have I renamed these pages The Elephant Box? Read on to find out.

By Russell Working

IN MARCH 1903, newspapers across America trumpeted a tragedy at on the high seas. Jingo, an elephant taller than the famed Jumbo, died on his way from the London zoo to Coney Island.

An American entrepreneur had purchased Jingo, and the titanic tusker was transported in a 14½-feet-tall, lidless crate on a ship called the Georgic. Jingo was too tall for the hold where he was kept. He and his box protruded through an open hatch above, exposing him to wind, rain, and cresting waves.

His mahouts recklessly fed him (and evidently poisoned him with) whiskey and stale bread rolls. The pachyderm, pining for his herd, died on the way to New York. The newspapers parroted the sailors’ narrative about a death by homesickness. The Chicago Tribune proclaimed:

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