Agency through Otherness: Portraits of Performers in Circus Route Books, 1875-1925

Owning Oneself: Entertainment as Empowering Enterprise

The relationship between circus owners and Black sideshow musicians evolved over time. African American musicians began to leverage their sideshow work into a position of power.

Lowery’s refusal to equate the sideshow with side work was made possible by the past popularization of Black musicians navigated by entertainers in the early 1880s. Prof. Roy Pope's 1915 correspondence to the Freeman is a perfect example of how integral Black sideshow musicians came to be to the circus. Hagenbeck-Wallace suffered after Lowery's refusal to work for a management that expected him to double his labor, and his decision to stand up - all other bandleaders with him - forced the circus to rethink their perception of Black musicians. (Was the big top band asked to double canvas?)

Wolfscale's large band of 32 musicians with Barnum & Bailey is also a testament to the demand for Black musicians. Wolfscale utilized this demand to create a band able to compete with the bands in the big top, in terms of music playable per the group size.


Wolfscale also had his ear to the ground, listening for what the audience wanted, and responded by playing the "heaviest marches, latest popular music and rags." Black performers understood the importance of branding their show within the entertainment market. Bandleaders would frequently change the name of their company to reflect the audience's desires. As minstrelsy's popularity gave way to more vaudevillian fare, company owners responded in turn. It was a cyclical feedback loop: Black musicians would influence the audience's tastes, which then changed over time, prompting entertainers to re-brand their work.

The growing popularity of African American music allowed more and more touring companies to form and grow. Their growing number and clout allowed musicians not only more lucrative work, but a choice in their work, and an equal seat for all audience members. Lewis Williams, clarinet player, writes to the Freeman on December 10, 1904:

Prof. Wm. Blue – Dear Sir: I received your favor and I appreciate your valuable offer, but at present I must decline the same as I am under contract with Mr. Pat Chappelle, and I have no desire to give up my job here for several reasons.

First. I am a black man, and I am interested in anything that a black man has, and will do all in my power to make it a success.

Second. I have been with Mr. Chappelle for over four years, and have always found him to be a perfect gentleman; he is always ready to help his people in any way he can; he has helped me and most every one of the company …
 My third reason is I was learned with this show … and I know that Messrs. Rusco and Holland would have never picked me up as Mr. Chappelle did and learn me, so I will frankly say that, if you were to offer me $20 per week, I would consider it an insult…

I would never persuade a member of a colored man’s show to join a show run by a white man, as you know that the white man bought and sold our fore-parents, and I thank the Lord to-day that there are some young Negros in the world that they cannot buy. I am one of them that Messrs. Rusco and Holland can not buy. And, as for yourself, Mr. Blue, I earnestly trust that this will be a lesson to you in the future – to hunt a black man for a white man. … I trust, in the future, you will try to get other people from other places for your white bosses instead of trying to break up a colored show.

… and we get the money [so] the colored people do not have to go up the side fire-escape or in back door and set in the gallery to see show. They set where they pay for.

In contrast to Williams' remarks on African Americans having an equitable place in the audience is Forepaugh's diary from 1900, which not only provides evidence of the "black top" but also the racially-charged perspectives held by many circus owners. It is these sorts of commentaries that drove African Americans to create their own newspapers:

 

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