P. T. Barnum
Summary
Phineas Taylor Barnum built the first great American entertainment fortune in the 1840s and 1850s. He bought a struggling collection in lower Manhattan in 1841 and turned it into Barnum's American Museum, the most popular attraction in the country. In 1850 he gambled on importing the Swedish opera singer Jenny Lind for a U.S. tour, paying her $1,000 a night, and the venture made him one of the wealthiest showmen in America.
Then he ruined himself with a single bad investment. Trying to build an industrial district in East Bridgeport, Connecticut, Barnum lent heavily to the Jerome Clock Company and was tricked into signing a flood of notes that left him personally liable for sums reported in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The company collapsed in 1856, and Barnum was effectively insolvent, his fortune wiped out and his name dragged through years of litigation and public mockery.
He clawed back through work and discipline. Barnum took his famous performer Tom Thumb on another European tour, delivered a popular lecture titled The Art of Money-Getting, and methodically paid down his debts. By the early 1860s he had bought back his museum and rebuilt his wealth.
In 1871, at the age of 60, Barnum entered the business that would make him a legend: the traveling circus. P. T. Barnum's Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan and Hippodrome grew, through a merger, into Barnum & Bailey, the Greatest Show on Earth. He also served as mayor of Bridgeport and in the Connecticut legislature before his death in 1891, far richer and more famous than he had been before his fall.
Timeline
The First Fortune
P. T. Barnum, born in Bethel, Connecticut, in 1810, made his first stir in the late 1830s exhibiting Joice Heth, an enslaved woman he falsely advertised as the 161-year-old former nurse of George Washington, a venture that established his talent for promotion and his comfort with what he called humbug. His real fortune began in 1841, when he bought Scudder's American Museum in lower Manhattan and reopened it as Barnum's American Museum.
The museum mixed genuine curiosities with hoaxes, freak shows, and spectacle, and it became the most visited attraction in the United States, drawing millions of paying customers over the years. Barnum had a genius for the publicity stunt and the manufactured sensation, and he turned the museum into a cash machine and himself into a household name.
His boldest stroke was cultural. In 1850 he signed the celebrated Swedish soprano Jenny Lind, the Swedish Nightingale, to tour America, guaranteeing her $1,000 per concert for as many as 150 performances before she had sung a note on American soil. Barnum spent lavishly to build anticipation, and the tour of 1850-51 was a triumph that earned both of them large sums and confirmed Barnum, by 1850, as a wealthy man.
The Fall
Barnum's undoing came not from show business but from real estate and a manufacturing scheme. In the early 1850s he set out to develop East Bridgeport, Connecticut, into an industrial town. To lure the Jerome Clock Company to relocate there and anchor the district, he agreed to lend the firm money. The company claimed it needed help retiring a debt of about $100,000.
The arrangement was a trap. Barnum was induced to sign and endorse a series of notes, and the obligations multiplied far beyond what he understood he had agreed to. By the time the dust settled he found himself personally liable for the clock company's debts, a figure reported at well over a hundred thousand and by some accounts approaching half a million dollars. The Jerome Clock Company went bankrupt in 1856, and Barnum's wealth went with it.
The collapse was a public humiliation as much as a financial one. It triggered roughly four years of lawsuits, and critics who had long resented Barnum's success delighted in his fall. The man who had taught America how to make money was now insolvent, his great museum mortgaged and his fortune gone.
The Comeback
Barnum refused to stay down. He returned to what he knew best: performing and promotion. He took the celebrated dwarf entertainer General Tom Thumb, whom he had made famous, on another tour of Europe, and the proceeds went toward his debts. He also took to the lecture circuit, delivering a talk he called The Art of Money-Getting, a brisk, practical sermon on thrift, energy, and enterprise that drew large audiences in America and Britain and earned him both money and a measure of rehabilitation.
Working steadily through the late 1850s, Barnum bought his way out of the Jerome Clock obligations and reclaimed control of Barnum's American Museum, which he had operated under lease arrangements during his insolvency. By around 1860 he had cleared his debts and rebuilt his fortune, and he marked the recovery by building a new home in Bridgeport. Fire would later destroy the American Museum in 1865, and again in 1868, but by then Barnum was solidly back on his feet.
The greatest chapter came late. In 1871, at age 60, Barnum launched P. T. Barnum's Grand Traveling Museum, Menagerie, Caravan and Hippodrome, a vast traveling circus that toured by rail. In 1881 he merged with his rival James Bailey, and the combined Barnum & Bailey enterprise, billed as the Greatest Show on Earth, became the most famous circus in the world and the source of a fortune far larger than the one he had lost.
The Turnaround
Legacy
P. T. Barnum died on April 7, 1891, in Bridgeport, Connecticut, a wealthy and celebrated man whose second fortune dwarfed his first. He had served in the Connecticut legislature and was elected mayor of Bridgeport in 1875, and he gave generously to his adopted city, including the land for Seaside Park. He famously asked a newspaper to print his obituary while he was still alive so he could read it.
His lasting monument is the American circus. The Barnum & Bailey show, later merged with the Ringling Brothers, toured for well over a century as Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey, an institution that did not close until 2017. The phrase Greatest Show on Earth and the figure of the top-hatted showman entered the permanent vocabulary of popular culture.
Barnum's career remains a study in American salesmanship, hype, and reinvention, complicated by the exploitation and outright frauds on which much of it rested. But as a second-act story it is nearly unmatched: a man ruined at the height of his fame by a swindle, who paid back his creditors, rebuilt his wealth through sheer work, and then, in his sixties, built the enterprise for which he is best remembered.
Lessons
- Stick to the craft you have mastered when rebuilding; Barnum recovered by promoting and exhibiting, not by inventing a new trade.
- A reusable asset, like a famous act, can be redeployed instantly to generate cash in a crisis.
- You can monetize the lesson of your own failure; the man ruined by bad money advice got rich lecturing on how to handle money.
- Repaying creditors in full, even slowly, restores the reputation a comeback depends on.
- It is never too late to build the thing you are remembered for; Barnum founded his circus at 60.
References
- P. T. Barnum Wikipedia
- P.T. Barnum Encyclopaedia Britannica
- The Man, the Myth, the Legend The Barnum Museum
- The True Story of P.T. Barnum Is Way Weirder Than the Movie Smithsonian Magazine