Artie Atherton

{{short description|Sideshow performer (1890–1920)}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2022}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Artie Atherton

| image = Artie Atherton.jpg

| caption = Skeleton man

| birthname = Charles Arthur Moll

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1890|01|30|mf=y}}

| birth_place = Saginaw, Michigan

| death_date = {{Death date|1920|05|31|mf=y}} (aged 30)

| death_place = Pontiac, Michigan{{cite web|url=https://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=60872&h=1204821&tid=&pid=&queryId=75f8fe855ebaf33c00b9a0998f2371f7&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Out5&_phstart=success|title=Michigan, U.S. Death Records (1867-1952)|website=Ancestry.com}}

| occupation = Circus attraction; Sideshow performer; Chicago newspaper reporter

| alias = Skeleton Dude; Human Skeleton; The Living Skeleton; The Thinest Man in the World; Transparent Man{{cite web|url=https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/artie-atherton-human-skeleton-1925189031|title=Artie Atherton, "Human Skeleton" side show "thin freak postcard"}}

| known_for = being extraordinarily underweight

| height = Variously given as:{{unbulleted list| {{height|ft=5|in=5}} in 1911{{cite web|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/marriage-clipping-jul-08-1911-3579023/|title=Thinest man marries|publisher=Saint Johns Evening Telegram, Newfoundland, July 8|year=1911|page=2}}|{{height|ft=5|in=6}} in 1917}}{{cite web|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-may-31-1917-3578383/|title=Living skeleton enrols for war|publisher=Brockport Republic, New York, May 31|year=1917|page=11}}

| title =

| family =

| spouse = Mary “Blanche” Burkley (m. 1911){{cite web|url=https://www.ancestry.co.uk/discoveryui-content/view/446586:2556?tid=&pid=&queryId=e23076f34370a20a203d3fc96603a21c&_phsrc=Out1&_phstart=success|title=Arthur Atherton marriage|year=1911|website=Ancestry.com|publisher=Cook County, Illinois, U.S., Marriages Index, (1871-1920)}}

| children =

| relatives =

| credits =

| URL =

| agent =

}}

Arthur "Artie" Atherton (born Charles Arthur Moll; January 30, 1890 – May 31, 1920) was an American entertainer, showman and circus sideshow performer during the early 20th century, who was billed as "the living human skeleton" or "skeleton dude".{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=djPCfSAsHN0C&dq=coffey+skeleton+atherton&pg=PA322|title=Freakery Cultural Spectacles of the Extraordinary Body|author=Thomson-Garland, Rosemarie|page=322|year=1996|publisher=NYU Press |isbn=9780814782224 }}{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PR7nAAAAMAAJ&q=artie+atherton+skeleton|title=Hobbies|publisher=Lightner Publishing Company|year=1948|page=27}}{{cite web|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-jun-18-1920-3578381/|title="Skeleton" of circus fame meets death in auto|publisher=High Point Enterprise, North Carolina, June 18|year=1920|page=4}}

Biography

He was born Charles Arthur Moll, in Saginaw, Michigan on January 30, 1890, weighing just {{convert|2|lbs|2}} at birth. Until the age of 6, his parents carried him around on a pillow due to his frailty. He used a wheelchair until the age of 10 and for greater mobility used crutches until the age of 17.{{cite web|url= https://books.google.com/books?id=XaoiAQAAMAAJ&q=artie+atherton+skeleton|title=Artie Atherton|publisher=Billboard, Volume 29|year=1917|pages=26, 79}} He was the son of Alphons “Al” Moll (1871–1952) and Mary “Francis” Smith (1868–1949). His father was a salesman of dried goods from Pontiac, Michigan, of dual German parentage with roots back to Hamburg. His mother was born in Wallaceburg, Ontario.

He joined the Barnum & Bailey Circus in 1909, and took the stage name of Artie Atherton, working alongside many others like him with disabilities and unique physical traits, who were subject to mockery. He also worked as a reporter for a Chicago newspaper during the circus off-season. Atherton initially worked as a barker for Barnum & Bailey’s traveling circus, which the company billed as "The Greatest Show on Earth".

Image: 1911 - Barnum & Bailey Circus Newspaper Ad.jpg

In the circus he acquired fame performing as a solo act, as well as in a group. He was styled by Barnum & Bailey as "The Skeleton Dude", a derivative replacement act emulating John "James W." Coffey (1852–1912), the elegant "Ohio Skeleton", which for 12 years made him a popular cultural icon.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dwAVCgAAQBAJ&dq=coffey+skeleton+atherton&pg=PA80|title=Weird and Wonderful|author=Dennett, Andrea Stulman|publisher=The Dime Museum in America|year=1997|isbn=9780814718865 }}

Image:Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Earth; A Colossal Congress of Curious Creatures.jpg

Atherton was routinely given prominence in regional newspapers as a top headline act, aimed at enticing interest in advance of the arrival of the traveling circus. Children at the time were encouraged by their parents to enjoy such entertainment, which contemporaries would now consider to be unacceptable behaviour when vulnerable people with rare physical traits are subject to commercial exploitation and public ridicule. His living skeleton act proved to be continuously successful in the Barnum & Bailey traveling circus, and it was mimicked by numerous other living skeleton protégés such as Peter Robinson and Eddie Masher.{{cite web|page=4|publisher=Emporia Gazette, Kansas, Fri, Sep 17|title=Big circus is coming with many thrills|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-sep-17-1915-3578378/|year=1915}} He also worked for a period at Dreamland Circus sideshow on Coney Island.

File:Show Bill, Barnum and Bailey's show Wellcome M0015543.jpg

Atherton moved between circuses during his career due to demand, and in 1914 he formed part of the Ringling Circus sideshow. In 1919, this circus merged with Barnum and Bailey, and was relaunched as the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. He claimed to have weighed {{convert|38|lbs|2}} and measured

{{convert|3.5|in|cm}} around the biceps, {{convert|16|in|cm}} inches around the waist, {{convert|6.25|in|cm}} around the thigh, and wore US size 3 shoes, and size 6 gloves.{{cite web|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-dec-17-1916-3024409/|title=Artie Atherton, skeleton dude|publisher=Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, Indiana Dec 17|year=1916|website=newspaperarchive.com|page=50}}{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W1vhAAAAMAAJ&q=artie+atherton+skeleton|title=Some of Those Days: An Autobiography|author=Taylor, John Wilson|year=1966|page=31}} He also claimed to be healthy, with no absences from his professional work, eating at regular intervals, and making no attempts to limit his food intake. When challenged by reporters, he justified his build to being simply “small boned”.{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cdPfmMQ2n84C&q=artie+atherton|title=Artie Atherton|date=February 1934 |publisher=The New Yorker, Volume 10, Issues 1-11}}{{cite web|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/chicago-day-book-dec-12-1916-p-14/|title=Perfect Baby Child of Skeleton|publisher=Chicago Day Book, December 16|year=1916

|pages=14–15}}

On June 9, 1911, at the age of 24, Atherton married Mary Blanche "Jelly May" Burkley, a 19 year old circus "freak performer" and snake charmer. Within this industry, marriages were often arranged and exploited for profit by managers who manipulated the image and the personal lives of performers. Weird Wonderful: The Dime museum in America by Andrea Stulman Dennett described Mr and Mrs Atherton as a bizarre couple, and questioned whether their relationship was fabricated to lure patrons, with his young wife who was multiple times his weight at {{convert|136|lbs|2}}. In order to portray their stage roles as Mr. & Mrs Atherton (The Happy Couple), "Jelly May" was encouraged to rapidly increase her weight in order for the couple to achieve fame as a duet act, and she achieved a weight of {{convert|183|lbs|2}} by 1912.

Atherton had two children with Mary Blanche, the "Snake Enchantress"; both of average birth weights. Harold Arthur Atherton (b.1914) was {{convert|12|lbs|2}}; and Mary Adelaide (b.1913) was {{convert|9|lbs|2}}. At 3 years of age, Mary Adelaide won a "Perfect Baby" contest in New York City during 1916.{{cite web|url=

https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-jun-15-1920-3579102/|title=Circus Skeleton|publisher=Mansfield News, Ohio, June 15|year=1920|page=1}} Her "perfection" ran counter to the pro-eugenics attitudes that were prevalent at the time, since Atherton was labeled by society as a circus attraction, and a genetically disadvantaged human specimen who had, to the bewilderment of others, fathered two healthy and robust children.{{cite web|url=https://newspaperarchive.com/other-articles-clipping-dec-03-1916-3579843/|title=Living skeleton father of two prize winning babies|publisher=Boston Sunday Globe, Dec 3|year=1916|page=45}}{{cite web|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/hd2/IDX-Business/Music/Billboard-Index/IDX/1920/Billboard-1920-03-20-Spring-Special-OCR-Page-0015.pdf|title=Billboard, Mar 20|year=1920}}

In May 1917, whilst in the employ of Barnum & Bailey Circus, the press reported that Atherton had enrolled in Greensburg, Pennsylvania for military service. However World War I military registration cards have revealed that Atherton claimed an exemption from draft, due to being underweight and he continued with Barnum & Bailey.{{cite web|url=https://www.ancestry.co.uk/discoveryui-content/view/1616514:6482?tid=&pid=&queryId=b63f227d02d927f33599236b2754f1f6&_phsrc=ejk2&_phstart=successSource|title=U.S., World War I Draft Registration Cards (1917-1918)|publisher=Ancestry.com}}

File:Barnum & Bailey greatest show on Earth poster.jpg

File:The Peerless Prodigies of Physical Phenomena.jpg

On May 31, 1920, during a visit to Pontiac, Michigan, Atherton was hit by a motor vehicle while crossing the road, puncturing his right lung, and as a result he died from his injuries at the age of 31.{{cite web|url=https://oregonnews.uoregon.edu/lccn/sn85042444/1920-06-26/ed-1/seq-6/ocr/|title=Archie Atherton (Image)|publisher=The Oregon daily journal (Portland, Or), June 26|year=1920|page=6}}

Personal

A stage name was part of his dandy character, however it is unlikely that he legally adopted it officially by Deed poll, since there is no record. Nevertheless, the Cook County, Illinois Marriage Index highlights his preference to formalise his stage name as Artie Atherton, by registering his marriage to Blanche Burkley in Chicago on June 9, 1911, as "Arthur Atherton".{{cite web|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/65961880/marriage-license-for-charles-edna/|title=Marriage Licenses Atherton-Burkley|publisher=Chicago Examiner, Jun 10|year=1911|website=newspapers.com|page=15}} Both his offspring were registered and subsequently baptized in a Presbyterian Church as Atherton’s, with both parents using this stage name at their children’s baptism.{{cite web|url=https://www.ancestry.co.uk/discoveryui-content/view/1650406572:61048|publisher=Presbyterian Church Records, (1701-1907)|title=Session/Register of Baptismal Cards (1909-1967)}}

Records show that Atherton traveled from Cuba to the United States, arriving in New York on the SS Esperanza on March 5, 1917, under his stage name.{{cite web|url=https://search.ancestry.co.uk/cgi-bin/sse.dll?indiv=1&dbid=7488&h=4024553367&tid=&pid=&queryId=6e4ffd0a2e6ea336f6c57d81369887c4&usePUB=true&_phsrc=Out3&_phstart=successSource|title=New York, U.S., Arriving Passenger and Crew Lists (1820-1957)}} His death was reported three years later in U.S. newspapers coast to coast, using his famed stage name; however, he was buried on June 3, 1920, as Charles Arthur Moll. His tombstone in Oak Hill Cemetery reflects his original name, with no reference to his stage name.

Following his death, his two children also reverted to the name Moll. His wife remarried as Blanche Moll on August 8, 1936, becoming Mrs George Bauers.{{cite web|url=https://www.ancestry.co.uk/discoveryui-content/view/300760833:2238?tid=&pid=&queryId=c7a311934c23273826a56e16807a6543&_phsrc=ejk4&_phstart=successSource|website=Ancestry.com|title=U.S. World War II Draft Cards Young Men (1940-1947): Arthur Harald Moll}}

Legacy

Atherton died at the peak of his professional career as the living skeleton; a time of economic downturn, such was the demand for his type of show in 1920 that The New Yorker reported:

Artie Atherton, the famous Skeleton or Transparent Man, died when the circus was playing a town in Arkansas; the telegrapher who sent the message to Atherton's relatives asked to be the new Skeleton and was engaged when it was found…{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cdPfmMQ2n84C|title=The New Yorker, Vol 10. Issues 1-11|publisher=F-R Publishing Corporation|year=1934|page=73}}

This line of work as a skeleton act predated a change in public conscience. In the decades that followed, localities across North America began passing laws forbidding the exhibition of persons who were subject to public ridicule, for which others profited.{{cite journal |last1=Fordham |first1=Brigham |title=Dangerous Bodies: Freak Shows, Expression, and Exploitation |year=2007 |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1g32z0dx |journal=UCLA Entertainment Law Review |volume=14 |issue=2 |doi=10.5070/LR8142027098 |access-date=25 November 2022|doi-access=free }} However, his own son followed his footsteps as a traveling showman, having been born into the community and familiar with the profession.

Further reading

  • Bogdan R. 1988. Freak Show: Presenting Human Oddities for Amusement and Profit.
  • Putova B. 2018. Freak shows. Otherness of the human body as a form of public presentation.
  • Fordham B. 2007. Dangerous Bodies: Freak Shows, Expression, and Exploitation.
  • Worrall H. Exposing the fallacy of circus ‘showmen’[https://www.sydneyoperahouse.com/backstage/first-nations/exposing-the-fallacy-of-circus-showmen.html]

See also

References