Delavan’s Circus Colony Historical Marker
N 42° 38.000 W 088° 39.244
16T E 364379 N 4721424
The Delavan’s Circus Colony Historical Marker is located in Horton Park on Hwy 11 in Delavan.
Waymark Code: WM2JTD
Location: Wisconsin, United States
Date Posted: 11/12/2007
Views: 39
In 1847 two New York brothers, Edmund and Jeremiah Mabie, toured Wisconsin with their United States Olympic Circus. The circus stopped over in Delavan and the brothers took time off to hunt prairie chicken near Delavan Lake. They liked the area so well that they purchased 400 acres of land and established winter-quarters for the circus here.
Because the circus was the largest and most profitable in existence, circus performers and other show personnel flocked to Delavan. Twenty-six circuses winter-quartered here between 1847 and 1894, including Harry Buckley’s National Circus and Roman Hippodrome, W.C. Coup-Dan Castello’s Egyptian Caravan, Holland and McMahon World’s Circus. The colorful days of the circus era in Delavan ended with the E.G. Holland & Co. Railroad Shows.
In 1871 the idea for forming the P.T. Barnum Circus was developed in Delavan by W.C. Coup, who also was first to put a large circus on rails and introduced the second and third ring to the performance. Delavan reached its peak as a “circus town” during the 1870’s. About seventy members of the “circus colony” are buried in Spring Grove and St. Andrew’s cemeteries.
Erected 1963
County: Walworth
Location: Park
MarkerID: 128
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Visit Instructions:
- A picture of the marker with your GPSr or you holding your GPSr.