CIRCUS HOROR - St. Paul Globe, June 22, 1893 *************************************************************************** This web site and its contents in the format presented, except where otherwise noted on the page, are copyrighted by Debbie Barrett and may not be copied, altered, converted nor uploaded to any electronic system or BBS, nor linked from any "pay-for-view" site, linked in such a manner as to appear to be part of another site including "frame" capturing, nor included in any software collection or print collection of any type without the express written permission of the author of this site, namely, Debbie Barrett. Please report any such violations to Debbie Barrett, mrsgrinnin@attbi.com. If you are caught in someone else's frame, please go to http://www.rootsweb.com/~wipierce and click on the link provided to free you. *************************************************************************** Seven Men Shocked into Eternity by Electricity at River Falls. *************************************************************************** The Deadly Fluid Passes Down the Center Pole of a Menagerie *************************************************************************** Bodies of the Dead Soaked Through Before They Are Removed. *************************************************************************** The Clothing on Some of the Victims Was Torn to Tatters. *************************************************************************** Thirty or Forty People Injured by the Terrific Shock. *************************************************************************** Three Bolts of Lightning Believed to Have Struck the Pole. *************************************************************************** Special to the Globe. River Falls, Wis., June 21. - During a severe thunder storm this afternoon at about 4 o'clock lightning struck the first center pole in the menagerie of Ringling Bros. Seven people were killed, and quite a number injured, none of the latter fatally. The killed are: Alex O. Dean, Eugene Reynolds, Charles Smith, Clark Mapes, ---- Aldridge, James Glendenning, Leslie Glendenning. The greatest consternation immediately arose. The rain continued falling in great sheets, and the bodies of the dead were soaked through before they could be removed. As soon as possible Ringling brothers and their employees did everything in their power to alleviate the condition of the wounded. The dead were taken down town and laid out on the floor of th engine house, where they were, with the exception of one boy, identified in a few minutes after their arrival. The *ew, as relatives identified their dead was distressing. One elderly gentleman, the father of young dean, a handsome and intelligent young man, who was so suddenly taken from life, fainted and was carried out of the engine house moaning. Women were present looking for relatives. Happily none of them recognized any of the dead as theirs while the GLOBE reporter was present. The clothing of some of the dead was torn in shreds, while others presented no external evidences of fatality except the awful stare and fixed, rigid features. The number of wounded is estimated all the way from ten to thirty. Most of them were taken home as soon as possible, and are now doing well. The presence of mind of the Ringlings and their employees alone prevented a stampede, which undoubtedly would have been attended with still greater fatality. The crowd was held in check, and the dead and wounded removed as soon and as quietly as possible. Al Ringling, master of ceremonies in the circus proper, thinks there were three distinct bolts of lightning. The first shock nobody felt. The lightning went right down the pole. The second shock caused the fatalities, and the third knocked down thirty of the circus horses. A carriage was passing the tent at the time, and a man, a boy and a woman with a boy in her arms were thrown to the gound. The father rushed around to the cook tent looking for his boy, the water at this time being up to his knees. Great pools of water formed at the circus entrance, and some of the stricken, who were helped and dragged outside, were dropped, in some instances, face downwards in these pools of water. When your reporter saw the dead bodies in the engine house afterwards, he noticed that the clothing of all of them was saturated as if they had been pulled out of the river. Mr. Ringling rushed through the connection tent after the stroke and around to the main entrance, where he saw a number of the bodies of the dead and injured lying in the water and on the ground. He thought at first that one of his brothers was among the dead, as there was one body of gigantic proportions among them. Happily this fear proved unfounded. Relieved to some extent by this knowledge he gave his attention to the aid of the wounded and the resuscitation of thos who he thought were not fatally injured. He worked for some time around the entrance of the tent, freely offering any facility in the company's power to alleviate the suffering. All the Ringlings did everything in their power, and are highly commended by the citizens. Among the incidents was the twisting of a buggy to pieces from the seat by a bolt of lightning. None of the occupants were injured. Many people were thrown violently against them. The dead, excepting in one or two instances were not apparently seriously burned or scorched. One young man named Dean, who was thrown to the engine house, was still alive. When the reporter entered the doctors were working over him. His eyes looked up appealingly, and as this reporter bent over him they became fixed, and his life went out. He was the last to die. Eugene Reynolds, a young carpenter, shywed (sic) for a few moments after death a flush of apparent health. Then the features relaxed, and, like his fellow unfortunates, he became a livid evidence of the awful destroying power of the bolt that sent so many to a final account. All the killed were in the full flush of health. The three children presented pathetic spectacles stretched out on chairs and on the floors. None of them was over fourteen-bright, sturdy little fellows dressed in holiday attire. The spectacle was the most saddening and heart-breaking ever looked upon in River Falls. That none of the circus employes (sic) was injured in the slightest was marvelous.