1874 The Australian Combination

 

Daily Gleaner, January 7, 1874

 
 

 

 

Daily Gleaner, February 3, 1874
A few Nights only until the arrival of the steamer for Vera Cruz.

Daily Gleaner, February 4, 1874

      The Australian Combination will give their last entertainment in this city, this evening, and, we would advise all who have not yet visited their exhibitions, to avail themselves of this opportunity to do so, as they may not have a another chance in a hurry to see anything to compare, especially with the learned Pig. Few exhibitors have succeeded for so long a time as the Australian

      The Australian Combination will give their last entertainment in this city, this evening, and, we would advise all who have not yet visited their exhibitions, to avail themselves of this opportunity to do so, as they may not have a another chance in a hurry to see anything to compare, especially with the learned Pig. Few exhibitors have succeeded for so long a time as the Australian Combination to attract large audiences, and we trust they may be equally successful at their next place of call. On leaving here they will proceed to Vera Cruz.

 

 Wild Australian Children
Buffalo ; New York : Warren Johnson & Co., circa 1864. Promotional card with colour lithograph design, after a photograph by Charles D. Fredricks, carte de visite format (102 x 67 mm), printed caption and publisher's imprint in lower margin, verso blank.

A portrait of two microcephalic sideshow 'freaks', whose physical appearance led them to be referred to at the time by promoters and commentators as 'pinheads'. The children were billed as Hoomio and Iola, who had purportedly been found in the interior of Australia. An anonymous contemporary promotional pamphlet, which gives a fictitious account of their background, is recorded in several Australian collections (The Adventures of the three Australian travellers : Capt. J. Reid and his companions Cooper and Parker, in search of the marvelous : giving a graphic account of the discovery, capture and semi-civilization of the wild Australian children, Hoomio and Iola : together with a sketch of the savage tribes inhabiting the interior of Australia : with a brief account of the customs, manners, heathen beliefs, superstitions, traditions and origin of those barbarous and curious islanders. New York : S. Booth, 1864). Hoomio and Iola are known to have been exhibited by promoters from around 1864 to at least 1869. They represented an opportunity for promoters to exploit the controversy surrounding the Darwinian theory of evolution, and were shamelessly portrayed to audiences as specimens of a 'missing link' in the evolutionary chain. Numerous other American sideshow acts of the 1860s, such as Maximo and Bartola, The Ancient Aztec Children, and Waino and Plutano, The Wild Men of Borneo, had similarly exotic histories concocted by promoters to appeal to the fascination of an insatiable and gullible public.