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Tompkins Real Wild West - By: The Donaldson Litho. 1914 #2828

1914 Tompkins Real Wild West #2828

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By: The Donaldson Litho.

Date: 1914 (circa) Newport, KY

Dimensions: 26.25 x 40 inches (66.5 x 101.5 cm)

A rare chromolithograph broadside poster promoting the Tompkins Real Wild West show by The Donaldson Litho. circa 1914, this poster identified as #2828. The artistry and printing technique used to make this work is so action-packed and vibrant that you can almost hear the scene that is presented.

This is a calamitous scene with many cowboys and cowgirls involved in a variety of western horseback activities, from trick riding, horse jumping, to cattle wrangling, horse breaking, and skeet shooting. Dust kicks up from the ground and gun smoke fills the air with a group of covered box wagons set at the base of low mountains in the background. At lower right is an steer skull, lying on the ground bleached from the sun; an emblematic object of the wild west. 

Tompkins Real Wild West    

Wild west shows were extremely popular for about three decades, beginning with the Buffalo Bill show that earned notoriety during the Columbian Exposition of 1893 and ending with the start of World War I. The Tompkins Wild West show ran from 1913 - 1917 in partnership with the Cooper-Whitby Circus. The show was scheduled to run from the summer to the fall, touring Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey during the summer months before moving about Maryland and Virginia in the fall. Notable performers included Charles and Mabel Tompkins, Chief Running Deer, Hank Drake (an African American trick rider), Dixie DeVere, Owasso, Bulldogger, and Lafe Lewman to name a few. 

Charles H. Tompkins

Born in Round Rock, Texas in 1873, Charles Tompkins began working as a ranch hand at age 12. He would eventually participate in a number of cattle drives, including the last big drive that herded 25,000 head of steer from Dalhart, TX (just north of Amarillo) to Montana. In 1895 he participate in a roping contest in Chicago and won 1st prize. He would continue to earn respect as a professional roper and rider and eventually become director of the Congress of Champion Ropers and Riders at the St. Louis Worlds Fair in 1904. 

Charles would marry Mabel Hackney who herself was an accomplished cowgirl. She worked the Buffalo Bill show riding horses, chariots, and jumping. During an ill-fated European tour that all but bankrupted the Tompkins Real Wild West show, she earned the title of "the World's Greatest Equestrian." Charles left Europe known as the "King of Cowboys."

For more information on the Tompkins Real Wild West show, we recommend this website: https://www.classic.circushistory.org/Bandwagon/bw-1971Mar.htm

Condition: This lithograph print is in A condition with vibrant color and full margins. The piece has been professionally linen backed for preservation and presentations purposes.

Inventory # 92053

1200 W. 35th Street #425 Chicago, IL 60609 | P: (312) 496 - 3622

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