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Mourning Elephant |
Showmen’s Rest is the nations’ most well known cemetery for circus artists and performers. It was created in 1916 when the Showmen’s League of America purchased a plot at Woodlawn Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois for the burial of circus performers, circus hands and circus artists. Five white elephant statues circle the plot, trunks lowered as a sign of mourning. Burials were far between for the first two years, until that fateful morning in June when circus history was changed forever.
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Wreck of the Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus Train |

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Grave Stone for Jennie Ward Todd |
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Jennie Ward Todd |
Among those buried were Jennie Ward Todd of the “Flying Wards.” And the “Great Dieckx Brothers,” Arthur Dieckx and Max Nietzborn.
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Row of Graves |
Forty of the markers are engraved as “Unknown” - “Unknown Female, number 48” or “Unknown Male, number 29”, and the date June 22, 1918.
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4 Horses Driver & Baldy |
Two performers were buried under their show names, ‘Baldy’ and ‘Smiley,’ as their real names were never known. A few stones are marked only with the person’s job descriptions such as 4 Horse Driver, June 22, 1918. Contrary to popular myth, NO animals were hurt or killed in the train crash.

Circus performers from around the country arrived to help Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus keep to their performing schedule for that season. All told, the circus only missed one performance, the night of June 22, 1918 when they were to appear in Hammond, Indiana.
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Mt Olivet Cemetery in Hugo, Oklahoma |
There are a few other ‘Showmen’s Rest Cemeteries’ in the U.S. – one is in Miami, Florida, at Southern Memorial Park. This is the largest of the Showmen’s Rest Cemeteries, founded in 1952. Another is located at the ‘winter home of the circus’, Hugo, Oklahoma at Mt Olivet Cemetery. And another is located in Tampa, Florida near downtown.
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International Clown Week |
It is true that performers and actors never want to “leave the boards” of the stage, and at Showmen’s Rest, in Woodlawn Cemetery, that desire is understood. Each year, International Clown Week http://performforthelove.com/showmensrest/ is held in early August. A private memorial is held during the week for the circus performers buried there. Then, on a Sunday afternoon, circus artists from across the world perform for the public at Showmen’s Rest. The events include circus acts, death-defying feats, family entertainment and general “clowning around,” as hundreds of clowns take part each year. The event is billed as “a loving and festive remembrance of circus artists past.”
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Showmen's Rest, Woodlawn Cemetery |
As a theatre performer I can tell you, this is one of the most fitting and touching tributes any performer could ask for. The old adage, “The show must go on…” is something every true performer believes. It is wonderful to see that it still does……at Showmen’s Rest.
~ Joy