BARNEY.
BARNUM.
BARNEY, Samuel S., representative, was
born in Hartford, Wis., Jan. 31, 1846; son of
John and Adaline (Knox) Barney ; and grandson
of William and Mercy (Crapeau) Barne}% and of
Sylvanus and Ruth (Adams) Knox. He was
educated in the jiublic schools of Hartford, at-
tended Lombard university, Galesburg, III., but
did not graduate, and taught in tlie higli scliool
in Hartford, 1867-'70. He studietl law with
L. F. Frisby, attorney-general of Wisconsin, in
1870 ; was admitted to tlie bar in 1S73, and prac-
tised at West Bend, Wis. He was superintend-
ent of schools of Washington county, 1876-'80 ;
Republican candidate for representative in the
49th congress against General Bragg in 1884 ;
delegate to the Republican national convention
at Chicago in 1884 ; and a representative from
the fifth district of Wisconsin in the 54th, 55th,
56th and 57th congresses, 1895-1903. He was
married in 1876 to Ellen McHenry of AVest Bend.
BARNUM, Henry A., soldier, was born at Jamesville. N. Y., Sept. 24, 1833. He was edu- cated at the Syracuse institute, graduated in 1856, and admitted to the bar in 1860. In 1861 he vol- unteered as a private in the 12th New York vol- unteer regiment. He was commissioned captain and fought in the battle of Bull Run, and during the Peninsular campaign. For his services in these engagements he received the rank of major. At the battle of Malvern Hill he served on the staff of General Butterfield, was wounded and left on the field for dead. He was found by the Confederates, taken prisoner, and confined in Libby prison, from which he was liberated in July, 1862. Soon after his release he was pro- moted colonel, and commanded his regiment in the battles of Gettysburg and Lookout mountain, and also throughout the Atlanta campaign, being woimded at Lookout mountain, where his regiment captured eleven battle flags. Before Atlanta he was again wounded, and on Sherman's famous march to the sea Colonel Barnum was commander of a brigade. In 1865 he was made major-general of volunteers "for his gallantry and fearlessness during the entire war," and resigned from the volunteer army in January, 1866, refusing a commission as colonel in the reg- ular army. He was elected inspector of state prisons in New York, and in 1869 was made deputy tax-commissioner, holding the ofiice three years. In 1885 he was elected to the state assembly, and was afterwards appointed harbor master of the port of New York, where he served five years, having been reappointed to the office in 1889 by President Harrison. Congress, by special vote in 1890, awarded him a pension of one hundred dollars per month, that being the largest pension ever allowed an officer of his rank. He died in New York citv Jan. 29, 1892.
BARNUM, Phineas Taylor, showman, was
born at Bathel, Conn., July 5, 1810, the son of a
country store and tavern keeper. His father
died when he was quite young, and he went to
New York to fiind employment. Having accumu-
lated some money, he opened a small store in
Bethel, and became connected with the lottery
chartered by the state for the purpose of building
the Groton monument opposite New London. In
1829 he estabHshed and edited 77ie Herald of Free-
dom, was charged with libel and imprisoned sixty
days. In 1834 he removed to New York city, and
placed on exhibition an old slave woman called
Joyce Heth, advertised as the nurse of George
Washington, and one hundred and sixty years
old. He paid one thousand dollars for the right
to exhibit her, advertised her extensively, and
realized large returns. Thereafter Barnum trav-
elled through the Southern states, exhibiting sev-
eral small shows. In 1841 he bought Scudder's
American museum, entirely on credit, and by
shrewd management he was able to pay for it
within a year. This became known as ' • Barnum's
Museum," and was a favorite resort for many
years. In 1842 he brought before the public
Charles S. Stratton, of Bridgeport, Conn., a dwarf
whom he named Gen. Tom Thumb and exhibited
in America and Europe with great success. In
1849 he engaged Jenny Lind for one hundred and
fifty nights, at one thousand dollars per night,
brought her to America, and provided a concert
company to assist her. This venture returned him
a large profit. In 1855 he retired from the show
business and built an elegant home in Bridgeport,
Conn. Here he entered into .several local business
schemes which eventually absorbed his fortune-
He again visited England with Tom Thumb, re-
turning in 1857, and his earnings enabled him to
extricate himself from his financial difficulties.
He once more took charge of the old museum
which was burned on the 13th of July, 1865.
Another museum in a different locality was
quickly extemporized, which was also burned.
In 1871 he established a vast traveUing menagerie
and circus, which attracted much patronage
and earned him a large fortune. He was four
times a member of the lower house of the Con-
necticut legislature, and Mayor of Bridgeport for
many years. He was a man of decided pubUc
spirit, and his benefactions, which were most Ub-
eral, included a public park in Bridgeport and a
stone museum building for Tufts college, filled
with specimens of natural history. He also de-
livered popular lectures in all parts of the country
for many years, and wrote his own life, which had
a wide circulation, and is as entertaining as any
romance. He also published in 1845, '* The Hum-
bugs of the World," and in 1876. •• Lion Jack."
He died at his home at Bridgeport, April 7, 1891.