The Sells Floto Circus was a combination of the Floto Dog & Pony Show and the Sells Brothers Circus that toured with sideshow acts in the United States and Canada during the early 1900s.
The Sells Floto circus absorbed Buffalo Bill's Wild West shows, and the Sells Brothers Circus, it was also a "combined" show. It later became the concessions department of Ringling Brothers Circus, along with Haggenback Wallace, who made the floats and other equipment.[citation needed]
The circus had four elephant births, three born to "Alice" and one to "Mama Mary." The sire of all four was "Snyder." None survived longer than five months.[2]
On April 17, 1908, the Sells-Floto circus appeared in Riverside CA. When the animals were ushered off the train, a vapor flashback explosion occurred at the adjacent oil storage tank. This frightened the animals, and led to an elephant stampede into downtown Riverside, leaving one person dead and six others injured.[4][5]
Feld Entertainment later used the Sells-Floto name for their supply division, located in Laurel, MD, that provided logistical support for all of the Feld shows for supplies and merchandise, including not only the three units of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, but the numerous On Ice shows (Disney on Ice, Ice Follies, etc.). This unit has since been renamed Feld Consumer Products.[citation needed]
Alternate names
Sells-Floto Circus, Harry Tammen and Fred Bonfils, proprietors
Sells-Floto Circus & Buffalo Bill's Wild West
Sells-Floto Circus, John Ringling, proprietor
Sells-Floto Circus & Buffalo Bill's Wild West
Sells-Floto Circus, American Circus Corp., proprietor
Members
During the 1914–1915 seasons, the circus featured Buffalo Bill Cody.
Novelist and cookbook author Isabel Moore's "first career" was as a trapeze artist with Sells Floto ca. 1928. She took the job because she had "courage, but no brains."[6]
Pasqual Piñón, (1889–1929), known as "The Two-Headed Mexican", was a performer with the Sells-Floto Circus in the early 1900s.
In 1919, professional boxer Georges Carpentier exhibited his boxing skills with the Sells Floto Circus for ten weeks at the rate of $2,000 a week.[7]
^Aaron Maggs; Allison Maggs (2022). Fire, Wind, and the Sells-Floto Circus. Riverside, CA: Mission Inn Foundation History Research Committee. pp. 4–24. ISBN9798846310100.
^" 'Other Woman' Inspires Book," Brookfield Courier (New York), July 21, 1949.
^White Hopes and Other Tigers, John Lardner, J. B. Lippincott Company, 1951