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Charles H. Larson: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox person | {{Infobox person | ||
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| caption = | | caption = Cover of Genii (1939) | ||
| birth_name = | | birth_name = Charles Henry Larson | ||
| birth_day = | | birth_day = circa | ||
| birth_year = | | birth_year = 1870 | ||
| birth_place = Chicago | | birth_place = Chicago | ||
| death_day = April 21, | | death_day = April 21, | ||
| death_year = 1950 | | death_year = 1950 | ||
| death_place = | | death_place = Manhattan Sanatoriuim, New York City | ||
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'''Charles H. Larson''' (c.1870-1950), born in Chicago, was collector and active in the magic community in New York City.<ref>Cover [[Genii 1939 January]]</ref> | |||
Before his retirement he was active in the automotive field. | == Biography == | ||
Before his retirement he was active in the automotive field. He is best known for his [[Larson Museum of Magic|Museum of Magic]] in New York which contained nearly 20,000 tricks from all over the world. The March 1941 issue of The Sphinx had an article describing the collection illustrated with numerous photographs. | |||
He is best known for his [[Larson Museum of Magic|Museum of Magic]] in New York which contained nearly 20,000 tricks from all over the world. The March 1941 issue of The Sphinx had an article describing the collection illustrated with numerous photographs. | |||
[[Greater Magic]] A Practical Treatise on Modern Magi by John Northern Hilliard (1938) has a chapter on OLD AND NEW APPARATUS from The Charles H. Larson Collection. | [[Greater Magic]] A Practical Treatise on Modern Magi by John Northern Hilliard (1938) has a chapter on OLD AND NEW APPARATUS from The Charles H. Larson Collection. | ||
It was report in Genii June 1950, that Charlie sold part of his vast collection of | It was report in Genii June 1950, that Charlie sold part of his vast collection of conjuring to [[Lou Tannen]]. In 2009 [[George McManus]], magi-lawyer, purchased the rest of it. It eventually ended up at the Ringling Circus Musuem in Florida where it languished until Charles Kalish purchased the remnants years later. Kalish sold things piecemeal to a number of collectors, Klosterman and Ellenbogen possibly chief among them. Many of the items have a "CMS" number on them showing the Circus Museum provenance. <ref>A LINKING RING REPORTER VISITS THE CHARLES H. LARSON COLLECTION APRIL, Linking Ring, April, 1943</ref><ref>The Linking Ring, Vol. 30. No. 4, June 1950, Broken Wand, Charles H. Larson, page 81</ref><ref>http://www.geniimagazine.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Board=12&Number=202451</ref> | ||
conjuring to Lou Tannen. | |||
== Honors and Awards == | == Honors and Awards == | ||
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* Cover Charles Larson [[Genii 1939 January]] | * Cover Charles Larson [[Genii 1939 January]] | ||
{{References}} | |||
* | * The Linking Ring, Vol. 19, No. 4, June 1939, Viewpoint – about Charles Larson, page 275 | ||
* | * The Sphinx, Vol. 49, No. 3, May 1950, Charles H. Larson Dies, page 65 | ||
* | * Tops Magazine, Vol. 15, No. 6, June 1950, Charlie Larson Dies, page 12 | ||
* The Perennial Mystics, No 10 (1992), Larson Museum of Magic, Charles Larson, page 17 | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Larson}} | |||
[[Category:Collecting]] | [[Category:Collecting]] | ||
[[Category:Biographies]] | [[Category:Biographies]] | ||
[[Category:Collections]] | [[Category:Collections]] |
Latest revision as of 06:18, 17 April 2015
Charles H. Larson | |
Cover of Genii (1939) | |
Born | Charles Henry Larson circa 1870 Chicago |
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Died | April 21, 1950 (age 79) Manhattan Sanatoriuim, New York City |
Charles H. Larson (c.1870-1950), born in Chicago, was collector and active in the magic community in New York City.[1]
Biography
Before his retirement he was active in the automotive field. He is best known for his Museum of Magic in New York which contained nearly 20,000 tricks from all over the world. The March 1941 issue of The Sphinx had an article describing the collection illustrated with numerous photographs.
Greater Magic A Practical Treatise on Modern Magi by John Northern Hilliard (1938) has a chapter on OLD AND NEW APPARATUS from The Charles H. Larson Collection.
It was report in Genii June 1950, that Charlie sold part of his vast collection of conjuring to Lou Tannen. In 2009 George McManus, magi-lawyer, purchased the rest of it. It eventually ended up at the Ringling Circus Musuem in Florida where it languished until Charles Kalish purchased the remnants years later. Kalish sold things piecemeal to a number of collectors, Klosterman and Ellenbogen possibly chief among them. Many of the items have a "CMS" number on them showing the Circus Museum provenance. [2][3][4]
Honors and Awards
- The Caryl Fleming Award of the I. B. M.
- Cover Charles Larson Genii 1939 January
References
- ↑ Cover Genii 1939 January
- ↑ A LINKING RING REPORTER VISITS THE CHARLES H. LARSON COLLECTION APRIL, Linking Ring, April, 1943
- ↑ The Linking Ring, Vol. 30. No. 4, June 1950, Broken Wand, Charles H. Larson, page 81
- ↑ http://www.geniimagazine.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Board=12&Number=202451
- The Linking Ring, Vol. 19, No. 4, June 1939, Viewpoint – about Charles Larson, page 275
- The Sphinx, Vol. 49, No. 3, May 1950, Charles H. Larson Dies, page 65
- Tops Magazine, Vol. 15, No. 6, June 1950, Charlie Larson Dies, page 12
- The Perennial Mystics, No 10 (1992), Larson Museum of Magic, Charles Larson, page 17