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Horace Marshall: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Marshall MahatmaJune1899.jpg|right]]
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| birth_name                = Horace Marshall III
| birth_day                = June 12, 
| birth_year                = 1902 
| birth_place              = Cleveland, Ohio
| death_day                = February 24,
| death_year                =  1976
| death_place              = Akron, Ohio
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'''Horace Marshall''', son of [[Vaudeville]] magician [[Marshall, the Mystic]], began his own career in magic working the [[Chautauqua]] Circuit in 1923 with partner [[John Frye]], using many of his own creations.


== Marshall, the Mystic ==
His grandfather was also a magician.
[[Horace Marshall]] (? - ?), '''Marshall the Mystic'''  was repeatedly endorsed by leading critics and magicians as "King of deceptive digital dexterity."


As [[Vaudeville]] team with his wife, featured on the Keith-Proctor [[Vaudeville]] circuit, they performed under the name of "Mystic Marshall and Company".
In 1926, Marshall decided to devote full-time to the creation, manufacture and sales of magical apparatus and started H. Marshall and Company, making all items by hand.<ref>Obit, Linking Ring, April, 1976</ref>


{{clear}}
Marshall was a prop builder known for his Feather Flower bouquets built for [[Harry Blackstone]]. Horace  purchased the business of [[Rudolph S. Schlosser]] who built Blackstone's "Light Bulbs Thru a Girl" and [[Houdini]]'s "Flight of Time".<ref>http://hmcmagic.com/history.htm#history</ref>


== Horace Marshall III ==
He was an avid collector of old and rare books on the magic and in 1940 the Akron Magic Club was designated, "The Horace Marshall Ring No. 161", of the [[I.B.M.]]
[[Horace Marshall]] III  (June 12, 1902 - February 24,1976) was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He was repeatedly endorsed by leading critics and magicians as "King of deceptive digital dexterity."


He began his own career in magic working the [[Chautauqua]] Circuit in 1923 with partner [[John Frye]], using many of his own creations. In 1926, Horace decided to devote full-time to the creation, manufacture and sales of magical apparatus and started H. Marshall and Company, making all items by hand.
== Books ==
* Historical and Modern Magic (co-author)


Horace was a prop builder known for his Feather Flower bouquets built for [[Harry Blackstone]]. Horace  purchased the business of [[Rudolph S. Schlosser]] who built Blackstone's "Light Bulbs Thru a Girl" and [[Houdini]]'s "Flight of Time".
== References ==
<references />


In 1940, the Akron Magic Club was designated, "The Horace Marshall Ring No. 161", of the [[I.B.M.]]


== References ==
* Marshall the Mystic, Cover of [[Mahatma]] Vol. 2. No. 12. (June, 1899).
* http://hmcmagic.com/history.htm#history
[[Category:Biographies]]
[[Category:Biographies]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Marshall,Horace}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Marshall,Horace}}

Revision as of 11:55, 6 July 2011

Horace Marshall
BornHorace Marshall III
June 12, 1902
Cleveland, Ohio
DiedFebruary 24, 1976 (age 73)
Akron, Ohio

Horace Marshall, son of Vaudeville magician Marshall, the Mystic, began his own career in magic working the Chautauqua Circuit in 1923 with partner John Frye, using many of his own creations.

His grandfather was also a magician.

In 1926, Marshall decided to devote full-time to the creation, manufacture and sales of magical apparatus and started H. Marshall and Company, making all items by hand.[1]

Marshall was a prop builder known for his Feather Flower bouquets built for Harry Blackstone. Horace purchased the business of Rudolph S. Schlosser who built Blackstone's "Light Bulbs Thru a Girl" and Houdini's "Flight of Time".[2]

He was an avid collector of old and rare books on the magic and in 1940 the Akron Magic Club was designated, "The Horace Marshall Ring No. 161", of the I.B.M.

Books

  • Historical and Modern Magic (co-author)

References

  1. Obit, Linking Ring, April, 1976
  2. http://hmcmagic.com/history.htm#history