Help us get to over 8,749 articles in 2024.

If you know of a magician not listed in MagicPedia, start a New Biography for them. Contact us at magicpediahelp@gmail.com

Difference between revisions of "Thomas Worthington"

From Magicpedia, the free online encyclopedia for magicians by magicians.
Jump to: navigation, search
(Awards and Honors)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:ThomasWorthington.jpg|right|thumb|Picture from Sphinx cover, May 1916]]
+
{{Infobox person
[[Thomas Chew Worthington III]] (1879 - January 2, 1953) was one of the founders of the [[Demons Club]] and [[Society of Osiris Magicians]]. By profession, he a salesman for distributors of X-ray and photographic equipment.  
+
| image                    = ThomasWorthington.jpg
 +
| image_size                =
 +
| alt                      =
 +
| caption                  = Sphinx, May 1916
 +
| birth_name                =
 +
| birth_day                =  February 13,
 +
| birth_year                =  1882
 +
| birth_place              = Baltimore, Maryland
 +
| death_day                =  January 2,
 +
| death_year                =  1953
 +
| death_place              =
 +
| resting_place            =
 +
| resting_place_coordinates = 
 +
| nationality              =
 +
| known_for                =
 +
| notable works            =
 +
| flourished                =
 +
| awards                    =
 +
| box_width                =
 +
| misc                      =
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
'''Thomas Chew Worthington III''' (1882 - 1953) was one of the founders of the [[Demons Club]] and [[Society of Osiris Magicians]]. By profession, he a salesman for distributors of X-ray and photographic equipment.
 +
 
 +
His first season as a performer was in 1911, where he worked mostly at churches, clubs, and the like.
  
 
Worthington  became interested in magic when his grandfather introduced him to his friend [[Alexander Herrmann]].  He later became friends with [[Thurston]] and was known by [[Houdini]] and of the magicians of his day.
 
Worthington  became interested in magic when his grandfather introduced him to his friend [[Alexander Herrmann]].  He later became friends with [[Thurston]] and was known by [[Houdini]] and of the magicians of his day.
Line 18: Line 42:
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 +
* Tricks That Mystify by Will Goldston (1934)
 
* [http://www.mdhs.org/Library/fotofind/PP0023lnk.html WORTHINGTON PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION]
 
* [http://www.mdhs.org/Library/fotofind/PP0023lnk.html WORTHINGTON PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION]
 
* The Society of Osiris by Mark Walker, Genii February 2000
 
* The Society of Osiris by Mark Walker, Genii February 2000
* The Society of Osiris by Mark Walker, Genii February 2000.
 
  
 
[[Category:Biographies]]
 
[[Category:Biographies]]
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Worthington}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Worthington}}

Revision as of 18:36, 31 July 2010

Thomas Worthington

Sphinx, May 1916
BornFebruary 13, 1882
Baltimore, Maryland
DiedJanuary 2, 1953 (age 70)

Thomas Chew Worthington III (1882 - 1953) was one of the founders of the Demons Club and Society of Osiris Magicians. By profession, he a salesman for distributors of X-ray and photographic equipment.

His first season as a performer was in 1911, where he worked mostly at churches, clubs, and the like.

Worthington became interested in magic when his grandfather introduced him to his friend Alexander Herrmann. He later became friends with Thurston and was known by Houdini and of the magicians of his day.

Worthington had one of the largest, and most valuable collection of rare magical apparatus at his home in Baltimore. He was a fighter against the exposers of magic, and the magic organization that fails to penalize members who did.

He wrote a column for The Sphinx and was also the editor of Society of Osiris Magicians' magazine Tablets of Osiris.

He gave his collection to the Ringling Brothers' Museum in Sarasota, Florida just prior to his death. Other collections including antiques, stamps, autographs, photographs, and natural history specimens, he left to Loyola College at his death. The magic collection eventually was obtained by magic collector Ken Klosterman and David Price of the Egyptian Hall Museum (later obtained by Mike Caveney and George Daily).

Awards and Honors

Books

  • Recollections of Howard Thurston Conjuror, Illusionist and Author (1938)

References