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Difference between revisions of "Henry Hardin"

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[[Henry Hardin]] (1849 - 1929), born Edward A. Parsons, was a musician and music teacher by profession in New Haven, Connecticut.  
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'''Henry Hardin''' (1849-1929), born Edward A. Parsons, was a musician and music teacher by profession in New Haven, Connecticut.  
  
 
Hardin advertise and contributed to Mahatma and in July 1899 he started "Hardin's Column", in which the ideas of the Walsh [[Vanishing Cane]] is described. <ref>HENRY HARDIN, "THE PRINCE OF IDEAS" John Henry Grossman, [[Magicol]] No. 92 (August 1989) & [[Mahatma]], Vol. 3, no. 1, July 1899, page 261, The Trick of Enchantment</ref>
 
Hardin advertise and contributed to Mahatma and in July 1899 he started "Hardin's Column", in which the ideas of the Walsh [[Vanishing Cane]] is described. <ref>HENRY HARDIN, "THE PRINCE OF IDEAS" John Henry Grossman, [[Magicol]] No. 92 (August 1989) & [[Mahatma]], Vol. 3, no. 1, July 1899, page 261, The Trick of Enchantment</ref>
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* [[Memorandum of Magic]] (1907)
 
* [[Memorandum of Magic]] (1907)
  
== References ==
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* Henry Hardin, Creator of Destined Magic in [[The Jinx]], June 15, 1940, page 595-599
 
* Henry Hardin, Creator of Destined Magic in [[The Jinx]], June 15, 1940, page 595-599
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Revision as of 20:02, 25 August 2012

Henry Hardin

Cover of Sphinx (July 1908)
BornEdward A. Parsons
November 2, 1849
New Haven, Connecticut
DiedJanuary 5, 1929 (age 79)

Henry Hardin (1849-1929), born Edward A. Parsons, was a musician and music teacher by profession in New Haven, Connecticut.

Hardin advertise and contributed to Mahatma and in July 1899 he started "Hardin's Column", in which the ideas of the Walsh Vanishing Cane is described. [1]

He is credited with inventing the Princess Card Trick in 1903 [2]). Other effects were described in a special issue of the Jinx No. 97, June 15, 1940, in which there is a biography written by Ted Annemann with the help of Rudolph Reimer. He also has a few effects in Tarbell Course in Magic books.

In the August 1899 issue of The Mahatma (V.3, No. 2), Henry Hardin describes what may be the first description of the Change Bag in print called The Plush Bag.

Hardin may also have been the very first to discover the fact that a card might be concealed in the top of a trousers' pocket when it was pulled out to show its emptiness, which he published in his "THE APPEARING CARD IN THE POCKET" manuscript. As Bart Whaley writes: "Henry Hardin popularized Stanyon's Top-of-Pocket Dodge in 1905.", it will be interesting to date Hardin's manuscript [3]

He invented many other tricks and became a dealer in New Haven as "Henry Hardin & Co". He was SAM member number 91.

According to Dai Vernon in his Vernon Touch column for Genii 1982 March, Hardin was the originator of the Living and Dead Test.

Books

References

  1. HENRY HARDIN, "THE PRINCE OF IDEAS" John Henry Grossman, Magicol No. 92 (August 1989) & Mahatma, Vol. 3, no. 1, July 1899, page 261, The Trick of Enchantment
  2. Ad in Mahatma, 1903 December, page 68 & Ellis Stanyon's description in Stanyon's Magic, Vol. 5, No. 10, July 1905, page 79.
  3. Ellis Stanyon described this in Stanyon's Magic, Vol. 4, No. 1, November 1903, page 20 without attribution
  • Henry Hardin, Creator of Destined Magic in The Jinx, June 15, 1940, page 595-599