Introduction
The Feejee Mermaid represents humanity’s attempt to deal with its
myths. This physical manifestation of ancient myth harkens back to other
works of art, but over time became a myth in its own right, resurrected
in the modern sideshows. Modern sideshow professionals keep the myth alive,
entertaining crowds and preserving a specific part of American cultural
heritage.
Throughout the centuries, there have been alleged mermaid sightings and
exhibitions of mermaids before the Fejee Mermaid. The Fejee Mermaid (note
the spelling) became Phineas T. Barnum’s greatest humbug and remains
a staple in the Barnum literature. The humbug tradition is carried on
with the Milwaukee Public Museum’s “Japanese Mermaid”
(as seen above). Today modern taxidermy artists make “animal gaffs”
for sideshows and a general audience. On the surface, their profession
appears peculiar, but they actually carry on a tradition spanning hundreds
of years in supplying sideshows and carnivals with fake animals.
Because the “Japanese Mermaid” is a taxidermy hybrid—
a combination of fish and papier-mâché— it presents
a series of challenges in a number of areas, including: cataloging, conservation,
and collections. The fake animal was constructed out of the cheapest of
materials for the entertainment of the sideshow audience, but has mythological,
cultural, and historical associations that make it one of the more valuable
and intriguing artifacts of the Milwaukee Public Museum.
Mermaids in Mythology
The mermaid is a mythical creature. According to Brewer’s Dictionary
of Phrase and Fable, the mermaid was a “fabulous sea marine creature,
half-woman and half-fish, allied to the SIREN of classical mythology,
[that] probably arose from sailor’s accounts of the dugong”
. An Irish mermaid is called a merrow, from the Irish word murbhach. These
merrows “were believed by Irish fishermen to forebode a coming storm.”
The sense of foreboding is also associated with the Sirens in Homer’s
Ulysses. Unlike mermaids, sirens were “half-woman and half-bird”
, but remain mythical figures that seduced travelers into disaster. Siren
comes from the Greek word seira meaning ‘rope’ or ‘entangler’.
Besides Irish and Greek mermaids, similar mythical creatures exist in
other cultures as well. Jan Bondeson mentions Artergatis, the “fish-tailed
Phoenician moon goddess” .
The sea’s power and unpredictability are embodied in these figures,
whether as a sea goddess, siren, or mermaid. This will become important
later in history as the competing forces of myth and tradition collide
with the yearning for empirical proof and the growing reliance on science
as a method of explanation. The Feejee Mermaid will become emblematic
of this tumultuous reassessment of knowledge, science, and mythology.
Mermaid Sightings and Early
Mermaid Relics
Prior to the appearance of the Feejee Mermaid in 1822, mermaids made their
presence known to Western Europeans. These spectacles came in two varieties:
sightings and relics. While the historical accuracy of the sightings is
dubious, these phenomena are instrumental in understanding how the public
will later react to The Feejee Mermaid.
The mermaid sightings, while easy to dismiss, are analogous to UFO sightings
of the present day and other cryptozoological encounters (e.g.: Bigfoot,
Chupacabra). What is missing from these encounters is physical evidence.
Bondeson cites examples of contact with living mermaids. The popular imagination
had yet to be debunked by science, so it was natural to believe these
tales. In 1403 a “living mermaid [was] caught off Edam, Holland”
. In 1531 a live mermaid was caught off the Baltic coast and was sent
as a present to King Sigismond of Poland.
|

FIGURE
1: A contemporary drawing of Barnum's Feejee Mermaid, "The
Eades Mermaid" (Source: Olalquiaga). |
|
Encounters were
not limited to European waters. In 1560 Jesuits in Ceylon caught
seven tritons and seven mermaids. Unfortunately, Bondeson does not
have much detail about these early “live mermaids.”
The lack of details can be attributed to the lack of primary sources
and the lack of physical evidence. Given the wide array of marine
life, it would be plausible that the Jesuits caught a vaguely human-looking
sea animal and gave it the name “triton” or “mermaid”.
These early encounters reveal the difficulties of animal classification.
In 1565 a “Mermaid skinne” is exhibited, originating
from Thora, a town by the Red Sea. A mermaid also was exhibited
in a church in Swartvale, Holland in 1660.
Classification becomes a primary issue when scientists came in contact
with the creatures of mythology. In the 1700s, the anatomist Thomas
Bartholin possessed a hand and tooth of Sirenica danica, which later
sold at public auction in 1826. The anatomist Carl Linnaeus, the
inventor of binomial nomenclature, saw two specimens. The first
was a mermaid caught off the coast of Nyköping, Jutland. Another
specimen, a “siren” from Brazil, was kept in a museum
in Leyden and appeared in the tenth edition of Linnaeus’s
Systema Naturae. But this classification of mermaids and sirens
is not out of character with taxonomy, since scientists have given
animals names like hydra, medusa, and devilfish.
The first mermaid to tour in
Britain was in 1737. A live mermaid was exhibited in the market
of St. Germains as late as 1759, while two tritons were caught off
the Isle of Man in 1800, and well-publicized mermaid sightings were
reported in 1809 and 1812. In 1809, more than a decade before the
appearance of the Feejee Mermaid, an exhibitor is charged with fraud
for displaying a fake mermaid.
Fraud will become a major issue
with the appearance of the Feejee Mermaid. The battles between science
and mythology, elitism and populism, entertainment and education
will be fought in the first half of the nineteenth century. The
battleground will be the animal gaff in the form of an ugly mummified
mermaid.
The Fejee Mermaid
While literature on earlier mermaid sightings and exhibitions remain
sparse, much has been written about the Fejee Mermaid (note spelling).
Its association with Phineas T. Barnum is responsible for its well-known
status, especially among sideshow professionals and taxidermists.
Barnum himself called the Fejee Mermaid “The most famous put-on
of all.” Olalquiaga asserts that the fake mermaids were “surrogate
relics of ancient dreams” . Its immense popularity reflected
“a century obsessed with empirical proof” , functioning
in a strange ritual territory as both scientific specimen and mythological
relic. Here was material proof that the ancient myths were true.
P. T. Barnum would later manipulate truth and reality, destabilizing
both in the name of entertainment. But the story of the eponymous
Fejee Mermaid is about more than Barnum’s showmanship.
|
While traveling in Indonesia Captain
Samuel Barrett Eades, an American working for the Boston commissioning
house Perkins and Co., arrived in Batavia. As one-eighth owner of the
merchant vessel Pickering, he was beholden to the majority owner of the
vessel, a man named Stephen Ellery. Then Eades saw a two and a half foot
animal whose strangeness rivaled its ugliness. As an experienced sailor,
Eades must have been familiar with cartographic maps and the monsters
depicted in the margins. What he saw was one of those monsters, only this
time he could see it with his own eyes and without the bias of a cartographer
who heard sea tales secondhand.
|
FIGURE
2: A contemporary drawing of Barnum's Feejee Mermaid, "The
Eades Mermaid" (Source: Olalquiaga). |
|
Sources
disagree on length, but the literature is unanimous in what made
up this alleged Mermaid. Its tail was from a salmon, while the head
and torso came from a female orangutan (Figure 1). The eyes were
artificial and the nails were either horn or quill. But Eades thought
it was genuine, which provoked him to sell the ship and buy the
Mermaid for 5000 Spanish dollars or 1200 pounds. He thought he could
exhibit the Mermaid and make the money back by charging admission
to see the wonder.
The Fejee Mermaid was first exhibited in Cape Town in early 1822.
It next appeared on exhibit in the Turf Coffeehouse in St. James’s
Street from September 1822 to January 9, 1823. Paul Semonin states
that “Inns were regarded … for upscale viewing,”
[but] “The cheapest shows were those of itinerant showmen
who set up their displays in the streets near taverns or coffeehouses.”
Men of science disregarded the exhibition, but the general public
thought it was genuine. One of these men was an assistant to the
eminent London anatomist Sir Everard Home. Home would later be famous
for examining both platypus and mermaid. William Clift, his assistant,
debunked the Mermaid on September 21, 1822. Harriet Ritvo asserts
how “Exhibited mermaids … concretely challenged the
established order of nature, which offered them no places.”
The issue of place would later become problematic for scientists
attempting to classify the mermaid. When the exploration of Australia
was in full swing, Charles Gould stated “many of the so-called
mythical animals … come legitimately within the scope of the
plain matter-of-fact Natural History.”
Since taxidermists were producing animal
gaffs for sideshows (Figure 2) at this time, the scientists thought
it conceivable for “an unscrupulous taxidermist” to
attach a fake beak onto another animal, possibly a beaver or otter.
Olalquiaga sums up the bizarre status of the Fejee Mermaid: “By
the mid-1800s, then, mermaids have turned into the most confusing
of beings, adding their amphibious nature this triple crossover
between fact and fiction, life and death, real and fake.”
When Clift debunked the Mermaid in 1822, he took away the source
of wonder and, in turn, Eades’s business.
By November 1822, in a last ditch effort
at credibility; Eades advertised that Home said the Mermaid was
genuine. By December of that year, the public had lost favor of
the exhibit. On January 9, 1823, Turf Coffeehouse shut down the
exhibition. During the next year, it toured the provinces, and then
from 1825 to 1842 its whereabouts were unknown.
Continued Next
Page 
|
Article by Karl Wolff, master’s
student in Public History-Museum Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
During the summer of 2005 he completed an internship at
the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida
|