gus wagner, the tattooed man

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The story of Gus Wagner, the Tattooed Man.

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August "Gus" Wagner

August Gus WagnerThe Tattooed Man

Born: 16 JUN 1872 at: Marietta, Ohio Married: 3 OCT 1904 at: St. Louis, Missouri Died: 10 JUN 1941 at: Chase County, Kansas Father: Jacob Wagner Mother: Charlotte

Wife: Maud Stevens Born: FEB 1877 at: Lyons County, Kansas Died: 30 JAN 1961 at: Lawton, Comanche County, Oklahoma Father: David Van Buran Stevens Mother: Sarah Jane McGee

GUS WAGNER "World's Champion Hand Tattoo Artist and Tattooed Man," was one of the most exuberant figures in the history of American popular culture. As tattooist and showman, he adorned thousands of customers and thrilled audiences from coast to coast in the early years of the 20th century. Gus was born in Marietta, Ohio, a trading and boatbuilding town on the Ohio River. At age twelve he saw his first tattooed man, "Captain Costentenus the Greek Albanian," in a traveling show. As a young man he hit the road as an itinerant salesman and laborer. In 1897 he boarded the cargo steamer Bellona at Newport News, Virginia, thus embarking on a four-year career as a merchant seaman. Traveling around the world, Gus got to know many seaports: Vera Cruz, London, Capetown, Sydney, Auckland, Honolulu, New York, San Francisco, and others. He also discovered his true calling. Gus claimed that he learned to tattoo from tribesmen in Java and Borneo who showed him how to use traditional hand-made tools. By 1901, Gus reportedly had 264 tattoos of his own, allowing him to promote himself as "the most artistically marked up man in America." Back home, Gus embarked on a forty-year career as a traveling tattooist, tattooed man, and circus performer. He largely eschewed the new electric tattooing machines that transformed the art form after 1890, and remained faithful to his hand-held instruments. With other wandering artists, he carried tattooing inland from coastal ports, making it part of the culture of small-town America in the 20th century. At some point late in life, Gus compiled a scrapbook of snapshots, trade cards, and other ephemera saved over the course of his career.Largely vanquished by movies, radio, and television, this world comes to life again in Gus's photographs and souvenirs. In his later years Gus diversified his talents, showing and selling busts and totems he carved out of wood. He also became a gem collector, taxidermist, and exhibitor of rare animals, reptiles, and birds. He continued to work as a showman in circuses and Wild West shows. Gus died after being struck by lightning, in 1941.