Our friend and fellow Houdini nut Jessica Jane was in Kansas City yesterday with The Foolers. Jessica owns a fantastic original photo of Houdini, his dog Charlie, and a fellow performer taken in Kansas City in 1907. So she went in search of the photo's location and posted her adventure on Instagram. Enjoy!
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Showing posts with label Kansas City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kansas City. Show all posts
Thursday, October 5, 2023
Friday, April 2, 2021
Kansas City's last Houdini theater
Yesterday I had the great pleasure of joining the members of IBM Ring 129 for a discussion of Houdini in Kansas City. Turns out Kansas City is a "five star" Houdini destination as it's a city where he performed all his major stunts and still has a surviving Houdini theater. (Which I did not know before I researched this presentation.)
Houdini made his first appearance in Kansas City at the original Orpheum theater located at W 9th and May Streets. Houdini played here in 1899, 1900 and 1907. In 1914 Orpheum built a new theater at 1214 Baltimore Ave. This is where Houdini appeared in 1915 (when he did his first ever suspended straitjacket escape) and twice in 1923. Both those theaters are now long gone.
But Houdini came back to Kansas City one last time for the week of New Year's 1924. This marked his third Kansas City appearance inside of 12 months. This time he didn't appear at the Orpheum, but instead played the Mainstreet theater at 14th and Main Street.
The Mainstreet opened on October 30, 1921. It had a seating capacity of 3000, making it the largest theater in Kansas City. While it was part of the Orpheum Circuit, the Mainstreet was a "Junior Orpheum" that offered more shows a day and featured a movie as the primary attraction. It was the future, but a Junior Orpheum was not typically where a headliner like Houdini appeared.
However, during his 1923-24 vaudeville tour, Houdini did play Junior Orpheums in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Urbana, and, as it turns out, Kansas City. And we're certainly glad he did! Because the Mainstreet theater still stands today and still looks very much as it did in Houdini's day.
The Mainstreet has seen several owners and renovations during its 100-year history. In 2007 it was placed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2012 it became an Alamo Drafthouse. After shutting down due to COVID, last month it was announced that Alamo was filing for Chapter 11 and the theater was closing permanently. So the future is now uncertain. But here's hoping the Mainstreet finds new tenants. Not only is it a beautiful old theater, but it's a Houdini Theatre!
A postscript. When Houdini played the Mainstreet you had quite a choice of other entertainment that same week. You could see Alexander "The Man Who Knows" at the Pantages. Or you could see the 4 Marx Brothers at the Missouri in their first Broadway hit, I'll Say She Is. What a week in KC!
Thanks again to Lance Rich and all the members of IBM Ring 129. Be sure and check out Lance's From the President's Desk column this month where he shares a High School essay he wrote about Houdini. It's great stuff.
Related:
Related:
Tuesday, November 12, 2019
LINK: Harry Houdini made history right here in Kansas City
The Martin City Telegraph has a very well researched article by Diane Euston about Houdini's history in Kansas City. KC was important stop on Houdini's tour, and has the distinction of being the first city to witnesses his suspended straitjacket escape on September 8, 1915. The article includes what's credited as a photo of that very escape (right). Diane also recounts a 1907 underwater escape at the Kansas City Athletic Club that's entirely new to me!
So click the headline and have a read at the Martin City Telegraph.
Related:
So click the headline and have a read at the Martin City Telegraph.
Related:
Friday, June 22, 2018
To Gladys from Bess Houdini
Fifteen years ago Bill Bremer, a postcard collector in Texas, unearthed a cache of 36 postcards sent to Houdini's sister, Carrie Gladys Weiss. All this week I am sharing select cards from this remarkable collection. [Read the full story of Bill's find here.]
Today I wrap things up with three incredible cards from Bess Houdini herself. This is appropriate as today is Harry and Bess's anniversary (I didn't even plan it that way). There is so very little written by Bess during Houdini's lifetime that anything in her hand is gold, and these cards have some great content. So let's get at 'em.
The first card is from Kansas City on Sept. 8, 1915. It's addressed to Gladys at 315 West 98th St. in New York, where she and Leopold now resided. The card was written while Houdini was on a coast to coast vaudeville tour that year.
When Bess speaks of "Flatbush," she is taking about home. Harry and Bess had moved out of 278 and in with the Hardeens in Flatbush the previous year. So she appears to be homesick. Or maybe her comment here has something to do with the date. Sept. 8, 1915 was the day Houdini performed what is believed to be his first suspended straitjacket escape. So perhaps her wish to be elsewhere is a sign of her nervousness that day?
Bess seems to have found peace a month later in Seattle, Washington, where she sent this card on October 20, 1915.
It's interesting that she says I've got a lovely little flat, not we. This card was sent while Houdini was playing the Orpheum Theater at 3rd & Madison in Seattle.
In Bill's collection there is a third card from Bess, this one sent to Leopold from Denver, Colorado, on December 30, 1915.
Bess seems to have recovered from any nervousness about Houdini's suspended straitjackets escapes, at least enough to be able to quip that his upcoming escape (from the Denver Post building on Dec. 30) was a "historical event." Of course, she turned out to be right about this!
Her mention of the state going "dry" refers to a prohibition on alcohol that Colorado and six other states (Iowa, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Arkansas, and South Carolina) instituted on December 31, 1915. Bess mentioning brother Bill in this context is likely a joke as Bill was said to be quite a drinker (his nickname was "Lobster Bill").
Please join me in thanking Bill Bremer for sharing with us his incredible find. Below are links to all the posts.
Related:
Today I wrap things up with three incredible cards from Bess Houdini herself. This is appropriate as today is Harry and Bess's anniversary (I didn't even plan it that way). There is so very little written by Bess during Houdini's lifetime that anything in her hand is gold, and these cards have some great content. So let's get at 'em.
The first card is from Kansas City on Sept. 8, 1915. It's addressed to Gladys at 315 West 98th St. in New York, where she and Leopold now resided. The card was written while Houdini was on a coast to coast vaudeville tour that year.
Kansas City - MO
9-8-15
Lots of love to you both. I wish I was in Flatbush where I belong
Ever your sister
Bess
Bess seems to have found peace a month later in Seattle, Washington, where she sent this card on October 20, 1915.
Hello Gladys
I've got a lovely little flat here and am some busy.
Lots of love to all
Bess
It's interesting that she says I've got a lovely little flat, not we. This card was sent while Houdini was playing the Orpheum Theater at 3rd & Madison in Seattle.
In Bill's collection there is a third card from Bess, this one sent to Leopold from Denver, Colorado, on December 30, 1915.
Dear Doc
Merry Xmas and a very Happy New Year.
Harry is doing his outside stunt to-morrow (Thurs.) and Friday this state goes dry, two historical events. Say isn't it too bad Bro. Bill doesn't live here now.
Lots of love
Bess
Bess seems to have recovered from any nervousness about Houdini's suspended straitjackets escapes, at least enough to be able to quip that his upcoming escape (from the Denver Post building on Dec. 30) was a "historical event." Of course, she turned out to be right about this!
Her mention of the state going "dry" refers to a prohibition on alcohol that Colorado and six other states (Iowa, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Arkansas, and South Carolina) instituted on December 31, 1915. Bess mentioning brother Bill in this context is likely a joke as Bill was said to be quite a drinker (his nickname was "Lobster Bill").
Please join me in thanking Bill Bremer for sharing with us his incredible find. Below are links to all the posts.
Related:
Saturday, August 20, 2016
The saga of Houdini and Dr. A. M. Wilson
I've been so swamped this summer that I let an important Houdini 100th anniversary slip past. On June 15, 1916, Houdini appeared on the cover of The Sphinx, the official magazine of the Society of American Magicians. Why is this special? What's so unusual about the most famous magician of his time appearing on the cover of a popular magic magazine? Therein lies the story.
Houdini had a rocky relationship with the S.A.M. when he first joined the fledgling organization in February 1903. When he launched his Conjurers' Monthly Magazine in 1906, Houdini lobbied the S.A.M. to make it the new official organ instead of Dr. A.M. Wilson's The Sphinx. Apart from wanting his new magazine to have instant legitimacy, he also had personal reasons.
Dr. A. M. Wilson was an assistant and pupil to magician Robert Heller, who once performed for Abraham Lincoln. Wilson took over as editor of The Sphinx in 1904. Wilson was a magic traditionalist who didn't care for escapology in general and Houdini in particular. His magazine rarely mentioned the exploits of the Handcuff King, and when Houdini complained, Wilson simply reminded him that he could take out an advertisement at the normal rate.
When The Sphinx ran an (erroneous) report that the Western Vaudeville Circuit was going to relegate handcuff acts to their ten cent houses, Houdini blew his stack. Houdini lambasted Wilson, accusing him of "petty spite" and jealously and called him a "dog in the manger." Wilson countered: "Houdini is yet a young man with much to learn. I am sorry for him that money has become his god and self-conceit has caused him to idolize himself." He then vowed, "I will never again mention his name in The Sphinx, no matter how great the provocation."
Houdini had a rocky relationship with the S.A.M. when he first joined the fledgling organization in February 1903. When he launched his Conjurers' Monthly Magazine in 1906, Houdini lobbied the S.A.M. to make it the new official organ instead of Dr. A.M. Wilson's The Sphinx. Apart from wanting his new magazine to have instant legitimacy, he also had personal reasons.
Dr. A. M. Wilson was an assistant and pupil to magician Robert Heller, who once performed for Abraham Lincoln. Wilson took over as editor of The Sphinx in 1904. Wilson was a magic traditionalist who didn't care for escapology in general and Houdini in particular. His magazine rarely mentioned the exploits of the Handcuff King, and when Houdini complained, Wilson simply reminded him that he could take out an advertisement at the normal rate.
When The Sphinx ran an (erroneous) report that the Western Vaudeville Circuit was going to relegate handcuff acts to their ten cent houses, Houdini blew his stack. Houdini lambasted Wilson, accusing him of "petty spite" and jealously and called him a "dog in the manger." Wilson countered: "Houdini is yet a young man with much to learn. I am sorry for him that money has become his god and self-conceit has caused him to idolize himself." He then vowed, "I will never again mention his name in The Sphinx, no matter how great the provocation."
Their private correspondence was even more incendiary. In one letter, dated May 20, 1908 and today housed in the Harry Ransom Center, Wilson writes, "...you are that type of Jew that has made the noble Hebrew race–God's chosen people–an execration in every country of the world." Houdini wrote back, "As to your slur against my religion, let me suggest to you that such things are best omitted from your letters."
Houdini had been having issues with the S.A.M., even beyond their support of The Sphinx as their official magazine, but his feud with Wilson appear to have been the last straw. In the July 1908 issue of Conjurers he announced:
When Houdini folded his Conjurers Magazine that same year, Wilson wrote that had been "inevitable" as the magazine "was intended primarily as an advertisement for the owner." He then took the gloves off:
The Houdini and Wilson feud extended to others. When Thurston asked Houdini for a $250 loan, Houdini reminded him that when they were both playing Chicago, Thurston invited Wilson to his show. "I told him to go to Wilson for the money." Houdini ended friendships if someone wrote for The Sphinx. He even darkly claimed to have a list of names of 300 married women with whom Wilson "was holding criminal relations as an adulterer and fornicator."
In June 1915, Houdini and Wilson came face to face in Martinka's Magic Shop in New York. Houdini was preparing to step back into the S.A.M., and he asked Wilson "what crime I had committed to make him write in such terms about my brothers and my work." Wilson reminded Houdini of a 12-page letter he had written to their mutual friend, Don Turley, slandering him using the most "vile and obscene language." Turley's mother had called Wilson and read him the letter in full. Houdini assured him he had never written a 12-page letter about anyone in his life.
Houdini had been having issues with the S.A.M., even beyond their support of The Sphinx as their official magazine, but his feud with Wilson appear to have been the last straw. In the July 1908 issue of Conjurers he announced:
Harry Houdini has resigned from the Society of American Magicians, and is no longer a member.
When Houdini folded his Conjurers Magazine that same year, Wilson wrote that had been "inevitable" as the magazine "was intended primarily as an advertisement for the owner." He then took the gloves off:
Can anyone with a modicum of reason or common sense compare Houdini's or any other such act with that of David Devant, Servais LeRoy, F. E. Powell, Kellar or Thurston?
Magic is an art, a science that requires brains, skill, gentlemaness and talent of high order. Brick walls, torture cells, straightjackets, handcuffs, etc., demand nothing but physical strength and endurance, nerve, gall, bluster, fakes and fake apparatus, etc., ad libitium, heralded by circus band advertising. In my opinion, magic is brought into disrepute by all such. Their place is in the side show or dime museums.
The Houdini and Wilson feud extended to others. When Thurston asked Houdini for a $250 loan, Houdini reminded him that when they were both playing Chicago, Thurston invited Wilson to his show. "I told him to go to Wilson for the money." Houdini ended friendships if someone wrote for The Sphinx. He even darkly claimed to have a list of names of 300 married women with whom Wilson "was holding criminal relations as an adulterer and fornicator."
In June 1915, Houdini and Wilson came face to face in Martinka's Magic Shop in New York. Houdini was preparing to step back into the S.A.M., and he asked Wilson "what crime I had committed to make him write in such terms about my brothers and my work." Wilson reminded Houdini of a 12-page letter he had written to their mutual friend, Don Turley, slandering him using the most "vile and obscene language." Turley's mother had called Wilson and read him the letter in full. Houdini assured him he had never written a 12-page letter about anyone in his life.
Houdini then reached out to Don Turley, who lived on the west coast, asking him about this alleged letter. Turley assured him he received no such letter, and, furthermore, his mother at that time did not even own a telephone, so how could she have called Wilson? Houdini sent Turley's response to Wilson, diplomatically suggesting, "some indigenous individual or individuals [...] with double-dealing methods has poisoned your mind against me."
A few months later, Dr. Theodore Blakesy, an amateur magician who admired both men, brought them together in his Kansas City office while Houdini was in town. One hour later the two men emerged arm and arm, bonded by a mutual love and knowledge of magic. "I apologized to Houdini; he made amends," said Wilson. "Now we are friends, as we should have been years ago."
At long last, Houdini appeared on the cover of The Sphinx that following June. The cover photo includes the inscription: "To My Friend Dr. A.M. Wilson. With sincerest best wishes and compliments of the season. Harry Houdini Xmas 1915." For the magic world, this was an announcement that the long feud was finally over.
In his column, Dr. Wilson explained:
The profile of Houdini in the magazine itself (provided by Houdini himself) is a praise-fest, even by Houdini standards. Headlined "Houdini (Has legalized the name)", it plays 16 years of catch-up, ticking off Houdini's triumphs one by one. Among those is a claim that I don't think has ever appeared anywhere else:
Wilson's acquiescence to Houdini was so total (and so one-sided), that it makes me wonder if the reconciliation might have been forced on him by the S.A.M. in a bid to pacify Houdini and bring him back into the organization. Indeed, Houdini would rejoin the S.A.M. the following year and become its president, building the club into the national magic organization that it is today.
But even if the friendship was initially forced, the men did genuinely get along from this point forward. Wilson even became somewhat of a father figure to Houdini. In the 1920s, Houdini arranged a lavish S.A.M. banquet, and as part of the evening's entertainment, he surprised the magicians by "teleporting" Dr. Wilson, then in his 70s, from Kansas City to New York via a "radio" cabinet (possibly the genesis of his later Radio of 1950 illusion). In 1926, Houdini enlisted Wilson's help in drawing up the curriculum for his proposed University of Magic. He even gave Wilson a key to his home so he could come and go as he liked.
Houdini appeared on the cover of The Sphinx again in 1924 and after his death in 1926. In that November issue, Wilson wrote:
Dr. A.M. Wilson remained editor of The Sphinx until his own death in 1930.
Thanks to Arthur Moses for providing Dr. Wilson's May 1908 editorial. Sphinx cover images from my own collection. This post was updated in 2023 using new information from the Harry Ransom Center.
Related:
At long last, Houdini appeared on the cover of The Sphinx that following June. The cover photo includes the inscription: "To My Friend Dr. A.M. Wilson. With sincerest best wishes and compliments of the season. Harry Houdini Xmas 1915." For the magic world, this was an announcement that the long feud was finally over.
In his column, Dr. Wilson explained:
I made a mistake in accusing Houdini of attacking me, and did not discover the mistake until last June, when I made ample and satisfactory apology to Mr. Houdini, since when we have been good friends and he has sent me a two-year subscription, and, as you see, has his picture in this Sphinx.
The profile of Houdini in the magazine itself (provided by Houdini himself) is a praise-fest, even by Houdini standards. Headlined "Houdini (Has legalized the name)", it plays 16 years of catch-up, ticking off Houdini's triumphs one by one. Among those is a claim that I don't think has ever appeared anywhere else:
Inventor of the Wardrobe Trunk, for which he never received any royalty, and which is now being made by almost every trunk firm that tries to be up-to-date.
Wilson's acquiescence to Houdini was so total (and so one-sided), that it makes me wonder if the reconciliation might have been forced on him by the S.A.M. in a bid to pacify Houdini and bring him back into the organization. Indeed, Houdini would rejoin the S.A.M. the following year and become its president, building the club into the national magic organization that it is today.
But even if the friendship was initially forced, the men did genuinely get along from this point forward. Wilson even became somewhat of a father figure to Houdini. In the 1920s, Houdini arranged a lavish S.A.M. banquet, and as part of the evening's entertainment, he surprised the magicians by "teleporting" Dr. Wilson, then in his 70s, from Kansas City to New York via a "radio" cabinet (possibly the genesis of his later Radio of 1950 illusion). In 1926, Houdini enlisted Wilson's help in drawing up the curriculum for his proposed University of Magic. He even gave Wilson a key to his home so he could come and go as he liked.
Houdini appeared on the cover of The Sphinx again in 1924 and after his death in 1926. In that November issue, Wilson wrote:
I knew his heart, his longings, desires, ambitions, all were noble and uplifting. I would that every one could have learned to know him as I did after our reconciliation. There is no one to take his place in the hearts of one who knew him; no one to fill the void in the world of mystery.
Dr. A.M. Wilson remained editor of The Sphinx until his own death in 1930.
Thanks to Arthur Moses for providing Dr. Wilson's May 1908 editorial. Sphinx cover images from my own collection. This post was updated in 2023 using new information from the Harry Ransom Center.
Related:
Monday, March 2, 2015
The Great Houdinis on KMBC
Here's an ad for the TV biopic The Great Houdinis on KMBC-TV in Kansas City. I'm not sure of the date of this ad, but considering the title is still plural, it could be for the original October 1976 airing. The movie became The Great Houdini after its initial showing.
While one can find various TV Guide ads for the Tony Curtis movie, ads for The Great Houdinis are less common. This one I've never seen before, so I thought it was worth the share.
This image come from the Pintrest page belonging to Blue Topaz which is devoted to all things related to Starsky & Hutch.
Related:
While one can find various TV Guide ads for the Tony Curtis movie, ads for The Great Houdinis are less common. This one I've never seen before, so I thought it was worth the share.
This image come from the Pintrest page belonging to Blue Topaz which is devoted to all things related to Starsky & Hutch.
Related:
Friday, July 4, 2014
Houdini in "VELVET FINGERS"
We are all familiar with the famous film footage of Houdini doing card manipulations late in his career. Little is known about this footage, except that it was made by Pathe in 1926. But while doing some unrelated research, I stumbled on two newspaper advertisements that appear to show exactly when and where this short film played and, most excitingly, the title: "Velvet Fingers."
These ads appeared in The Hutchinson News on April 1st and 2nd, 1926, and advertised the line-up of movies at the Royal Theater in Kansas City. The main feature was the Ralph Lewis newspaper drama, The Last Edition. But look below and you'll see among the short subjects on the bill is HOUDINI in "VELVET FINGERS." The second ad has the more descriptive "HOUDINI in an array of tricks." It seems almost certain that "Velvet Fingers" and the famous Houdini card flourishes footage are one in the same.
Unfortunately, I can't find any other record of a short called "Velvet Fingers" (there was a serial with this title in 1920). Might the theater have invented the title? Hard to know. But the Our Gang short that is billed above the Houdini movie was indeed called "Better Movies."
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| Royal in Kanas City where "Velvet Fingers" played in 1926. |
It's intriguing to wonder just how many tricks in the "array of tricks" existed in the full short. In the surviving film, we see Houdini demonstrate a 32 card forward and back palm, an armspread turnover, a waterfall, and an amazing armspread toss and catch. Houdini was featuring these flourishes in his 3 Shows In 1 at this time, so this is really the only footage that exists of Houdini doing his stage act. Pretty cool.
As far as I know, this short no longer survives complete. Some footage appeared in 1950 feature documentary, The Golden Twenties. The most complete selection of footage can be found on the 3-DVD set "Vintage Magic Films" produced by The Miracle Factory. I once had the fantasy that this could have been a sound short, but certainly that would have been advertised, so I have to put that wish to bed.
And now here's a short clip from "Velvet Fingers."
Related:
UPDATE: Readers Bill Mullins and Joe Notaro have uncovered some clippings that confirm the title and give us even more details about the full footage:
UPDATE 2: Was this footage originally part of a 1925 short produced by Red Seal Pictures? Click to read: The Houdini card manipulation movie mystery deepens.
Motion Picture News, March 20, 1926:
Pathe Review No. 12 brings Houdini to the screen as a master manipulator of playing cards in a novelty called "Velvet Fingers."
Greensboro NC Record, March 21 1926:
HOUDINI'S VELVET FINGERS
Houdini, master magician, brings to the screen his grace and form in handling playing cards in a current issue of the Pathe Review. He also presents an expose of some of the card tricks by means of which card sharps have mulcted the public of millions of dollars. Slow motion analyses "the gambler's cut," in which the middle and bottom of the deck are transposed, leaving the top as it was; the "forearm rifle" in which Houdini makes a whole deck of cards obey his orders and the "forearm toss," in which every card stays in its place as if under hypnotic control, and other stunts that make the cards almost sit up and talk. [typos as in original]
UPDATE 2: Was this footage originally part of a 1925 short produced by Red Seal Pictures? Click to read: The Houdini card manipulation movie mystery deepens.
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Evidence of Houdini's first suspended straitjacket escape
Back in February, I posted a photo of Houdini being prepared for a suspended straitjacket escape and posed the question of when Houdini first performed his most famous and iconic outdoor escape. If you go back and read the comments on that post, turns out this was not an easy question to answer.
While there's agreement that the first escape happened in September 1915, it's not at all clear in what city and on what day Houdini first put on the block and tackle. The two candidates are Kansas City on September 8 (sourced to a mention by the notoriously unreliable Will Goldston in the October 1915 The Magazine of Magic), or Minneapolis on September 29 (sourced to a newspaper in the Stanley Palm collection and referenced in Ken Silverman's Houdini!!! The Career of Ehrich Weiss -- aka "My Bible" -- as the first).
Now our good friend Joe Notaro, who normally confines himself to research on The Grim Game at his terrific blog, Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence, has uncovered a hitherto unreferenced newspaper article from The Kansas City Post that shows Houdini did indeed perform the suspended straitjacket escape in Kansas City on September 8, 1915. Joe queried and received this page from the archives of the Kansas City Public Library. Interestingly, the Post account says Houdini was only raised 20 feet in the air. In Minneapolis, he would rise to 45 feet and, in subsequent escapes, to over 100 feet.
So Goldston was right and Silverman wrong? Upside-down indeed.
Click on over to 'Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence' to read the Post article in full and to link back to several articles about Joe's efforts to discover Houdini's first.
To celebrate the solving of this mystery, here's an unpublished photo of Houdini doing a suspended straitjacket escape from our Hinson Endowment (note the "Houdini" advert above the windows behind him).
While there's agreement that the first escape happened in September 1915, it's not at all clear in what city and on what day Houdini first put on the block and tackle. The two candidates are Kansas City on September 8 (sourced to a mention by the notoriously unreliable Will Goldston in the October 1915 The Magazine of Magic), or Minneapolis on September 29 (sourced to a newspaper in the Stanley Palm collection and referenced in Ken Silverman's Houdini!!! The Career of Ehrich Weiss -- aka "My Bible" -- as the first).
Now our good friend Joe Notaro, who normally confines himself to research on The Grim Game at his terrific blog, Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence, has uncovered a hitherto unreferenced newspaper article from The Kansas City Post that shows Houdini did indeed perform the suspended straitjacket escape in Kansas City on September 8, 1915. Joe queried and received this page from the archives of the Kansas City Public Library. Interestingly, the Post account says Houdini was only raised 20 feet in the air. In Minneapolis, he would rise to 45 feet and, in subsequent escapes, to over 100 feet.
So Goldston was right and Silverman wrong? Upside-down indeed.
Click on over to 'Harry Houdini Circumstantial Evidence' to read the Post article in full and to link back to several articles about Joe's efforts to discover Houdini's first.
To celebrate the solving of this mystery, here's an unpublished photo of Houdini doing a suspended straitjacket escape from our Hinson Endowment (note the "Houdini" advert above the windows behind him).
![]() |
| Click to enlarge. |
Thanks for the hard work, Joe! Another piece of the grand puzzle that is Harry Houdini is now in place.
UPDATE: I've shared another account of this historic escape that includes PHOTOS on my Patreon below.
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