25 P.T. Barnum Facts That You Didn’t Know About History's Greatest Showman
Liam Parker
Published May 20, 2026
These fascinating P.T. Barnum facts reveal the story of the infamous showman who brought Barnum & Bailey Circus to the world.
There's no proof that Barnum ever said "There's a sucker born every minute"
Barnum really had bad luck when it came to fire
However, the most devastating fires of his life were the ones that burned his museum to the ground — twice!
New York Public LibraryHe was a master hoaxer
He became a politician later in life
Barnum helped found Tufts University
Barnum really didn’t like alcohol
One of Barnum’s most successful acts was an opera singer
Between 1850 and 1852, she gave 93 concerts in the U.S., earning Barnum $500,000 and herself $250,000, most of which she donated to charity.
The Print Collector/Print Collector/Getty ImagesHe almost went bankrupt
Barnum didn't get into the circus business until he was 60 years old
He designed a cemetery
Of the 82 million tickets that Barnum ever sold, Tom Thumb was responsible for more than 20 million
Ironically, Barnum hated swindlers
For the trial, Barnum hired someone to create a picture that appeared to show Barnum with the ghost of Abraham Lincoln.
Wikimedia CommonsHis business savvy was evident even as a kid
He spent years writing his wildly successful autobiography
Barnum published new editions almost every year and instructed his widow to add a chapter about his death after he was gone.
Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty ImagesHe once used elephants to test the weight of the Brooklyn Bridge
Barnum offered to lend a hand, parading 21 elephants and 17 camels across the bridge from Manhattan to Brooklyn.
Glasier/Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty ImagesSome of his most outrageous stunts were outside the circus tent
After his first wife died, Barnum married a woman 40 years his junior
At one point, Barnum's circus employed the world's only female clown
He read his own obituary in the paper
Phineas Taylor Barnum, better known simply as P.T. Barnum, stands today as perhaps history's greatest showman. A founder of the Barnum & Bailey Circus, which eventually merged with the Ringling Bros. operation to form the Greatest Show on Earth, Barnum's spectacles entertained millions for many years.
Nearly one and a half centuries after the 1871 founding of Barnum's original circus, the Greatest Show on Earth's final performance took place in the spring of 2017.
In honor of so many decades of entertainment, we've compiled the most interesting P.T. Barnum facts that reveal a lot you never knew about the intriguing, brilliant, fun-loving man who's creations captivated countless people.
Next after reading these interesting P.T. Barnum facts, learn about "lobster boy," the circus act turned murderer and read about some other infamous sideshow performers. Then, read the sad story of Murderous Mary, a circus elephant hanged by a Tennessee town.