Since she's shutting her doors for good at the end of the month, I finally got up to the
American Dime Museum in good ol' Baltimore. It's a recreation of the 18th century exhibitions of oddities and curiousities peddled by the likes of P.T. Barnum, until vaudeville and the movies made the sideshow collections obsolete. Five bucks very well spent. I took some pictures, which ain't great because my camera was damn near dead, causing me to work very fast, and there wasn't much room to maneuver. Oh, and I'm also not a top-notch photographer.
The upstairs was a replica of the original Dime Museum setup, where audiences would pay ten cents to scope out all sorts of interesting things. Right as you walked in, you were greeted by a Jersey Devil perched atop a display case.
Not to far off was the Jersey Devil's cousin, the Flying Squirrel. Funny, I don't remember Rocky having wings.
In the side room there all sorts of bizarre creatures, including a fossil of a fairy, a Fijian mermaid…

…and the oh-so-sexy half-human, half-gator. They also had a little bucket of "Gator Skin", which to my untrained eye looked a whole hell of a lot like sheets of seaweed.

In the main room there were two different mummies, very questionable medical devices and some interesting arts and crafts. The picture on the left is embroidered out of human hair. They also had buttons and jewelry made from hair. It was wild. In the interest of multi-marketing your sideshow attractions, the sculpture on the left was made by a "miniature man" (dwarf) out of matchsticks.

The back room had a model of a 700 lb. man. Died when he was only 39, who woulda thunk it? Oh, and they also had Abraham Lincoln's final bowel movement, fetched from the Surratt House and framed.

Downstairs was modeled after the early century circus sideshows, with some common faces from the movie
Freaks. For you "Carnivale" fans, they had a 12.5 foot, 600 lb. bat, the largest in the world. There were also some rickety ass ferris wheel chairs and a tattoo machine that was pedal driven like a sewing machine. That thing was pretty intimidating. There was also this big ball of ties.
As I said before, it sucks that this place is closing on the 31st. Even though I went primarily for the freakshow factor, it was pretty interesting to get some historical perspective on how much entertainment has changed. I'll take a mummy and a fur-lined trout over sitcoms anyday.