Thurston, Howard: Howard Thurston's Card Tricks
©1903 Henry J. Wehman, I&M Ottenheimer, Pub, MD
Softcover, perfect-bound, 5.5x8.5", 82 pages
Comments: There were many editions of this book. So many that in 1991 David Meyer even wrote a 46 page book on the many editions, entitled, "Howard Thurston's card tricks: An illustrated and descriptive checklist of various editions covering a 50 year period"
Contents:
1 CHAPTER I A Few Incidents in the Life or Howard Thurston
3 Hermann The Great Mystified by Thurston
5 San Francisco Examiner March 27th 1899
6 New York World August 21st 1890
8 The King of Cards
10 CHAPTER II Indispensable Sleights
10 The Pass
13 The Force
15 The Change
16 The Ordinary Palm
19 CHAPTER III The Continuous Front and Back Hand Palm, with Cards and Tricks in Connection Therewith
24 The Disappearance of Five Cards One at a Time
26 The Production of Cards One at a Time at the Finger-Tips From the Back-Hand Palm
30 The Production of Cards at the Finger-Tips from the Ordinary Palm
33 Passing a Card Through the Knees, Etc.
38 CHAPTER IV The Thurston System of Expert Card Manipulation
43 First Method
44 Second Method
46 To Instantly Name any Card Chosen
47 To Tell the Names of Any Number of Cards Chosen
49 To Tell the Exact Position in the Pack of Any Card Named by the Audience
52 Mind Over Mind or the Marvelous Will Power
54 To Cause a Card Selected by a Spectator to be Named by the Audience
57 A New Mind-Reading Feat With Cards
59 CHAPTER V An Entirely New and Original Collection of Miscellaneous Card Tricks, Including the Correct Method or Performing Thurston's New Rising Cards
59 An Incomprehensible Divination
62 A Mechanical Card for the Back Hand Palm
66 A Card Caught on the Corner of a Borrowed Handkerchief
69 The Thurston Method of Throwing Cards
70 Tricks for the Novice
70 - A Pack of Cards Changed to Two Large Balls
71 - New Card and Egg Mystery
73 - Disappearance of a Card Thought of By a Spectator
74 - The Electric Cards
75 The Thurston Rising Cards
82 Final Remarks
Former owner's sticker, William R. Morrall on top right corner of cover. This is an early edition of the book by Thurston. It had been stab stapled as issued, but a former owner has carefully removed the staples. This has made the book easier to go through, as all the pages now lie flat for viewing and reading. It has loose portions of signatures, BUT all pages are here in Fine Condition.
SIZE: 5 1/4 by 7 3/4 inches, 83 pages with light paper covers.
CONDITION: Stab staples were removed by former owner. Some portions of signatures therefore loose, but all here and all readable. Printed on pulp paper with even age toning. Interior pages are in Very Fine Condition, with virtually no wear. Covers had splits, repaired with archival tissue tape.
| Owner | Bryan-Keith Taylor |
|---|---|
| Location | Magic Library (Home) |
| Read | |
| Index | 5536 |
| Added Date | Jul 01, 2017 03:06:55 |
| Modified Date | Apr 06, 2026 14:24:08 |
| Book Condition | Good |
|---|
Thurston, Howard
(1869-1936)
Born in Columbus, Ohio, the first magician Thurston saw was Alexander Herrmann, the “King of Magic.” Thurston resolved to match the style of his idol, but he briefly studied for the ministry before finally becoming a full-time magician.He first toured the United States with a small act. Then a European vaudeville tour started him on the road to magical fame. Thurston’s financial success in Europe let him build an illusion show which he took around the world. He visited Australia, India, and the Orient, polishing his skills and developing a stage presence that served him well. Thurston returned to the United States to succeed the then-reigning magician, Harry Kellar.
Wrote: Howard Thurston's Card Tricks (1903), 200 Tricks You Can Do (1926), 200 More Tricks You Can Do (1927) [ both books published together as 400 Tricks You Can Do in 1939].
Video Footage: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6f4a2l_w3Y&mode=related&search=
------------------------------------
Howard Thurston
Born July 20, 1869
Columbus, Ohio, United States
Died April 13, 1936 (aged 66)
Miami, Florida, United States
Occupation Magician
Howard Thurston (July 20, 1869 – April 13, 1936) was a stage magician from Columbus, Ohio, United States. As a child, he ran away to join the circus, where his future partner Harry Kellar also performed. Thurston was deeply impressed after he attended magician Alexander Herrmann's magic show and was determined to equal his work. Alexander Herrmann was a French magician and was known as "Herrmann the Great". Thurston eventually became the most famous magician of his time. Thurston's traveling magic show was the biggest one of all; it was so large that it needed eight train cars to transport his road show.[1]
Early life
Howard Thurston was born June 24, 1867, in Columbus, Ohio. He was the middle son of William and Margaret Thurston. His father William Henry Thurston was a wheelwright and carriage maker who served briefly as a private during the Civil War in the Third Ohio Regiment. His mother Margaret (Cloude), was the daughter of an Ohio farmer.[2] He attended Mount Hermon School for Boys in Northfield, Massachusetts, class of 1893. Among his fellow students were Lee de Forest, "The Father of American Radio," and musical humorist Charles Ross Taggart, "The Old Country Fiddler."[3]
When he was a child, Thurston practiced sleight of hand, but his mother viewed this as "devil's work".[4]: 113 She later sent Thurston away to undertake Bible studies.[4]: 113 Eventually, Thurston saw one of Alexander Hermann's shows, which led to Thurston's decision to begin his career as a magician.[4]: 113
Career
Thurston said, "The historian of magic can trace an unbroken line of succession from the Fakir of Ava in 1830 to my own entertainment."
The King of Cards
Howard Thurston in 1905
He is still famous for his work with playing cards. According to legend, a Mexican magician appeared at a magic shop owned by Otto Maurer in New York City. The enigmatic magician demonstrated how he could make cards disappear, one by one, at his fingertips.[5]
Maurer showed Thurston the move, which he would later feature in his act. He added the "Rising Cards" trick from Professor Hoffman's Modern Magic, the book from which Thurston had learned the rudiments of magic. For this trick, he would walk into the audience and ask several people to choose cards from a deck of cards. The deck was shuffled and placed into a clear glass. Thurston would then call for the chosen cards. One by one the cards would rise up to the top of the deck.
Thurston arranged an impromptu audition with Leon Herrmann, nephew of Alexander Herrmann. His performance fooled Leon. From that point on he called himself "The man that fooled Herrmann" and used the publicity to get booked into top vaudeville houses in the U.S. and Europe, billing himself as the King of Cards.[6]
Levitation illusion
Thurston became well known for performing a floating lady illusion known as the "Levitation of Princess Karnac". The illusion was originally performed by John Nevil Maskelyne and most famously by Harry Kellar.[7][8]
Magic historian Jim Steinmeyer has written that "In Thurston's hands, the Levitation of Princess Karnac became a masterpiece. The beautiful trick was perfectly suited to Thurston's lyrical baritone."[9] By 1908, the levitation illusion was sought by famous magicians. It was duplicated by Charles Joseph Carter on a world tour and had interested the magician Chung Ling Soo.[9]
Later years
Thurston continued presenting the Thurston–Kellar Show following the retirement of Kellar. He continued presenting for about thirty-five years until, on March 30, 1936, he suffered a stroke from a cerebral hemorrhage. He died on April 13 at his Oceanside apartment in Miami Beach, Florida. His death was attributed to pneumonia.[10][11][12] He is entombed at Green Lawn Abbey, a mausoleum in Columbus, Ohio,[13] which opened again to the public in 2021 after more than fifty years.[14]
Legacy
Thurston is quoted as a subject matter expert in Dale Carnegie's book How to Win Friends and Influence People. He appears in Part Two, Chapter One ("Do This and You'll Be Welcome Anywhere"), on pages 67–68 of the original text.[15]
A poster for Thurston can be seen in many episodes of the TV show The Magicians hanging on the wall of the protagonists student house, known as 'the physical kids' dorm, so named because the magic they perform is physical, as opposed to say, psychic, or illusion based magic. The poster's placement in the show would lead viewers to believe that Thurston was possibly a student of the school, and thus his performances used "real" magic.
Publications
Thurston performing a levitation illusion.
Articles
Revealing the Mysteries of Magic, an exposure of the methods of the Egyptian conjuror Tahra Bey. The Day (January, 1926)
Thurston, Howard. The Truth About Indian Magic. Popular Mechanics (April, 1927)
Thurston, Howard. Magic and How It Is Made. Popular Mechanics (October, 1927)
Books
Howard Thurston's Tricks With Cards (1903)
50 New Card Tricks (1905)
Thurston's Easy Pocket Tricks: The A-B-C of Magic (1915)
The Mishaps of Magicians (1927)
Fooling Millions (1928)
Tales of Magic and Mystery (1928)
My Life of Magic (1929)
400 Tricks You Can Do (1940)
References
Sevilla, Julio. "Howard Thurston (1869-1936)". All about magicians.com. Archived from the original on March 18, 2014. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
Steinmeyer, Jim (2011). "The Last Great Magician in the World: Howard Thurston versus Houdini & the battles of the American wizards". New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, a member of Penguin Group.
Boyce, Adam R. The Man from Vermont: Charlie Taggart, the Old Country Fiddler. Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2013. ISBN 9781626192119. Google Books. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
Randi, James (1992). Conjuring. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-312-08634-2. OCLC 26162991.
Steinmeyer, Jim (2004). Hiding the Elephant. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-7867-1401-8.
"Howard Thurston (1869–1936)." www.all-about-magicians.com. Retrieved February 24, 2016.
Pritchard, William Thomas. (1958). This is Magic: Secrets of the Conjurer's Craft. Citadel Press. p. 98 "In America, the Maskelyne Levitation was staged by Harry Kellar, who entitled it "The Levitation of Princess Karnac." Later, the illusion passed to Howard Thurston, who brought it back to England when he toured this country."
Price, David. (1985). Magic: A Pictorial History of Conjurers in the Theater. Cornwall Books. p. 147. ISBN 978-0845347386
Steinmeyer, Jim. (2006). The Glorious Deception: The Double Life of William Robinson, aka Chung Ling Soo, the Marvelous Chinese Conjurer. Da Capo Press. p. 346. ISBN 978-0786717705
"Leading American Illusionist Had Vast Repertoire, but Liked Card Tricks Best. Headed Last Big Show of Kind Played Before Royalty. Studied for Ministry". New York Times. April 14, 1936. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
"Thurston Dies Of Pneumonia At Miami Beach". Washington Post. April 14, 1936. Archived from the original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
"Thurston, Peer of Magic, Dies in Miami". Chicago Tribune. April 14, 1936. Archived from the original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
Myers, David; Walker, Elise Meyers. (2015). Wicked Columbus, Ohio. The History Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-1626199224
Hasson, Audrey (8 February 2021). "Green Lawn Abbey opens to the public for first time in 50+ years". WCMH-TV. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
Carnegie, Dale (2015-01-01). How to win friends and influence people. Magdalene Press. ISBN 9781897384558. OCLC 936559159.
Further reading
Steinmeyer, Jim (2011). The Last Greatest Magician in the World: Howard Thurston Versus Houdini & the Battles of the American Wizards. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, a member of Penguin Group. ISBN 978-1-58542-845-8. OCLC 646111788.
Thurston, Grace; William L. Rhode; Charles Holzmueller (2006). My Magic Husband: Howard Thurston Unmasked. [United States]: Phil Temple Publication. OCLC 70700027.
Worthington, Thomas Chew. (1938). Recollections of Howard Thurston: Conjurer, Illusionist and Author. (With an introduction by Henry Ridgely Evans). Baltimore.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Howard Thurston.
"Howard Thurston". Magician. Find a Grave. Apr 22, 1999. Retrieved Aug 17, 2011.
"ThurstonMasterMagician.com - The #1 Source For Howard Thurston Information."
Howard Thurston - Master Magician on YouTube
Howard Thurston Encyclopædia Britannica
"Digital Howard" Classic Schemes
Howard Thurston at IMDb
Howard Thurston posters, held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
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