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Original Vintage 1920s Carter the Great Poster
2c Posters

Original Vintage 1920s Carter the Great Poster

12 5/8" x 19 1/4"

Genre

  • Magic

Subject

  • Magic Poster

Plot

Original, Vintage Chromolithograph of the 20s Magician, Carter the Great.
This poster is not a modern reprint. I have had it in my collection for over 50 years. I had it framed professionally back then.

Image is 12 5/8" x 19 1/4". I'm not sure how much larger the poster itself is behind the matt. Poster is in very good condition, but there is a scratch down the lower left side of the frame.

Details

First Edition Yes

Personal

Owner Bryan-Keith Taylor
Location Magic Library (Home)
Index 1535
Added Date Sep 02, 2025 17:34:50
Modified Date Mar 25, 2026 01:11:19

Value

Book Condition Mint

Notes

Charles Joseph Carter

Born
; June 14, 1874
New Castle, Pennsylvania
Died: February 13, 1936 (age 61)
Bombay, Inda
Resting place: Calvary Cemetery in Queens New York

Charles Joseph Carter (b.1874–d.1936), who began his career as a journalist and lawyer, was an American stage magician who performed as "Carter the Great."

Contents
1 Biography
2 Touring Dates
2.1 1906
2.2 1912
3 References

Biography
Due to stiff competition from the number of magic acts on the American stages at the time, Carter opted to pursue his career abroad, where he achieved his greatest fame.
Among the highlights of Carter's stage performances were the classic "sawing a woman in half" illusion (an elaborate surgical-themed version with "nurses" in attendance), making a live elephant disappear and "cheating the gallows", where a shrouded Carter would vanish, just as he dropped at the end of a hangman's noose.
Charles Carter first theatrical experience occurred at the Herzog's museum and Pat Harris' Masonic Temple in Baltimore at the age of 10, where he appeared as "Master Charles Carter the Original Boy Magician".
Carter purchased the famous Martinka Magic Palace in 1917, when he was unable to continue his world touring magic show. It's been told that he kept his lion, Monty in the back room of the shop which would often startle customers when it would roar. He sold the Martinka Magic Store to Houdini in 1919.
On April 9, 1918, Carter opened on Broadway to mixed reviews. Billboard said he was clever and witty, however, Variety found the acting in one of his skits "almost as atrocious as the lion seems ferocious." Carter's "indefinite" run only lasted a mere two weeks.
After becoming ill in early 1935, his son Larry Carter (1936-1995) took over the show with his final performance given in San Francisco the following year when The Depression started.[1]
A fictionalized account of his life can be found in Carter Beats the Devil (ISBN 0-7868-8632-3) by Glen David Gold (2001).

Touring Dates
1906
September 15-21 : Decatur, Illinois
September 27 - Oct 3 : Cleveland, Ohio
October 4 - ? : Cincinnati, Ohio
October 28 - ? : Holland, Michigan
November 8 - ? : Chicago Heights, Illinois
November 19 - ? : Fairmount, Indiana
November 30 - ? : Tecumseh, Michigan
1912
December 25 : Terre Haute, Indiana

References
↑ Carter the Great by Mike Caveney (1995)
Wikipedia-logo.png This page incorporated content from Charles Joseph Carter,
a page hosted on Wikipedia. Please consult the history of the original page to see a list of its authors. Therefor, this article is also available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The Linking Ring, Vol. 15, No. 12, February 1936, Magician Carter Dies in Bombay; to Try Return, page 1049
The Sphinx, Vol. 35, No. 1, March 1936, Charles J. Carter, by Anson B. Ingels, page 17
The Linking Ring, Vol. 32, No. 12, February 1953, Charles Joseph Carter, by John Braun, page 39
Genii Magazine, Vol. 29, No. 12, August 1965, Carter The Great, A Review of his show at the Excelsior Theatre Bombay, India, March 17, 1928, by Arnold Furst, page 608
M-U-M, Vol. 80, No. 4, September 1990, Carter The Great’s Show Lives On, by Phil Temple, page 19
The Magic Circular, Vol. 85, No. 918, August 1991, Carter The Great, page 171
The New Tops, Vol. 32, No. 1, January 1992, Cover, PERSONALITY PARADE by Geoffrey Hansen - Carter The Great, page 12
The Magic Circular, Vol. 87, No. 933, February/March 1993, THE CARTER SCRAPBOOK, page 33
The Linking Ring, Vol. 90, No. 11, November 2010, Pictures from the Past, page 29, Answer to Pictures from the Past, page 98
Bio-bibliographisches Lexikon der Zauberkünstler Edition Volker Huber, April 2002, Carter, Charles Joseph = Boy Magician; The Great Carter; USA Zauberkünstler; Zauberkunst-Fachschriftsteller (*14.06.1874 New Castle, Pennsylvania; †13.02.1936 Bombay), page 72
http://www.findacadabra.com/index.php?fn=pois&f=show_details&id_poi=611#
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=90743694