• Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop
  Pioneers' Cemetery AssociationPhoenix, AZ
  • Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop

Frank Albert Barnes

7/25/2025

0 Comments

 
Picture
Frank Albert Barnes, 1868-1903
Circus Seal Trainer
 
Buried in Rosedale Cemetery temporarily;
​removed to family plot in Akron, Ohio.

(Generic image created with Bing AI)


Frank Albert Barnes was born November 11, 1868, in Meadville, Pennsylvania, to James Barnes and Mary Jane Cain. James was an oilwell driller who had immigrated from England to work in Pennsylvania’s oil fields. By the 1890s, the family was in Akron, Ohio. They lived in a cottage near railroad tracks, from which the Barnes youngsters would have seen trains come and go every day. Frank’s younger brother James, Jr., became a locomotive engineer.
 
It is not known exactly how Frank Barnes joined the circus. In 1897, he was employed by the Barnum & Bailey Circus. Soon thereafter, he joined the Ringling Brothers Circus where he became a seal trainer and performer.
 
On the evening of October 4, 1903, Barnes suffered a fractured skull when he fell from a Ringling Brothers circus train as it was passing through Gila Bend, Arizona, at about 20 miles an hour. He had been riding on a flatcar, next to the cages of his flippered charges, when the accident occurred. It is presumed that he had fallen asleep. 
 
Train employees telegraphed ahead to the Circus’s ‘advance man,' Mr. Nagle, who was already in Phoenix making arrangements for the circus train’s arrival, and he had an ambulance waiting at the station. Barnes was conveyed at once to Sisters Hospital in Phoenix, but he died on October 7, never having regained consciousness.
 
Barnes’s funeral was conducted from the undertaking parlor of J. Bradley, with all expenses covered by the Ringling Brothers Circus. His body was temporarily interred in Rosedale Cemetery until the following spring, when the Circus had it transported back to Akron for burial in his family’s plot. It is a well-known fact that circus performers are a close-knit group and look after each other in death as in life. Barnes being something of a local celebrity, his demise was widely reported in Akron newspapers.
 
© 2025 by Donna L. Carr. Last revised 21 July 2025.

If you would like assistance researching our interred, you can find more information on our website. You can contact us at [email protected] at any time. Thank you for your interest to preserve the history of Arizona's pioneers!
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

      Subscribe

    Subscribe to Newsletter

    Categories

    All
    12 Graves Of Christmas
    Architects
    Asian Pacific Islander (Chinese)
    Asian Pacific Islander (Japanese)
    Bad Men
    Bad Women
    Black History
    Civil War
    Farmers
    Forgotten No More
    Hispanic Heritage
    Immigrant Heritage
    Irish History
    Jewish Heritage
    Lawmen
    Miner
    Ministers
    Music
    Native American
    Physicians
    Politicians
    Teachers
    Unusual Occupations
    Veterans
    Woe Is Me


    Additional blog

    BEHIND THE EPITAPH BLOG

We Would Love to Have You Visit Soon!


Hours

TH: 10am - 2pm

Email

[email protected]
  • Home
  • Research
    • Pioneer Biographies
  • Preservation
    • Our Cemeteries
  • Calendar
  • About PCA
    • Board News
    • Photos
  • Our Partners
  • Membership
  • Gift Shop