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Abbott maintained an active interest in the magic business until his retirement in 1959. At that time, he sold his share of the company to long time partner Bordner.
Abbott maintained an active interest in the magic business until his retirement in 1959. At that time, he sold his share of the company to long time partner Bordner.


In 1959 Abbott wrote his memoir, "A Lifetime of Magic". Published in 1960, just months before he died, on August 26, 1960, from a heart attack. He was 74 years old.<ref>http://geniimagazine.com/magicpedia/Percy_Abbott</ref> <ref>Programmes of Famous Magicians, 1937.</ref><ref>Cover of [[Genii Magazine]] (June, 1949)</ref><ref>Cover of The Linking Ring, October 1959</ref>
In 1959 Abbott wrote his memoir, "A Lifetime of Magic" just months before he died, on August 26, 1960, from a heart attack .<ref>http://geniimagazine.com/magicpedia/Percy_Abbott</ref> <ref>Programmes of Famous Magicians, 1937.</ref><ref>Cover of [[Genii Magazine]] (June, 1949)</ref><ref>Cover of The Linking Ring, October 1959</ref>

== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==
===Books===
===Books===

Revision as of 18:44, 14 September 2013

Percy Abbott
Born(1886-05-03)May 3, 1886
Braidwood, Australia
DiedAugust 26, 1960(1960-08-26) (aged 74)
Colon, Michigan
NationalityAustralian
Known forAbbott Magic & Novelty Co.

Percy Abbott (1886-1960) was an Australian magician and magic dealer who founded Abbott's Magic Novelty Company in Colon, Michigan. Abbott's business was once the largest manufacturer and retailer of magic tricks and stage illusions in the world.[1][2]

Biography

Abbott was born in Braidwood, Australia on May 3, 1886 as one of four children. Orphaned as a youngster, Abbott and his siblings moved in with an aunt who charged the children for room and board.[3]

Early interests included theater and magic. He took part in amateur theatrical productions as a boy. He discovered magic which he would devote most of his life along with its allied art, ventriloquism. In his early 1920s, Abbott found himself performing regularly in Sydney and other Australian towns, eventually taking a position with a firm that supplied magicians with the tricks of their trade, the New York Novelty Co.[4]

Abbott would eventually open his own supply house for conjurers, called the Abbott's Magic Novelty Co., on Pitt St. in downtown Sydney. He continued performing and was reportedly one of the first magicians to perform the Sawing a woman in half illusion in Australia.[5]

Abbott turned the reins of his magic shop over to his brother Frank to leave Australia permanently. He toured the Orient and eventually landed in America, where in 1926 attended the first annual convention of the International Brotherhood of Magicians.

He would meet Harry Blackstone, Sr. and the two men agreed to form a partnership to establish the "Blackstone Magic Co." in the small village of Colon, Michigan in 1928, but only lasted for 18 months. Four years later, after working on Coney Island with Jean Hugard, playing school shows throughout the Midwest, and getting married, Abbott opened another magic shop in Colon, Michigan, "The Abbott Magic Novelty Company" and began advertising in trade journals in 1933. Recil Bordner, a magic enthusiast and son of successful farmers from Edon, Ohio, join the form as a partner in 1934.

The shop moved into larger premises in Colon, at 124 St. Joseph St., and celebrated the event by hosting the first annual Abbott Magic Get-Together that fall. The event became an annual tradition that continues to this day.[6]Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

He also founded the Abbott Magic Co.'s magazine called "Tops", in January 1936, editing it for several years before turning it over to the Abbott company's staff artist, Howard Melson.

By the end of 1945, Percy Abbott's business was spread over seven buildings and employed over 54 workers with Abbott branch stores established in Detroit, Indianapolis, New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. Abbott's issued the largest magic catalog of all time, some 832 pages long, and featuring over 1800 different products, most manufactured at the Abbott factories.

Abbott maintained an active interest in the magic business until his retirement in 1959. At that time, he sold his share of the company to long time partner Bordner.

In 1959 Abbott wrote his memoir, "A Lifetime of Magic" which was published just months before he died, on August 26, 1960, from a heart attack at the age of 74.[7] [8][9][10]

Bibliography

Books

Written or contributed to

  • Abbott's Magic for Magicians, Secrets of Occidental and Oriental Magic (1934).[11]
  • Abbott's Practical Patter (1935)
  • Comedy Magic (Abbott) (1937)
  • A Lifetime in Magic (1960)
  • Abbott's Encyclopedia of Rope Tricks, Vol. 1 (1941) compiled by Stewart James
  • Rice's Encyclopedia of Silks, Vol. 1, (1948) by Harold Rice
  • Abbott's Cigarette Magic compiled by Tom Zeno (1936)

Published

  • Hat Loading Methods, compiled by U. F. Grant and Stewart James (1941)
  • Illusions! Illusions! (n.d.)

References

  1. ^ http://www.rivercountryjournal.info/2011/08/06/linda-abbott-daughter-of-percy-abbott-comes-to-colon-historical-museum/
  2. ^ Official website
  3. ^ Cover of The Linking Ring, May 1959
  4. ^ A Lifetime in Magic by Percy Abbott, The Abbott Magic Manufacturing Co., (1960)
  5. ^ http://www.americanmuseumofmagic.org/bios/PercyAbbott.htm
  6. ^ http://www.magictimes.com/archives/2012/2012-07_23-29.htm
  7. ^ http://geniimagazine.com/magicpedia/Percy_Abbott
  8. ^ Programmes of Famous Magicians, 1937.
  9. ^ Cover of Genii Magazine (June, 1949)
  10. ^ Cover of The Linking Ring, October 1959
  11. ^ Abbott, Percy (1934). "Abbott's Magic for Magicians". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)