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A cafe that sounded promising was just a short distance from my sleeping
spot so I walked there for breakfast.
Sunnyside Cafe
identifies its sausage as "homemade"
and it was quite good.
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I returned to the motel and checked out then walked the other direction to
the Ringling
Museum complex.
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First up in the Tibbals Learning Center is an informational film on the
circus in the next room and a display about a role
circus women played in the women's suffrage
movement.
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Then it's Howard Tibbals' incredible creation,
The Howard Brothers Circus. It's basically a 1/16
scale version of the complete 1936 Ringling Brothers and Barnum &
Bailey Circus although there are exceptions regarding the year.
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The second floor contains a timeline of the American Circus that starts
with a 1793 performance that George Washington attended and runs through
Cirque du Soleil. A couple of windows provide overhead views of the
Howard Brothers operation below.
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The original circus museum building is just beyond. There are quite a few
pieces of circus history displayed there, but the main attractions seems
to be the Ringlings' personal train car. Visitors cannot actually enter
that car but a platform beside it allows peering in through the windows.
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The last piece I visited was the Museum of Art. An addition houses some
modern but the original galleries hold mostly classic paintings with a
religious bent. Many are huge.
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Sarasota was as far south as Granddad and Granny reached in 1920, but
friends live just a bit beyond. They are actually much closer to Sarasota
than I realized and when I contacted them, they were brave enough to give
me the address and kind enough to take me out to dinner and give me a
place to sleep. Here's a picture of Rose and Brian I took using that new
soft focus technique.
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