Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Al G. Field

Minstrel show operator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al G. Field
Remove ads

Alfred Griffin (or Griffith) Hatfield (November 7, 1848 or 1850 April 3, 1921) was a performer and minstrel show producer as Al G. Field and sometimes Al G. Fields.[1]

Quick facts Born, Died ...
Remove ads

Biography

He was born in Leesburg, Virginia near Morgantown, West Virginia on November 7, 1848 or 1850, as Alfred Griffin Hatfield or Alfred Griffith Hatfield.[1][2] He had a brother Joseph E. Hatfield.[3][4]

Thumb
Poster

Beginning in 1875 he performed with the Sells Brothers Circus that was based out of Columbus, Ohio.[5] In 1884 he organized the Hagenbeck-Wallace Circus in Peru, Indiana. He managed them until September 9, 1886.[1] He launched his own namesake minstrel show the same year. His autobiography Watch Yourself Go By was published in 1912.[6] He changed his name and established his own company in 1886. He eventually retreated to a farm and bred animals.[5]

He died on April 3, 1921, in Columbus, Ohio from Bright's Disease.[2] He was buried in Green Lawn Cemetery in Columbus, Ohio. His last will and testament arranged for his minstrel show to be bequeathed to his brother, Joseph E. Hatfield, and to Edward Conard, a relative. His estate was valued at $150,000 (equivalent to $2,644,310 in 2024) and he requested that the minstrel show continue to be operated.[3]

Remove ads

Performers

Shows

  • Darkest America, first staged in 1896[11]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads