John Daniel II (c. 1920–1926), originally called Sultan, was a Western gorilla who was captured in August 1923[1] in the French Congo[2] when he was about three years old. The gorilla then passed into the possession of an Englishwoman named Alyce Cunningham,[3] who raised him as a successor to John Daniel I. He toured with Ringling Circus in America and was exhibited at the London Zoo before his death in 1926.
Biography
According to a 1924 press release, John Daniel II was taken from the same "gorilla village" as John Daniel I.[3] John Daniel II reportedly did not like men as a consequence of their involvement in his capture and as such needed a female chaperone at all times. He enjoyed bacon and eggs for breakfast, and took tea at 4 p.m.
John Daniel and Cunningham came to the United States from the UK in early 1924 on the SS Deutschland (1923).[2] John Daniel II lived with Cunningham at the McAlpin Hotel in New York and "even answered the door when visitors called."[4] That summer, John Daniel II and Cunningham toured with the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey circus.[5] Per a poster held in the Ringling Museum circusiana collection he was advertised as a "Genuine Gorilla from the Wilds of Africa."[6]Valerie Harrisse Walter sketched John Daniel II in his hotel room in 1924.[7] Walter later sculpted him in bronze.[8] American journalist Mildred Seydell often performed palm readings as a gimmick to gain access to interesting interview candidates; John Daniel II was one such subject.[9]
In the winter of 1924, John Daniel II and Cunningham returned to the UK. Press reports had it that John Daniel II was to be married in London to Jenny Lind, a "spinster" gorilla in the possession of Professor T. Alexander Barnes.[10][11] Circa 1925, John Daniel II weighed about 80 lb (36 kg).[1] John Daniel II was exhibited at the London Zoo in 1925 and/or 1926, traveling to the zoo from his hotel by motorcar or taxi, arriving for his shift around 11 a.m. and leaving around 6 p.m.[12] One newspaper report claimed that John Daniel II, "the great chimpanzee, could smoke a pipe, ride a tricycle, chew tobacco, and tie his necktie."[13]
Daniel II died in London in approximately May 1926.[12][14] The cause of death was "some internal trouble such as humans suffer from."[12] With the passing of the cosmopolitan John Daniel II, American newspapers reported that the only gorilla remaining in U.S. captivity was Congo,[14] a female eastern gorilla, who was eventually passed into the custody of Robert M. Yerkes.[15]
^Herzfeld, Chris (2017) [2012 (Paris, Editions du Seuil)]. The great apes : a short history [Petite histoire des grands singes]. Translated by Frey, Kevin. Foreword by Jane Goodall. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 133. ISBN978-0-300-22137-4. LCCN2017940993. OCLC982651819.