Thomas Dilward

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Thomas_Dilward an entity of type: Thing

Thomas Dilward (c. 1817–1887) was an entertainer who appeared in blackface minstrel shows from 1853 until the early 1880s under the name Japanese Tommy. He was also sometimes billed as "The African 'Tom Thumb'" and the "African Dwarf Tommy". Dilward is one of only two known African-Americans to have performed with white minstrel companies before the American Civil War (the other being William Henry Lane). rdf:langString
rdf:langString Thomas Dilward
rdf:langString Thomas Dilward
rdf:langString Thomas Dilward
xsd:date 1887-07-09
xsd:integer 2928120
xsd:integer 1084207563
rdf:langString Thomas Dilverd
rdf:langString Dilward c. 1860
xsd:date 1887-07-09
rdf:langString Entertainer
rdf:langString Thomas Dilward (c. 1817–1887) was an entertainer who appeared in blackface minstrel shows from 1853 until the early 1880s under the name Japanese Tommy. He was also sometimes billed as "The African 'Tom Thumb'" and the "African Dwarf Tommy". Dilward is one of only two known African-Americans to have performed with white minstrel companies before the American Civil War (the other being William Henry Lane). Dilward's size, between 23 and 36 inches in height, made him a "curious attraction" and allowed him to take to the stage with whites at a time when almost no black men did; in addition, his stage name may have been intended to hide his ethnic background. He was famous for his skills at singing, dancing, and playing the violin. He has also been credited in John Russell Bartlett's 1877 Dictionary of Americanisms with having invented the word hunky-dory, meaning "everything is all right". In 1887, the Indiana State Sentinel stated that Dilward was of Native American and African American ancestry.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11663
rdf:langString Thomas Dilverd
xsd:gYear 1817
xsd:gYear 1887

data from the linked data cloud