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It was on May 17, 1971 that a nationwide rail workers strike left circus animals from Ringling Brothers and Barnum Bailey Circus stranded in South Kearny, New Jersey prior to their performance at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Most of the circus caravan were able to travel by truck, but nineteen elephants, a zebra, a llama and a pony had to somehow get to the Garden. The solution was to march them through the Lincoln Tunnel. At 10:30 p.m., more than a thousand spectators gathered to watch this strange trek of these animals, led by four trainers who rode on the elephants, as well as police from Weehawken, Hudson County, the Port Authority and New York City. Coincidentally, the toll for the caravan to cross into New York was nine dollars.
from today in NJ History