In April 2017, the phone rang with an impossible offer: join the final tour of Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus for its last eight weeks on earth. Tim Mack—who had spent 15 years running his own circus company—said yes, trading stability for a chance to witness the end of a 146-year American institution from the inside.
"The Last Train" is the unvarnished story of those final weeks: living on a mile-long train with 300 people from 30 countries, executing brutal 12-hour venue transformations, getting snarled at by lions during Baltimore load-outs, and watching America roll past at 60 mph from train vestibules. It's about playing Magic: The Gathering with international performers between three-show days, about building deep friendships you know will end, and about what it means to give everything to something that's already dying.
This isn't a romanticized circus memoir. Mack came as an experienced professional who understood both the remarkable technical achievement and the institutional dysfunction. He captures the strange beauty of impermanence—the way temporary communities become family, the satisfaction of difficult work in service of something larger, and the courage required to choose meaningful experience over security.
The circus is gone now. The train sits in storage. The people have scattered across the globe. But for eight weeks in spring 2017, they created something that can never be replicated—and this is what it felt like from the inside.
A story about endings, belonging, and the things we choose to be part of before they disappear forever.
Connect with Tim Mack: Follow his ongoing adventures and new stories at roaminsparrow.com, where he continues seeking undiscovered places and unique tales worth telling.
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