Joseph Merrick
Joseph Carey Merrick (5 August 1862 – 11 April 1890) was an English man with extreme physical deformities attributed to Proteus syndrome, a rare disorder involving asymmetric overgrowth of tissues.[1][2] Born healthy in Leicester to working-class parents, Merrick's condition manifested progressively from infancy, leading to grotesque enlargements of his skull, limbs, and skin that rendered him unable to perform ordinary labor.[1][3] By his early twenties, unable to sustain factory work or hawking, he joined a traveling freak show in 1884, billed as "the Elephant Man" due to a fabricated origin story linking his afflictions to maternal contact with an elephant.[4][3] Discovered that year by surgeon Frederick Treves during an exhibition in London's East End, Merrick was later rescued from destitution abroad and granted permanent residence at the London Hospital, where Treves provided care and facilitated genteel interactions with patrons of high society, revealing Merrick's underlying intellect and gentleness despite his isolation.[3] He died at age 27 from accidental asphyxiation, his massive head—measuring 36 inches in circumference—dislocating his neck as he attempted, for the first time, to sleep lying flat like others.[3][2]