Angus T. Jones,
Ann Bevan’s life is remembered as both heartbreaking and courageous. Born in London on December 20, 1874, she enjoyed a normal childhood, trained as a nurse, and later married Thomas Bevan, a farmer from Kent. The couple had four children and lived a modest, happy life until Thomas’s untimely death in 1914. Left a widow, Mary Ann was forced to support her family alone.

Soon, she began developing symptoms of acromegaly, a rare disorder caused by excessive growth hormone. Her features changed dramatically—her hands, feet, and face grew disproportionate, leaving her unrecognizable. With few medical treatments available at the time and facing social stigma, she struggled to find steady work.

Desperate, she entered a “Homeliest Woman” contest and won, which led to sideshow opportunities. In 1920, she accepted an offer to join Coney Island’s Dreamland amusement park, performing alongside other well-known circus acts. Branded cruelly as the “Ugliest Woman in the World,” she endured public ridicule but used her earnings to provide her children with a better life.

By the 1930s, she had become an international sideshow attraction. Mary Ann Bevan died in 1933 at age 59, remembered not for her appearance but for her sacrifice and devotion as a mother.
