Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Cincinnati Gazette, ([])

Cue: "There has been good luck"

Source format: "Paraphrase"

Letter type: "clipping"

Notes:

Last modified: 2017-01-26T16:50:57

Revision History: blg 2017-01-26 Redated to Feb 1877 based on news reports of packet service

MTPDocEd
To James D. Randall
February 1877 • Unknown place (Paraphrase and transcript: Cincinnati Gazette, 27 February 1877, UCCL 13532)

The steamer Mark Twain is now running from Helena to the cut-offemendation, forty-five miles above that point, on the St. Francis River.1explanatory note As soon as the stage of the river will permit, she will proceed to the Sunk Lands regions on the upper St. Francis River.2explanatory note Her namesakeemendation, whose proper name is Samuel L. Clemens, recently sent the boat his photo and his autograph. In a private letter to Capt. Randall, Mark says: “There has been good luck in the name these ten years. Let us hope it will continue.”

Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

Paraphrase and transcript, “Miscellany,” Cincinnati Gazette, 27 February 1877, 7, reprinting the Memphis Avalanche of unknown date.

Explanatory Notes
1 James D. Randall (d. 1901) was the owner and captain of the Mark Twain, a steamboat which, starting in early February 1877, served as a mail packet on the St. Francis River, a tributary of the Mississippi in southeastern Missouri and northeastern Arkansas. In 1885 the Mark Twain exploded, killing six people (“River News,” Cincinnati Gazette, 28 Dec 1876, 7; “Arrivals and Departures,” Evansville [Ind.] Courier and Press, 3 Feb 1877, 3; “River Intelligence,” Memphis [Tenn.] Public Ledger, 7 Feb 1877, 4; “A Steamer Explosion,” Chicago Tribune, 28 May 1885, 3; Reilly and Thomas 1883, 101; “James D. Randall,” Western Electrician 29 [6 July 1901]: 7).
2 The “sunk” or “sunken” lands were areas in northeastern Arkansas that shifted and sank during the New Madrid, Missouri, earthquakes of 1811–12 (Hendricks 2017).
Emendations and Textual Notes
 cut-off • cut- | off
 namesake • namesame
Top