I'd be remiss not to mention Neal Moore on this
topic. He canoed the entire river in 2010 chronicling
positive stories of people and places along the way
as a CNN citizen journalist. Each chapter stands alone
and focuses on a place and its people: the Ojibwe,
Somali-Americans, inmates at The Farm, etc. It also
describes the journey itself and includes a handful
of close calls. Neal did the adventuring and the bulk
of the writing, and I got to help.
Looking forward to seeing many of you at the upcoming
Clemens Conference in Hannibal!
Cindy
________________________________
From: Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]> on behalf of Mac Donnell Rare Books <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 9, 2019 1:51:10 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: canoing/boating down the Mississippi
CAUTION:This email originated from outside of Stetson. Do not click on links or open any attachments unless you expected the attachments and know the sender.
Thanks. That's very helpful. Yes, I know those you mention from the
1920s and 1938, but the other are new to me. The 1887 book I mentioned
is by Willard Glazier. He and two friends made a trip down the river in
1881. He met his wife in Hannibal where they spent three days--with no
mention of Mark Twain. Glazier made up for that omission when he later
wrote a book about American cities and described Twain's home in
Hartford.
Kevin
@
Mac Donnell Rare Books
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------ Original Message ------
From: "Hal Bush" <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: 7/9/2019 1:08:19 PM
Subject: Re: canoing/boating down the Mississippi
>Abraham Lincoln (the Mark Twain of our politicians) floated down the river, twice in fact. Biographers have often mentioned this but not long ago, a definitive study was published: it is particularly memorable for its exotic scenes of Creole culture in New Orleans around the time AL would have seen it...
>
>
>Richard Campanella. Lincoln in New Orleans: The 1828–1831 Flatboat Voyages and Their Place in History. Lafayette: University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press, 2010.
>
>
>
>Dr. Hal Bush
>
>Dept. of English
>
>Saint Louis University
>
>[log in to unmask]
>
>314-977-3616
>
>http://halbush.com
>
>author website: halbush.com
>
>________________________________
>From: Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]> on behalf of Thomas Smith (AMA - Staff) <[log in to unmask]>
>Sent: Tuesday, July 9, 2019 12:54:12 PM
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Re: canoing/boating down the Mississippi
>
>Hi Kevin,
>
>
>I don't know of a definitive list, but I have written about three canoe journeys from the early 1880s in my forthcoming book. They are:
>
>
>Bishop, Nathaniel H. Four Months in a Sneak-Box.1879.
>
>Neidé, Charles A. The Canoe Aurora: A Cruise from the Adirondacks to the Gulf. 1885.
>
>Wilkins, Ben C. Cruise of the “Little Nan,” Five Hundred Miles down the Mississippi River.
>1881.
>
>The first two are readily available through Internet Archive. The Wilkins one I had to hunt down at the Newberry Library. There are also lots of interesting snippets about Mississippi expeditions in The American Canoeist magazine, which launched in 1882.
>
>
>Judging by the dates below, it looks like you might already know about Albert Tousley's Where Goes the River from 1928, and Major Rowland Raven-Hart's Canoe Errant on the Mississippi from 1938. There are some good houseboat books too from the early twentieth century - Kent and Margaret Lighty's Shantyboat, Harold Speakman's Mostly Mississippi, William F. Waugh's The Houseboat Book from 1904, and John Lathrop Mathews' Log of the Easy Way (1911).
>
>
>It was nice to see the enthusiasm for Eddy Harris the other day - I agree that Mississippi Solo is a great book.
>
>
>Best wishes,
>
>Tom
>************************************************
>Dr Thomas Ruys Smith
>Senior Lecturer in American Literature and Culture
>Room A1.40
>University of East Anglia
>Norwich
>Norfolk
>NR4 7TJ
>United Kingdom
>
>Coming soon: Deep Water: The Mississippi River in the Age of Mark Twain: https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__amzn.to_2JoEzqO&d=DwIFAA&c=Pk_HpaIpE_jAoEC9PLIWoQ&r=f7i-Uq4rMQU8-TBe45qVLg&m=1m7soEgWF7-lScVzoAz1jXtshDd6DbH56Th0xrryp_Q&s=w0YcroERXtcIyAXQoyqjCv6-HQxQ_0iGu8_RPXfOrt4&e=
>
>Co-editor Comparative American Studies: https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.tandfonline.com_loi_ycas20&d=DwIFAA&c=Pk_HpaIpE_jAoEC9PLIWoQ&r=f7i-Uq4rMQU8-TBe45qVLg&m=1m7soEgWF7-lScVzoAz1jXtshDd6DbH56Th0xrryp_Q&s=a49vBILLbPTD0bXYUcho0u1_ubjtCgTnJpWDtuva8x8&e=
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>E-mail: [log in to unmask]
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>************************************************
>________________________________
>From: Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]> on behalf of Mac Donnell Rare Books <[log in to unmask]>
>Sent: 09 July 2019 18:22:56
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: canoing/boating down the Mississippi
>
>I've been in and out of the office and meant to reply to the thread on
>canoe trips down the Mississippi. I have a question:
>
>Has anyone compiled a list of published accounts by people who have
>boated down the Mississippi? I'm not talking about people on steamboats,
>but solo excursions, or trips by very small groups of people (say six or
>less), in small riverboats (skiffs, canoes, etc.), who traveled down the
>entire river.
>
>I only know of seven, the earliest in 1887, two in the 1920s, one in
>1938, and the rest more recent.
>
>Kevin
>@
>Mac Donnell Rare Books
>9307 Glenlake Drive
>Austin TX 78730
>512-345-4139
>Member: ABAA, ILAB, BSA
>
>You can browse our books at:
>https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__eur01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com_-3Furl-3Dwww.macdonnellrarebooks.com-26amp-3Bdata-3D02-257C01-257CThomas.Smith-2540UEA.AC.UK-257C05239ed950f140992fd808d70492eac6-257Cc65f8795ba3d43518a070865e5d8f090-257C0-257C1-257C636982901372269054-26amp-3Bsdata-3DuUN213Yb591RwHiJbYsnKWA948S5MXTDRJ-252Fq882Qgq0-253D-26amp-3Breserved-3D0&d=DwIFAA&c=Pk_HpaIpE_jAoEC9PLIWoQ&r=f7i-Uq4rMQU8-TBe45qVLg&m=1m7soEgWF7-lScVzoAz1jXtshDd6DbH56Th0xrryp_Q&s=dtr4mG5fvsA1cgJRsvrJGXblMZpHn6mlKN_7HW-jm8A&e=
>
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