Bob:
I feel your pain. This may be an AOL-handshake issue.
Try hitting return after 65 characters, counting spaces,
whether you're finished with the sentence or not,
and see what happens.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Dan
-----Original Message-----
From: Robert E Stewart <[log in to unmask]>
To: TWAIN-L <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Thu, Nov 27, 2014 3:21 am
Subject: Twain's Tahoe Host, Final Try
Moving to another computer, I will try this one last time:
=20
Hoping your Thanksgiving today is full of family, food and friends, I =20
offer the following diversion, dubbed by my granddaughter as "Funny how =
people=20
don't change despite modern technology.=E2=80=9D
It is a runaway husband anecdote, peripherally involving Sam Clemens. It=
=20
is a piece of Twain-related "gossip" from 1861.
In researching people and places in 1861 Nevada Territory, I ran across=
a =20
journal by sketch artist Joseph Lamson, of Maine, and obtained photocopies=
=20
from Lamson's journal at CalHistSoc.=20
Lamson writes of hiking north along the east shore of Lake Tahoe in May,=
=20
1861. He spent time exploring Cave Rock, then hiked north until he came=
to a=20
=E2=80=9Chouse,=E2=80=9D an occupied log cabin, where he spent the night.
=20
He writes of "small squirrels" [chipmunks] scampering in through the =20
chinking of the house, and the daughter of the unnamed "lady of the house=
=E2=80=9D =20
chasing them off. He names his host as "Mr. Walker," and writes of a visi=
tor,=20
"Mr. Patterson" also being there. Lamson mentions Shakespeare rock, and=
the=20
meadow, where "Walker" is planting grain.
It is clear he is at Glenbrook Bay, then called Walton's Landing, where=
=20
four men (Capt. A. W. Pray, Rufus Walton, George Warren, and Nelson E.=
=20
Murdock) had formed a sawmill company. Capt. Pray lived in Virginia City.=
Walton=20
owned the Clear Creek toll road from there to a point just north of Carso=
n=20
Valley. He collected toll where he, lived half-way along that road, near=
=20
"Mr. Jones" sawmill. Warren and Murdock lived at the site. Numerous reco=
rds=20
identify Nelson Eliphalet Murdock as a "millwright.
Lamson's journal begs the question: "Mr. Walker and Mr. Patterson"? No =20
records have been found of a man named Walker at the Lake in 1861, and th=
ere=20
was only the one cabin/house at Walton's Landing on the November 1861 =20
General Land Office original survey. But Lamson was specific about the oc=
cupants=E2=80=99=20
names.
In the September, 1861 letter by Sam Clemens, he writes that a few days=
=20
earlier he and John Kinney had arrived at the =E2=80=9Clower camp=E2=80=
=9D at the Lake, then=20
they ". . . set out for the only house on this side of the Lake,
three miles from there, down the shore" on a stormy day in September 1861=
=20
afternoon. In Roughing It he writes it had been "a three mile pull" to=20
reach the =E2=80=9CBrigade=E2=80=9D camp on first arrival. It becomes cle=
ar from the =E2=80=9Cthree=20
miles=E2=80=9D that they considered the brigade camp to be their =E2=80=
=9Clower camp=E2=80=9D and=20
they were now back at the point of beginning. Sam does not name or direct=
ly=20
mention people there. In the 1861 letter Sam specifies =E2=80=9Clower cam=
p=E2=80=9D, three=20
miles =E2=80=9Cdown the shore=E2=80=9D, and =E2=80=9Cthis side of the lak=
e.
=20
Four of his roommates at Mrs. Murphy=E2=80=99s (Capt. John Nye, William=
Wagner,=20
Johannes Slott and James Coulter) were partners in a Tahoe timber claim.=
=20
From a description of the claim by Will Wagner in 1861, and the 1862 claim=
=20
survey and plat by the Ormsby County Surveyor, we know their =E2=80=9CJohn=
Nye & Co.=E2=80=9D=20
camp was three miles north of the Warren/Murdock cabin. All of which=20
suggests Clemens =E2=80=9Clower camp=E2=80=9D was at the Brigade Claim of=
Roughing It.
A few weeks later, in November 1861, surveyor Butler Ives wrote in the=20
Land Office survey of the Glenbrook area, that the house was that of "Mes=
srs.=20
Warren and Murdock." (The draftsman didn=E2=80=99t include the names on=
the plat of=20
Ives=E2=80=99 survey.) Ives also notes the nearby "sawmill, just built".=
(Roughing=20
It specifies "a saw-mill and some workmen", not a working sawmill.) In=20
December 1861, George Warren and Nelson Eliphalet Murdock filed a claim=
on the=20
land under both the house and sawmill. In it they state they have lived=
=20
there since May, 1860.
So, OK, who is this =E2=80=9CWalker=E2=80=9D fellow that Lamson tells us=
lived there in=20
May, 1861? I mentioned my quandary to a historian who retired from Law=20
Enforcement. He asked about Lamson, and then the occupants--two men, a wo=
man and=20
a girl, and then promptly said " Murdock didn't want folks back home to=
=20
find him", adding that Murdock was neither the first nor the only man to=
use=20
the Gold Rush to skip out on his family. =20
A Murdock family genealogist in New York confirmed that Nelson Eliphalet=
=20
Murdock, born 1810, was a millwright from New York who left his wife and=
=20
three children in the East in 1852 for California--and was never heard=
from=20
again. (The term is =E2=80=9Cgrass Widow.)
Whether Lamson knew the true names of his host or not is unknown. It's=20
possible he was covering for Murdock, and equally possible they gave Lams=
on=20
aliases. Same goes for Sam Clemens.
Bob Stewart
All documents mentioned above, excepting the Lamson Journal, are in the
online package at https://futureboy.us/twain/2014Version6Total.pdf
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