Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Fri, 11 Jul 1997 16:12:55 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
Dennis Kelly wrote:
>
> Does anyone have a handy comparison of what a dollar bought in Huck Finn's
> day?
Victor Doyno places a 1990 value between $572 and $693 for the $40 Huck
received in the smallpox incident (_Writing Huck Finn_,142).
> What did it cost to buy a loaf of bread or a chicken?
Clemens reported that the price of "Flour ranges from from $8 to $9 50" on
the St. Louis market, 5 Nov. 1855. I do not know the unit of measure or
how much flour is needed for bread. Items in the report with a unit of
measure include "Potatoes $2 to $2 25 per bushel" and "Eggs (retail) 30c
per dozen" (_MT's Letters_, I, 56).
On 21 Nov. 1860, Clemens, who was then speculating in commodities to be
sold in New Orleans, complained to Orion that the price of chickens sold
on the New Orleans market fluctuated from less than $3.00 to $7.00 per
doz. Meanwhile, eggs which had been selling at 40c per doz dropped to 12
1/2c after Clemens invested in 15c eggs (_Letters_, I, 103).
> How much was deck passage up the Ohio?
I don't know, but you might extrapolate from the two dollars Clemens
presumably paid for deck passage for the fourteen-hour voyage from Saint
Louis to Hannibal in 1855 (_MT' Notebooks & Journals, I, 18). (It now
takes considerably longer and a lot more money by steamboat.)
thanks, larry marshburne
|
|
|