I have always thought of AHF as taking place, loosely, in 1849 or 1850. When SLC himself was 14-15. The Fugitive Slave Act was passed in 1850, as part of the compromise(s) of 1850. The Dred Scott decision had not yet been rendered. Dred Scott's suit (for his freedom) was filed in 1853. (These real world events/framing are not mentioned in the text of the novel, although the ability of "free blacks" to vote in Ohio is. ) https://www.cleveland.com/opinion/2021/06/black-voting-power-in-pre-civil-war-ohio-helped-elect-a-governor-and-president-van-gosse.html On Thu, Sep 8, 2022 at 4:04 PM Scott Holmes <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > I have a copy from the University of California Press with a date of > 2002 but I fail to find an actual printing date. The electronic edition > found on the Mark Twain Project site gives dates of 2003, 2009, and > 2016. I'm wondering if there are any substantive changes in these > editions (printing runs?). Actually, I'm trying to fix a date for Huck > and Jim passing Cairo on their way down the Mississippi. I've been > poring over the history of Cairo for the past week and find written > perceptions of this place to vary as much as the level of the > Mississippi River, depending on the date observed. From the Explanatory > notes of my edition, Huck's passing Cairo would have been between 1835 > and 1845. The year 1835 saw the beginning of the second, and ultimately > failed, attempt to built a city on this dynamic piece of land at the > confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. > > -- > /Unaffiliated Geographer and Twain aficionado/ >