8–10 July 1874 • Elmira, N.Y. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 01107)
Just been to Hartford. Can’t well go again till September.1explanatory note
I should think you ought to try Hartford. I’d like to be there & help you, & so turn an honest pennyⒶemendation, but couldnt before——O, come to think my wife & I go there for a visit, next month some time.2explanatory note How’s that. Love to you both.3explanatory note
Fuller had written (CU-MARK):
For the reference to the “Comet,” see 17 July 74 to Albright, n. 3click to open link. Clemens left the St. Nicholas Hotel in New York on the morning of 7 July. The article Fuller enclosed does not survive with his letter. Entitled “A Visit to Bingham,” it was a lengthy description of a trip from Salt Lake City to the mining town of Bingham, the last leg of which was “upon the elegant new cars of the Bingham Cañon and Camp Floyd” railroad, which had begun operations in December 1873. Fuller gave particulars of the railroad’s costs, equipment, extent, freight traffic, receipts, and expansion plans, and described George Goss, “the superintendent of the road,” as “an old railroad man, careful to a degree, and watchful of the interests committed to his charge” (Fuller). Fuller was a member of the board of directors, as was wealthy Pennsylvania oil financier Charles Lockhart (1818–1905), who in 1874 helped organize the Standard Oil Trust and became president of the Standard Oil Company of Pittsburgh. Clemens neither invested in the railroad himself nor helped Fuller “place” its bonds in Hartford (see the next note).
The Clemenses did not travel to Hartford in August. Although they planned to move into their new home there before the end of that month—after trips to Buffalo and Fredonia—they had to postpone their return until September (11 July 74 to JLCclick to open link; 15 Aug 74 to JLC and PAMclick to open link; 22 Aug 74 to Howellsclick to open link; 20 Sept 74 to Parishclick to open link). Meanwhile, Fuller went there himself to try to sell his bonds; on 13 August, Twichell wrote Clemens, “Gov. Fuller called on us in Hartford a few days ago, and we had a delightful talk with him” (CU-MARK; Fuller was acting governor of Utah Territory in 1861 and 1862). For Fuller’s account of his trip, see 6 Sept 74 to Fuller, n. 1click to open link.
That is, also to Fuller’s wife, Annie.
MS, Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (CU-MARK).
L6 , 182–83.
See Appert Collection in Description of Provenance.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.