The Adventures of the Real Tom Sawyer
Mark Twain prowled the rough-and-tumble streets of 1860s San Francisco with a hard-drinking, larger-than-life fireman
- By Robert Graysmith
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 6)
Finally a lifeboat was lowered, and women, children and many men, including the ship’s surgeon, who would be needed on land, packed in and were rowed to shore. Two broken lifeboats were repaired and launched. Sawyer returned to the flaming vessel in a long boat, rowing hard despite burned forearms to reach more passengers. He got a group into life preservers, then towed them ashore and went back for more. An hour later, the ship was a perfect sheet of flame.
Four days later, the survivors were picked up by American whaling vessels. Ultimately, Sawyer was credited with saving 90 lives at sea, among them 26 people he had rescued singlehandedly.
Twain, floating in clouds of steam at Stahle’s baths, was riveted by Sawyer’s story. He himself had a deathly fear of exploding steamers, and for good reason. In 1858, Twain had gotten his brother Henry, then 20, an unpaid post as a junior purser on the New Orleans steamer Pennsylvania. On June 13, the Pennsylvania exploded 60 miles below Memphis. Four of the eight boilers blew up the forward third of the vessel. “Henry was asleep,” Twain later recalled, “blown up—then fell back on the hot boilers.” A reporter wrote that Twain, who had been nearly two days’ travel downriver from Memphis, was “almost crazed with grief” at the sight of Henry’s burned form on a mattress surrounded by 31 parboiled and mangled victims on pallets. “[Henry] lingered in fearful agony seven days and a half,” Twain later wrote. Henry died close to dawn on June 21. “Then the star of my hope went out and left me in the gloom of despair....O, God! This is hard to bear.”
Twain blamed himself and, at the time he and Sawyer met, was still reliving the tragedy in his memory by day and in vivid dreams by night.“My nightmares to this day,” he would write toward the end of his life, “take the form of my dead brother.”
MINING COUNTRY ESCAPADE—
THE MEN COMMENCE TO CAROUSE—
“I WAS BORN LAZY”
*
Only weeks after meeting Sawyer in San Francisco, Twain, in July 1863, went back to Virginia City, Nevada, where he’d previously worked as a correspondent for the Territorial Enterprise. He’d gotten free mining stocks as kickbacks for favorable mentions in the paper, and the value of his shares in the Gould and Curry mines had been soaring. “What a gambling carnival it was!” Twain later recalled. Now covering the rough-and-tumble silver-mining town as a freelancer for San Francisco’s Daily Morning Call, he sent for his new friend, Sawyer. “[Sam] wrote,” Sawyer recalled, “asking me to make him a visit. Well, I was pretty well-heeled—had eight hundred dollars in my inside pocket—and as there was nothing much doing in Frisco, I went.” Sawyer jolted 200 miles over mountain roads by stagecoach.
Sawyer had an exciting few nights with Sam and his friends, drinking and gambling. “In four days I found myself busted, without a cent,” Sawyer said later. “Where under the sun he got it has always been a mystery, but that morning Sam walked in with two hundred dollars in his pocket, gave me fifty, and put me on the stage for California, saying that he guessed his Virginia City friends was too speedy for me.”
After Sawyer left, Twain’s luck went bad. He moved into rooms in the new White House Hotel, and when it caught fire on July 26, most of his possessions and all his mining stocks were burned to ash. In Roughing It, he fictionalized the reason for his sudden poverty. “All of a sudden,” he lamented, “out went the bottom and everything and everybody went to ruin and destruction! The bubble scarcely left a microscopic moisture behind it. I was an early beggar and a thorough one. My hoarded stocks were not worth the paper they were printed on. I threw them all away.”
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (14)
For Mark Twain's story of his brief stint in the Confederate army, read “The Private History of a Campaign That Failed”.
Posted by Maggie Secara on November 13,2012 | 04:59 PM
The adventures of the real Tom Sawyer was a real enjoyable read. Good work
Posted by Gerald E Carlson on November 10,2012 | 04:35 PM
As a curent resident of the gritty part of san francisco, south of market street, I smile to think that the footsteps behind me in the fog may be those of Tom Sawyer.
Posted by ronnyjane on November 4,2012 | 06:15 PM
"...yet Twain was sitting it out in California. Why?" A well developed sense of self-preservation, maybe?
Posted by JE on October 8,2012 | 02:46 PM
Great great article, and one more example of what makes the Smithsonian institution such a treasure! Among the many revelations in this piece, I am reminded once again of the important tradition the deadly, but legal, hard drug alcohol plays in our history and in literature in particular. Here we see Twain in his California years on an almost non stop drunk, yet he goes on to write one of the greatest books in literature. I point this out as reminder that drugs have always been a key element of American life, and that marijuana, an infinitely safer than alcohol, should be made legal.
Posted by Paul Shindler on October 8,2012 | 09:56 AM
After reading about Thomas Jefferson,s story in the Smithsonian magazine. I do not believe or can believe anything any more .so many untruths about our country so much greed ,treated human beings like a commodity . and you know what it has not changed . most working people in the social worker section would not have a job if we did not have poor people and the big people and all their money would not be able to live high on the without poor people working for them . I am almost questioning our history books, No one wants to admit to the truth about the changes in Our one Nation under God has forgotton about God who we claim owns this nations and as we stole it from one inhabited group there are other that are working hard to change our course from In God We trust, My faith is in God and we can only find peace in Him
Posted by Rev Loretha Johnson on October 4,2012 | 10:20 PM
I wouldn't usually comment but that was one of the most informative, interesting, and well-written articles I have read in a long time. Kudos to Mr. Graysmith! I may well subscribe...
Posted by StevieB on October 3,2012 | 11:54 AM
"As he waited for the lecture to begin, Tom Sawyer wriggled in his seat next to Mary Bridget..." All very imaginative but Twain makes it clear that the Sawyer who attended the lecture in Roughing It was a complete stranger to him: Down the street I met a man I never had seen before. He had been drinking, and was beaming with smiles and good nature. He said:"My name’s Sawyer. You don’t know me, but that don’t matter. I haven’t got a cent, but if you knew how bad I wanted to laugh, you’d give me a ticket. Come, now, what do you say?"
Posted by MickGJ on October 3,2012 | 06:07 AM
@John Ciccone: " I'm sure he must have commented on this." He did, to some extent: http://civilwarsaga.com/mark-twains-civil-war-experience/
Posted by eBbrInSaltLake on October 2,2012 | 07:56 PM
@John Ciccone: "I'm sure he must have commented on this." He did, to a limited extent: http://civilwarsaga.com/mark-twains-civil-war-experience/
Posted by eBbrInSaltLake on October 2,2012 | 07:53 PM
Man, so much to be learned in this article.
Posted by on September 29,2012 | 07:22 PM
@Bob Lince. Huck Finn was based on Tom Blakenship, a boy who lived near Sam Clemens in Hannibal, Missouri. It is mentioned in Twain's autobiography.
Posted by George Moore on September 26,2012 | 05:09 PM
>>Twain was more definite about the real-life model for Huckleberry Finn than Tom Sawyer.<< Okay, I give up -- who would that have been?
Posted by Bob Lince on September 25,2012 | 02:15 PM
Arguably, the most important event in American history was the Civil War, yet Twain was sitting it out in California. Why? I'm sure he must have commented on this.
Posted by John Ciccone on September 24,2012 | 11:39 AM