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 4 of 6)
Sawyer did not take him seriously. He got to the firehouse on Fourth Street and tried to sleep off his hangover in a back room. Twain went home, slept and then wrote his sister. “I would commence on my book,” he wrote. He had already spoken of his ambitious literary plan to write a novel to his brother Orion, cautioning him to say nothing of it.
Throughout the following year, 1865, Twain lived freelance assignment to freelance assignment. He had moved to Minna Street, an alley paralleling Market Street. Sawyer lived three blocks away. He had fallen in love with young Mary Bridget (records do not document her maiden name), and after they were married, the couple moved into 935 Mission Street. Sawyer set up housekeeping on the second floor and converted the ground floor into a saloon.
On Sunday, October 8, 1865, Twain was walking down Third Street when he was shaken off his feet. “The entire front of a tall four-story brick building in Third Street sprung outward like a door,” he wrote, “and fell sprawling across the street....” At Sawyer’s cottage, his antique firefighting memorabilia collection was smashed. Eleven days later, Twain, unable to pay off his debts, reached a decision. “I have a call to literature of a low order—i.e. humorous,” he wrote Orion and his wife, Mollie. “It is nothing to be proud of but it is my strongest suit.”
TWAIN FEIGNS CONFUSION—"A KIND
BUT NOT SAD FAREWELL”—
BEYOND THE GOLDEN GATE
*
On March 5, 1866, Twain wrote his mother and sister that he was to depart in two days for a reporting excursion to the Sandwich Islands (present-day Hawaii). “We shall arrive there in about twelve days. I am to remain there a month and ransack the islands, the great cataracts and the volcanoes completely and write twenty or thirty letters to the Sacramento Union for which they pay me as much money as I would get if I stayed at home.”
After he steamed back to California, reaching San Francisco in August, he visited the Turkish baths to see Sawyer. As he sweated his worries away, Twain studied the round-faced young firefighter. Sawyer had found happiness, and with a prosperous, popular bar, was helping to build a great city. Meanwhile, Twain was preparing for a lecture tour on the Sandwich Islands, to be delivered at stops in Nevada and California, concluding in San Francisco on December 10.
A crowd including California governor Frederick Low and Nevada governor Henry Blasdel gathered in front of Congress Hall on Bush Street to hear Twain’s talk. He intended to add final remarks summing up San Francisco, what it had been and would be. He would speak of its destiny. Now there were 20 blocks, 1,500 new homes and offices, fireproof buildings.
As he waited for the lecture to begin, Tom Sawyer wriggled in his seat next to Mary Bridget, his mind occupied by the $183 he owed in delinquent property taxes. At 8 p.m. the gaslights dimmed. Twain stepped to the podium. Solemn-faced, he shuffled a stack of ragged pages, dropping them in feigned confusion until he had the crowd laughing. “And whenever a joke did fall,” he recalled in Roughing It in 1872, “and their faces did split from ear to ear, Sawyer, whose hearty countenance was seen looming redly in the center of the second row, took it up, and the house was carried handsomely. The explosion that followed was the triumph of the evening. I thought that honest man Sawyer would choke himself.”
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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