Mark Twain in German-Language Newspapers and PeriodicalsMain MenuIntroduction: About the ProjectIntroductory Remarks on the ProjectCatalog of Newspaper Articlescatalog pageCatalog of Newspaper Articles in Der Deutsche Correspondent, Baltimorecatalog pageReferences to Mark Twain's Writing and Speechesreference pageOverview of Peoplereference pageOverview of Locationsreference pageOverview of Topicsreference pageReference Materialreference toolsEditorial pagesproject organisationMost Recent Editsproject organisationSample Pathstest path"Ein amerikanischer Humorist." Grenzboten 33 (1874), 306-314 | Entry pageperiodical article, German, pathHolger Kerstenbe319ed8bdb5a4fd7c387ac70fb9bb1beb4a2843Klara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238
Langdon, Charles Jervis | Portrait
1media/Charles Langdon_The Boys Life of Mark Twain_thumb.jpg2025-01-28T02:36:58-08:00Klara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238397262Depiction of Charles J. Lagdon (scan from "The Boy's Life of Mark Twain")plain2025-01-28T03:01:22-08:00The Boy's Life of Mark Twain, Paine, 1916 (facing page 164). Public domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Boys%27_Life_of_Mark_Twain_018.jpg, via Wikimedia Commons1916Klara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238
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12025-01-21T02:25:16-08:00Langdon, Charles Jervis9(1849-1916)plain2025-01-28T02:41:33-08:00-annotation -main -personCharles Langdon was born on 13 August 1849. He was Olivia Langdon's younger brother and Samuel Clemens' brother-in-law. Samuel Clemens and Charles Langdon met during the Quaker City Excursion in 1867 when Langdon was eighteen years old and quickly came to admire Clemens (see Rasmussen et al. 2:759). This aquaintance eventually led to the first meeting between Clemens and Olivia Langdon in the same year and to their subsequent courtship and marriage. After the death of his father Jervis Langdon in 1870, Charles took over the family business in coal and lumber (see LeMaster and Wilson, MTE 440). He married Ida Clark and the couple had three children together: a son, Jervis, and two daughters, Julia and Ida (see LeMaster and Wilson, MTE 440). Although Samuel Clemens and Charles Langdon were not always the closest of friends, their family ties - and the Clemens family's frequent summer stays in Elmira - resulted in a cordial and mutually respectful relationship. Langdon was present at the death of Susy Clemens in 1896 and at Clemens' own death in 1910 (see Rasmussen et al. 2:759). Charles Langdon died on 19 November 1916 in Elmira, N.Y..