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 pageReference Materialreference toolsEditorial pages (for internal use)project organisationMost Recent Editsproject organisationSample Pathstest path"Ein amerikanischer Humorist." Grenzboten 33 (1874), 306-314 | Entry pageperiodical article, German, pathHolger Kerstenbe319ed8bdb5a4fd7c387ac70fb9bb1beb4a2843Klara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238
The German Chicago | Illustration from The Illustrated London News
1media/1892-German Chicago_London Illustrated News-02a-cut_thumb.jpg2024-06-12T11:22:28-07:00Holger Kerstenbe319ed8bdb5a4fd7c387ac70fb9bb1beb4a2843397263Illustration for The German Chicago (pt. 2) from The Illustrated London News (1 Oct. 1892)plain2024-11-05T08:07:56-08:001892-10-01HKKlara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238
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12024-06-12T09:56:46-07:00Writing | The German Chicago21plain2024-11-12T00:40:29-08:00-annotation -main -mtWritingHK In 1891, Clemens agreed with the New York Sun to write six travel letters during his stay in Europe (Rasmussen, 813). His report on Berlin, the last in the series, was published in the New York Sun on April 2, 1892, titled "The German Chicago." On the same day, the Chicago Daily Tribune release a version of the text as "The Chicago of Europe", illustrated by Dan Beard and Harold R. Heaton. For a transcribed version, including reproductions of the illustrations, see Barbara Schmidt's website. Under the title "Giants of Germany," the article, along with two of the illustrations from the Tribune, was printed in the Pittsburgh Dispatch on April 3, 1892, where it was featured next to the first installment of Henry James's story "The Real Thing." On September 4, October 1, and October 22, Mark Twain's report on Berlin appeared in three installments in The Illustrated London News. This time, it was accompanied by ten original illustrations created by Amédée Forestier (1854-1930), an artist who enjoyed great popularity with readers of English books and magazines and who also garnered respect for his artistic technique (Sketchley, 93).
"The German Chicago" was later included in several collections of Mark Twain's works, for example in The £1,000,000 Bank-Note, and Other New Stories (New York: Charles Webster & Company, 1893, 210-232), The American Claimant and Other Stories and Sketches (New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1899, 502-517), and In Defense of Harriet Shelley, and Other Essays (New York and London: Harper & Brothers, 1918, 244-262).