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 Locations (map)reference pageOverview of Topicsreference pageOverview of Annotationsreference 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
White Suit | Newspaper Clipping | 15 Feb. 1907
1media/white_winter_suit_1_thumb.png2025-02-04T02:37:56-08:00Klara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238397262A newspaper clipping depicting MT dressed in white and surrounded by men dressed in black - from the New York Herald, 15 Feb. 1907plain2025-02-04T02:41:23-08:00"A Study in Black and White", New York Herald, 15 Feb. 1907.1907-02-15Klara Blanke2e76e4a8b5d98452e5fdd97c12e60f016a573238
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12025-01-21T00:43:23-08:00White Suit8plain2025-02-04T02:39:45-08:00-annotation -mainThe white suits Clemens started wearing in public in his seventies shape his image in the modern imagination and he is frequently depicted wearing white suits in popular media. The first time he made such an unusual appearance was in December 1906 when he appeared in a congressional hearing on the topic of literary copyright wearing a white three piece suit. While it was usual to wear white during summer and in warmer climates, doing so in December was quite the oddity and promptly attracted attention among the press and Clemens' peers - the incredible volume of articles published in the subsequent days on the spectacle of the white suit is evidence of this (see e.g. [MT lobbying for copyright changes] and [On MT’s white suit] which are part of this project, or e.g. “Mark Twain in White Amuses Congressmen,” New York Times, 8 Dec 1906, and “Mark Twain Bids Winter Defiance,” New York Herald, 8 Dec 1906). Clemens affinity for this style of dress is attributed to multiple different reasons: his "enjoyment of shocking people" (Rasmussen et al. 2:940), his need to express his own freedom and individuality via his clothing (see Rasmussen et al. 2:650), and his desire for cleanliness and hygiene (see Rasmussen et al. 2:940). Clemens expressed some thoughts that especially support the last theory, recording that "I am considered eccentric because I wear white clothes both winter and summer. I am eccentric, then, because I prefer to be clean in the matter of raiment - clean in a dirty world; absolutely the only cleanly-clothed human being in all Christendom north of the Tropics." (Twain, Autobiography of Mark Twain 3:253). Clemens was dressed in a white suit for his funeral.