The former Union 1428 ton warship U.S.S. Quaker City, now remodeled and in private hands, sailed this rainy Saturday from New York Harbor on a five month tour of the Mediterranean and the Holy Land, with a side trip to the Paris Exhibition. Among the approximately seventy passengers aboard, each of whom had paid $1,250 for the privilege, was Samuel Clemens, who under his pen-name Mark Twain would in 1869 publish his famous The Innocents Abroad. The book made Clemens a small fortune and remains one of the best-selling travel books of all time. (By John Osborne)
Source Citation
Mark Twain, The Innocents Abroad, or The New Pilgrim's Progress... (New York: American Publishing Company, 1869), 29-30.
Record Data
Date Certainty
Exact
Type
Education/Culture