The frog that jump-started Samuel Clemens’ career
Samuel Clemens, a.k.a. Mark Twain, began his rise as a writer after the short story that would later be known in book form as “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County†was published 150 years ago, and its setting, Angels Camp, Calif., hasn’t forgotten.
Vintage laundry is strung high above Main Street in downtown Angels Camp, the former mining town that hosts the annual Calaveras County Fair and Jumping Frog Jubilee, which runs May 14-17 this year. The laundry is a vestige of an earlier era when residents would wash their clothes and hang them out to dry ahead of festivals in the region.
(Randy Lewis / Los Angeles Times)A wood cabin on Jackass Hill about 10 miles south of Angels Camp. The cabin was built in 1922 to replace an earlier one that was destroyed. The original was owned by miner and storyteller Jim Gillis, who befriended 29-year-old Samuel Clemens when he came to the area for 88 days that became an important time in the development of his career as a writer and humorist.
(Randy Lewis / Los Angeles Times)One drawer among dozens cataloging about 2,700 of the estimated 50,000 letters