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                  <text>Jack London, legendary author of adventure classics such as Call of the Wild and White Fang, came from blue-collar beginnings and was largely self-taught. He based many of his exciting literary yarns on his hard-scrabble life experiences which included poaching oysters, laboring at a cannery, jute mill, and coal power plant, and panning for gold in the Alaskan Klondike. Broken by personal despair, two unsuccessful attempts to have children with second wife Charmian, the destruction of his California dream home, and slow kidney failure from years of alcohol abuse, London died on November 22, 1916, at age forty. This selective small digital collection highlights his will, letters, and book inscriptions that offer insights into his complex relationships with the important women in his life: first wife Bessie, second wife Charmian, daughters Joan and Bess, mother Flora, &amp;ldquo;mammy&amp;rdquo; Jennie, and friend/collaborator Anna Strunsky. Other items in the digital collection include photographs and book covers. For more details about London&amp;rsquo;s life as well as a full inventory of USU&amp;rsquo;s larger print collection of Jack and Charmian London materials, see &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;. Merrill-Cazier Library's Special Collections and Archives houses one of the largest Jack London manuscript collections in the world, second only to the prestigious Huntington Library in San Marino, California. This acquisition was a result of the close personal and professional relationship between Irving Shepard, Jack London's nephew and executor of his literary estate, and King Hendricks, a prominent London scholar and English professor at USU. Thanks to a series of purchases and donations from the London estate made between 1964 and 1971, USU is now proud to provide online access to selected material from the collection.</text>
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                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL MSS 10 Box 2 Folder 13.</text>
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                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL MSS 10 Box 20 Folder 6.</text>
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                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL MSS 10 Box 2 Folder 13.</text>
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                <text>fZtZe »     /-^^^^&#13;
Glen Elian, California, August 21, 1914,&#13;
Dear Jack London:•&#13;
In reply to your good lattar of August 3, 1914«&#13;
I imagine that wa came from tha same original stock but that we became early sap*&#13;
ereted after coming to dwell in America. The London branch that I am descended from was living&#13;
at Cape May, New Jersey, at tha time of BraddockV defeat, Shortly aftar ths olose of tha&#13;
French and Indian wars these Lcndone migrated into Pennsylvania and of oourse after that&#13;
spread slowly westward so that I was bom in California,&#13;
But prior to tha residence of the Londons at Cape May, Haw Jersey, they lived in&#13;
Connecticut and there tradition ceases, Wa have no zecord of how early they cams abroad from&#13;
England.&#13;
By tha way, there ia a vary large Jewish family that goes by tha name of London*&#13;
Thaaa ware Austrian Java who oame over to England about two hundred yaars agofront Austria&#13;
and who ohanged thair nana to London* Since that time thay hava spread all over the world,&#13;
aa I wall know, because I have encountered them all over the world.&#13;
If you are ever out in California ba aura to look ma up.&#13;
Sincerely Tours,&#13;
ityadi AMt/ml&#13;
Mr, Jaok London&#13;
e/o Tha Mutual Ufa Inc. Co/ of N.Y.&#13;
Ardmore, Okla.</text>
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                <text>2201, Kalia Read, Honolulu, T.K.,&#13;
March 7, 1916&#13;
Dear Joan:-&#13;
In reply to yours of February 16, 1916,  just to hand.&#13;
Glad you like    tha furs,     hope some day to   see tharj on you before  they  're worn out.&#13;
I hope also,   twenty yrtfl   i'rom now,   to hear you tall &amp; ia year own intellectual aaturity,  your&#13;
revisad judgment of THI STAR ROvER .1 hope also, at that time,   to  fiiii that THE U""T.E LADY OF&#13;
THE BIG HOUSE,  has appreciated in your comprehension.    I am glad you like the sm Of it;   it&#13;
was  tha only way out the only clean* decent way cut,   I mean.     Some day,   /ill you   take    the&#13;
time off and tall me what books of  nine you have r«au, and what boohs you have not read. Also,&#13;
I   some time,  personally, with you,  I should like to  leva you tall me and I make this as a&#13;
challenge and ^^preparation in aavance -to tall me what you think about me.&#13;
I have told Aunt Eliza r.o send you the price of tha theatre tickets three ti.-nes ouch&#13;
Iftnth, whsn you 'ra net on vacation. I have forgotten to tall her, ard so you tell her for me,&#13;
to sand you a;u Becky tha hr* pairs of shoes,  or, rather,  the pries for same,&#13;
I received your  ibrwarded postal, tallin* ma that  &amp;gt;3ocky had coma through tha opara-&#13;
xl   tion all right.&#13;
far&#13;
Some day, and not  vrr rmsua .way,  a series of popular films will be run in the&#13;
■OViaf- pic tare theatres, entitled HEARTS OF THREE.     It will take   fifteen weeks to sac  this ser-&#13;
iss of fifteen.    Tha Sujiiay T5Uam ner each week will publish the  story as writ tan by W*    If ycu&#13;
and Beaky rant  to  go  to see these pictures, do  so.  But you will have to pay the price of adr.is-&#13;
sitn out of your own pocket money.&#13;
Lota of love all round,&#13;
jl/ckl</text>
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Dear Joan:&#13;
In reply to yours of December 11, 1915,&#13;
I am afraid that my etearaer will start before I have time to catoh it. You will&#13;
understand from this in how big a hurry I am, and how orowded I 4sa for time.&#13;
How, chipping everything clco, and getting down to the cain point; I do not&#13;
know enythirs etcut furs. I have never wcrn furs in ny life, though I cm at^iro I hava&#13;
bought them.for pereono of the female pereuaeion.&#13;
Ycu have put up to me a very awkxrard &amp;lt;jue£ ion, nanely, how nuoh and how far&#13;
I can go in the way of getting furs for you and Bcoky. I cone baok and eay that I do&#13;
not know. "  damn about the prioeo of furs for girls of your t^e and of your situation in&#13;
_^    lifo. 8uppose ycu come baak quiok and let ne know what you think are the naxiiaim and&#13;
minima prices for furs that will cult the two of you.&#13;
In a ruch, with lots of love*&#13;
Miss Joan London&#13;
609 Soenic Avenue&#13;
Piedmont, California.&#13;
\&#13;
JB/JL&#13;
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Sonoma Co.,®e&amp;&#13;
U.S.A.&#13;
Glea Ellen,  C&amp;l.,  July 5tht lyl4.&#13;
Dear Joan:-&#13;
Just back from Uos Angeles whither I've been since my return&#13;
from Mexico.&#13;
Congratulations oh your being President of the Initial Club.&#13;
I am telliag Aint Eliza to  send you  sal Baby B.  $10.00 ia addition to your allowance for the trips to  the beach etc..&#13;
Sorry I cannot see you: So-'^ry so much good country up here going to waste in whioh I could see you.&#13;
Daddy.</text>
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                <text>Tanscript of Jack London letter to Charmian London, dated August 2, 1910.</text>
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                <text>[Original at Jack London Ranch]&#13;
Written from Ranch&#13;
Charmain in Fabiola&#13;
Hospital after birth&#13;
and death of Joy (their only child) at birth&#13;
August 2, 1910&#13;
D ear e s t My-Wo man:-&#13;
The papers were slow in getting started because my signature to open&#13;
letter was typed and they feared it was a fake.&#13;
But, honestly, I believe I've got Samuels' goat 1 He's afraid to come&#13;
back.&#13;
It's election time, you know, and I think enough botes will be swung to&#13;
defeat him.&#13;
Also hush mention it not 1 got a tip from Noel to-day, which&#13;
remains to be investigated and proved, namely (l) Samuels is partly interested -&#13;
in Muldowney's dive — how, I do not know.  And, (2) one of Samuels relatives&#13;
owns the ground and the building rented by Muldowney.  Noel is looking it up.&#13;
Election   the waterfront, other places, there are any number of men,&#13;
not socialists, who will remember me and scratch Samuels' name from the ballot.&#13;
Incidentally, Muldowney goes on getting more public notoriety for his&#13;
place, and is sorry he ever met me. He'll have a job living down (police)&#13;
the notoriety I've given him.&#13;
There is a daily published in Oakland named The Mail, I believe. Look&#13;
up and send me what it said yesterday.  Don't forget to-day's Call and Chronicle.&#13;
Two letters, on strength of evening papers publication of letter, show&#13;
how some votes will swing.&#13;
I am saving all your letters.  I only destroyed one   the "blue" one&#13;
in which you worried about me and Samuels.&#13;
(signed)   Your Own Man.</text>
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                <text>For more information about this collection, please see the finding aid at : &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>London, Jack, 1876-1916; Authors, American--20th century; London, Charmian--Correspondence;</text>
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                <text>Jack London letter to Charmian London, dated August 2, 1910</text>
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                  <text>Jack London, legendary author of adventure classics such as Call of the Wild and White Fang, came from blue-collar beginnings and was largely self-taught. He based many of his exciting literary yarns on his hard-scrabble life experiences which included poaching oysters, laboring at a cannery, jute mill, and coal power plant, and panning for gold in the Alaskan Klondike. Broken by personal despair, two unsuccessful attempts to have children with second wife Charmian, the destruction of his California dream home, and slow kidney failure from years of alcohol abuse, London died on November 22, 1916, at age forty. This selective small digital collection highlights his will, letters, and book inscriptions that offer insights into his complex relationships with the important women in his life: first wife Bessie, second wife Charmian, daughters Joan and Bess, mother Flora, &amp;ldquo;mammy&amp;rdquo; Jennie, and friend/collaborator Anna Strunsky. Other items in the digital collection include photographs and book covers. For more details about London&amp;rsquo;s life as well as a full inventory of USU&amp;rsquo;s larger print collection of Jack and Charmian London materials, see &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;. Merrill-Cazier Library's Special Collections and Archives houses one of the largest Jack London manuscript collections in the world, second only to the prestigious Huntington Library in San Marino, California. This acquisition was a result of the close personal and professional relationship between Irving Shepard, Jack London's nephew and executor of his literary estate, and King Hendricks, a prominent London scholar and English professor at USU. Thanks to a series of purchases and donations from the London estate made between 1964 and 1971, USU is now proud to provide online access to selected material from the collection.</text>
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                <text>London, Jack, 1876-1916;</text>
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                <text>1915-11-12</text>
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                <text>Jack London letter to Joan London, dated November 12, 1915.</text>
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                <text>Glen Ellen,  California, November 12,   19.15.&#13;
Pear Joan:&#13;
In reply to yotirs of November 5,   1915:&#13;
First of mil, I think I hive given orders to have sent to you a oheok for&#13;
$7.50 to oover the extra cost of tha silk dress. If you hav« not recffivno. this cheek&#13;
please let ne know, and I  shall have it i^romptly sent.&#13;
Yes,  I will  sit alongside Beoky,  but I will not be able to meet her  outside&#13;
and go  la with her.   Ike must have lief own ticket and go in and take her seat, and I&#13;
will meet her there at her  sent. My reasons for this are simple and ample.  I  ar. going&#13;
to "y^nd four hours of that day in the dentist's chair.  The rest of the day will be&#13;
apemt  ia getting something to eat and going to a turkish bath in order to forget how&#13;
badly my mouth hurts me.  So I shall arrive at the auditorium just in tine to go in&#13;
and take ay seat.&#13;
As regards/ my tioket,  it would be the easiest thing for me if you mailed it&#13;
to me ear« of Grandma at 490 ftfth Street,  or gave it to Grandma with instructions to&#13;
hold it for me and txirn over  to rm whan I arrive from Glen Ellen. Mow if it be mailed&#13;
under my narae  to Grandma without any instructions,  Grandma will most likely re-address&#13;
the letter to Glen Ellen, and I  shall be in Oakland and the tioket will be in Glen&#13;
llleftj   so  it is ttf   to you  so  to arrange it that Grandma will hold the  ticket  in Oakland&#13;
and give it  to ne when I oome down.&#13;
h     fhen I   seo Becky I will pay her the half dollar  for my tioket.&#13;
As regards your eritioisn of Dr.  Goodhue's article,  on ne,  entitled "The&#13;
absolutely&#13;
Rancher",  I agree/with you in your eritioisn.  I could not have stated it better myself.&#13;
I  shall be forever unable to se« you and Beoky at your Piedmont hone. As you&#13;
know,   the ranch is always open to both  of you. Also,   sometime,   if you eatiVMlxP oan see&#13;
your way to it, I should be glad to have you oone and have lunch or dinner with ne at&#13;
the "Saddle Rook" restaurant on 13th Street.&#13;
JB/JL</text>
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                <text>Mss10Bx2Fd13026_Letter 9.jpg</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jacklondon/id/575"&gt;http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jacklondon/id/575&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Jack and Charmian London Correspondence and Papers, 1894-1953</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64332">
                <text>Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Libraries Manuscript Curator, phone (435) 797-0891.</text>
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            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64340">
                <text>1914-03-08</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
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                <text>Jack London letter to Joan London, dated March 8, 1914.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64342">
                <text>Glen Ellen,  Calif., ,;&amp;lt;|&#13;
f Uw»l»      O io-t .,-»&#13;
;&#13;
Daar Joam-&#13;
■&#13;
•"% Itf reply to yours of J'arch 3, 1914.    Plsaoe find herewith check for $4.70.&#13;
It will be well, whenever I am in California, to send me directly what carfare and&#13;
allowance coma to.    When I am awt.y Mrs.Shepard will b* the one to send te.&#13;
Also, whatever school books I pay for I do not care to have charged to your mother's&#13;
account. Tcu can send to me (or Hrs.S. in ny absence) what tha nacaseary books come to and receive check for same. (&#13;
It is a vary good idea to  fila my letters no that you nay rsad them when you are&#13;
older.    You will be sure to understand thea than a bit core.    l!a of course you will be unable&#13;
!&#13;
ever to understand, bacausa you have navsr had an opportunity to be with ma.    The same will ba&#13;
true of yoursalf.      I Ghall ba unable to understand you.    *ften you are a woman you end I will&#13;
ks talk different languages.   Tha thoughts of each will be gibberish to the other.&#13;
(Signed) Jack London.</text>
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                <text>For more information about this collection, please see the finding aid at : &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64351">
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July 28, 1910&#13;
My Heart's Dearest:-&#13;
Another booful letter from you, which I have just finished.&#13;
And I have just finished enclosed open letter to Judge Samuels.&#13;
Please have ten copies made of it — two originals and four carbons each.&#13;
Don't delay to discuss the advisability of it with me, but dispose&#13;
of the open letters as follows:&#13;
Mail in evening, with special delivery stamps on every envelope, one&#13;
copy each to:&#13;
Judge Samuels,&#13;
Police Court&#13;
City Hall,&#13;
Oakland.&#13;
Editorial Department of -&#13;
Examiner&#13;
Call&#13;
Chronicle&#13;
Bulletin&#13;
Post&#13;
Oakland Tribune&#13;
Oakland Enquirer&#13;
And the two remaining copies to me.&#13;
Also, get me copies of above papers on dates letter would be published.&#13;
Also, get me codes of to-days morning papers, July 28, including&#13;
ner, and of evening paper of July 27 or 28, whichever may contain&#13;
accounts of Mrs. Muldowney's suit for divorce.  Out out clips of same and&#13;
send to me.&#13;
Enclose with Samuels' letter, the Muldowney clipping I enclose you&#13;
herewith.&#13;
Dear Woman, the more I think of that cowardly, oily Jew, the angrier&#13;
do I get about it.  I'm going after him and if I don't do anything else,&#13;
someday I'll bankrupt him in the business game. Watch my smoke.&#13;
(signed) Mate Man.</text>
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                <text>[Original at the Jack London Hanch]&#13;
Nov. 21 1916&#13;
Dear Joan:-&#13;
Next Sunday, will you and Bess have lunch with me at Saddle Hock,&#13;
and, if weather is good, go for a sail with me on Lake Merrit.&#13;
If weather is not good, we can go to a matinee of some sort.&#13;
Let me know at once.&#13;
I leave Ranch next Friday.&#13;
I leave Calif. Wednesday following.&#13;
Daddy</text>
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                <text>[Original at Jack London Ranch]&#13;
March 21, 1913&#13;
Jack L. London, Esq.&#13;
Cottage Grove, Oregon&#13;
My dear Jack London:&#13;
Some time recently I had forwarded to me from Mr. Hillier, your letter&#13;
of Feb. 25, 1913.&#13;
This is the second time I have received a letter from Jack London—nay, it&#13;
is the third time.  Down in Sydney, Australia, lying in hospital[sic], I&#13;
received a letter from a boy, Jack London, who lived over in Western&#13;
Australia.  About a hear and a half ago I received a letter from Jack London&#13;
in Omaha; and now I learn of you, still another Jack London.&#13;
I wonder if we are related.  Please find herewith a short biography of&#13;
yours truly.  Tell me about yourself; send me a photo of yourself.  Let me&#13;
know if you think we are related, and what the branch of the family is from&#13;
which you have descended.  The Londons, as you know, are a very large family.&#13;
In fact, there are two great London families.  One is a Jewish family&#13;
which came to England from Austria about 200 years ago, and changed its&#13;
name to London.  I am not a member of this family.  I am a member of the&#13;
English family of Londons, hundreds of whom now reside in the City of London&#13;
and are in the City of London Directory, while hundreds of their emigrant&#13;
descendents are living in various parts of the U.S., from the Ear West to&#13;
the Ear South and on up to Old New England.  Pleast tell me all about&#13;
yourself.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
(signed) Jack London</text>
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                  <text>Jack London, legendary author of adventure classics such as Call of the Wild and White Fang, came from blue-collar beginnings and was largely self-taught. He based many of his exciting literary yarns on his hard-scrabble life experiences which included poaching oysters, laboring at a cannery, jute mill, and coal power plant, and panning for gold in the Alaskan Klondike. Broken by personal despair, two unsuccessful attempts to have children with second wife Charmian, the destruction of his California dream home, and slow kidney failure from years of alcohol abuse, London died on November 22, 1916, at age forty. This selective small digital collection highlights his will, letters, and book inscriptions that offer insights into his complex relationships with the important women in his life: first wife Bessie, second wife Charmian, daughters Joan and Bess, mother Flora, &amp;ldquo;mammy&amp;rdquo; Jennie, and friend/collaborator Anna Strunsky. Other items in the digital collection include photographs and book covers. For more details about London&amp;rsquo;s life as well as a full inventory of USU&amp;rsquo;s larger print collection of Jack and Charmian London materials, see &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;. Merrill-Cazier Library's Special Collections and Archives houses one of the largest Jack London manuscript collections in the world, second only to the prestigious Huntington Library in San Marino, California. This acquisition was a result of the close personal and professional relationship between Irving Shepard, Jack London's nephew and executor of his literary estate, and King Hendricks, a prominent London scholar and English professor at USU. Thanks to a series of purchases and donations from the London estate made between 1964 and 1971, USU is now proud to provide online access to selected material from the collection.</text>
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                <text>-OiuitUf SUefumd-&#13;
JACK LONDON RANCH - GLEN ELLEN, CALIFORNIA&#13;
WEbster 8-2729&#13;
April 9, 196?&#13;
King Hendricks, Head&#13;
Department of English&#13;
Utah State University&#13;
Logan,Utah*&#13;
Dear Kings&#13;
Answering your letter &amp;r April 2, 1963, I will be anxious to&#13;
see the reply o* Mr* Bitter.&#13;
I will plan te be in Logan on the 9th. of Kay se I will be&#13;
there en the tenth. Would you like me to bring some of Jacks&#13;
first editions that he Autographed to my mother to be put on&#13;
display?&#13;
I think it would be a wonderful idea to have a Jack London room&#13;
in the new library and I would be willing to give some of the&#13;
origional material that I have here to the library room.&#13;
As to Charmian's autographed books 1 think it would be a ^ine&#13;
place for them if we can agree about a price. We can talk about&#13;
it when I come up in May.&#13;
If there is anything you want me to bring let me know as I am&#13;
driving up and will have plenty of room to take things.&#13;
love to Barbara and will see you in May.&#13;
Sincerely&#13;
Irving Shepard</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64425">
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                <text>May 29. 1911.&#13;
244 Mortimer Street,&#13;
Oakland, California.&#13;
IS there any ona living at above address, by the name of Hiss Myrtle London, or any&#13;
one connected with a ''iss "yrtle London! Any information you can give me will be greatly appreciated.&#13;
Hoping for an early reply,&#13;
Vary truly yours,</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64444">
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              <elementText elementTextId="64445">
                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL MSS 10 Box 2 Folder 13.</text>
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                  <text>Jack London, legendary author of adventure classics such as Call of the Wild and White Fang, came from blue-collar beginnings and was largely self-taught. He based many of his exciting literary yarns on his hard-scrabble life experiences which included poaching oysters, laboring at a cannery, jute mill, and coal power plant, and panning for gold in the Alaskan Klondike. Broken by personal despair, two unsuccessful attempts to have children with second wife Charmian, the destruction of his California dream home, and slow kidney failure from years of alcohol abuse, London died on November 22, 1916, at age forty. This selective small digital collection highlights his will, letters, and book inscriptions that offer insights into his complex relationships with the important women in his life: first wife Bessie, second wife Charmian, daughters Joan and Bess, mother Flora, &amp;ldquo;mammy&amp;rdquo; Jennie, and friend/collaborator Anna Strunsky. Other items in the digital collection include photographs and book covers. For more details about London&amp;rsquo;s life as well as a full inventory of USU&amp;rsquo;s larger print collection of Jack and Charmian London materials, see &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;. Merrill-Cazier Library's Special Collections and Archives houses one of the largest Jack London manuscript collections in the world, second only to the prestigious Huntington Library in San Marino, California. This acquisition was a result of the close personal and professional relationship between Irving Shepard, Jack London's nephew and executor of his literary estate, and King Hendricks, a prominent London scholar and English professor at USU. Thanks to a series of purchases and donations from the London estate made between 1964 and 1971, USU is now proud to provide online access to selected material from the collection.</text>
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                <text>UTAH       STATE       UNIVERSITY&#13;
DARYL  CHASE,  PRESIDENT&#13;
LOGAN,     UTAH,     84321&#13;
BRANCHES. OFFICE        OF        THE        PRES!&#13;
c°darGcit°yF SOUTHERN UTAH December 10,  19o4&#13;
SNOW  COLLEGE&#13;
Mr. Irving Shepard&#13;
Jack London Ranch&#13;
Glen Ellen, California&#13;
Dear Mr. Shepard:&#13;
I am informed that you recently donated to the Library at Utah State&#13;
University 406 books from the Charmian London collection.   Our Librarian,&#13;
Dr. Milton C. Abrams,  and Dr. King Hendricks, Head of the Department of&#13;
English at the University and an authority on the writings of Jack London,&#13;
have valued your gift of first editions, inscribed works and other volumes&#13;
at $11, 821.&#13;
This unusual collection will greatly enrich our holdings at the Library&#13;
and will benefit all members of our student-body.    Please accept our sincere&#13;
appreciation.   We are grateful for your thoughtfulness and generosity.&#13;
Yours sincerely,&#13;
Daryl Chase&#13;
President</text>
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                <text>[Original at Jack London Ranch]&#13;
July 30, 1910&#13;
My Own Woman:-&#13;
I wish you were here.  I'll come down to you if you say. Ay   and&#13;
I'll cut out the Jinks if you say so.  Let me know.&#13;
I figured on writing a letter that would not lay me open to criminal&#13;
or civil libel nor to contempt of court. I think I succeeded, but there is&#13;
no telling. Samuels, a sheeny shoe peddler! Bah! My blood boils. I can&#13;
make him sick that he ever locked horns with me.&#13;
As long as you have me, and deem me worth while, you have no license&#13;
to be blue.&#13;
(signed) Mate-Man.</text>
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                <text>COPY&#13;
Glen Ellen, August 29, 1913&#13;
Dearest Joan:&#13;
Of course, read all your letters from me,to your mother.&#13;
This is to reply to yours of Aug.27, 1913.&#13;
No; I neither "see" nor "understand." If you came to see me 6$ Glen Ellen here, you&#13;
would see me, all tha world, and my wife.&#13;
When you ask as if I cannot see, if I cannot understand, I answer you that I cannot&#13;
see,  cannot understand what you think you see, and what you think you understand.&#13;
Now is the time for us to get right up in meeting on our hind legs and testify to&#13;
what we see and understand.&#13;
WHAT DO YOU SEE AND UNDERSTAND! Now is the time. Tell me. Let me glimpse the face&#13;
of truth as you glimpse it. Tell me what the faceJof truth looks like. If you don't tell me,&#13;
then do you refuse to share truth with me. Then are you not true to me.&#13;
And can you or I travel very far together in this world when you refuse to seek anything less than perfect understanding with me!—----anything less than full truth shared between&#13;
us!&#13;
Remember that truth is the greatest thing in the worlc.    If you will be great,  you&#13;
will be true.    If you suppress truth, if you hide truth, if you do not rise up and speak out in&#13;
meeting, if you speak out in meeting without speaking the whole truth, then are you less true&#13;
and&#13;
than truth by that much are you less than great.&#13;
Now just what is it that you see, and you understand, which prevents you from coming&#13;
to see me on ray ranch.    Don't be afraid of being harsh.    Don't be afraid of being true.    What&#13;
is it you see and understand (which I in truth can neither see nor understand)  that prevents you&#13;
from corning to my ranch!&#13;
In all love,&#13;
(Signed) Daddy.</text>
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Dear  Dad: ' Get.20,   1913.&#13;
I was unable  to write  Saturday,  on account of Portola,  on Sunday,  on account of company,   and so  here  I am writing now,  Monday night.       I   'm all  ready   for bed, in my bed   slippers&#13;
and oajr.mas,   and my hair hanging  down.       I   'in curled up on  the  couch in my bed room,   and  as&#13;
soon as I  'm through I  'li  "beat, it" to bed,   for there are  two ox's to-morrow.    One I  'n long-&#13;
for,   and  the other well,   I  'm not longing  for it,   'cause it is a French ex.      The  first one&#13;
is an ex. in Algebra.    Yumi yum'.    I love Algebra'.l'&#13;
'.Veil,   Dad,   I   ' ve  r ad over your letter,   read it twice and carefully,  and I    understand from it   that  silence on my part means that I am satisfied with my present  surroundings-.  I&#13;
tried to keep silence,   for I am satisfied,  but you have demanded an answer.    So,   this I  nay,     I&#13;
am perfectly  satisfied with my present  surroundings and do a»t wish to  change them.&#13;
I  resent your opinions of my mother.     Sho is considered as one of the   finest coach^rs&#13;
in Oakland,  by  the principals of  the different schools,  and Mr.Barker,   Supt. of Schools.        Her&#13;
pupils can always be marked by their good work In both grammar and high  schools.    And above all&#13;
this,   she is a good mother,   end what is greater,  in this world,   than a good mother!    This    is&#13;
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And now,   Daddy,   since we have   thrashed this question out   together, may wo not    leave&#13;
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ELease,   Daddy,   please  let mo   feel   that  this  is  the last of  these awful  letters    you&#13;
force me to  write you;  it hurts me  so   to  write  them,  and yot,  you/ demand these kind of answers&#13;
and I can only write them.&#13;
Now,   I   'm, getting so   sleepy that I close one  eye and then the other to keep awake and&#13;
I   lm yawning continuously,   so Good night mon cher p6re,  et   "sweet  dreams."&#13;
Lots of love,&#13;
(Signed)J oan.</text>
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                <text>Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Libraries Special Collections Books Curator, phone (435) 797-2661.</text>
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                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL V Gr. 2, No. 29.</text>
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                <text>Book cover, inscription, and title pages of Acorn Planter: a California forest play: planned to be sung by efficient singers, accompanied by a capable orchestra by Jack London. Published by Macmillan Company in February 1916, this book is a first edition copy composed of vi, 84 pages and is 18 cm. tall. It is inscribed to Charmian London and signed by Jack London.</text>
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                <text>AcornPlanter</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jacklondon/id/675"&gt;http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jacklondon/id/675&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>eng;</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>Macmillan Company;</text>
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                <text>Digitized by : Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library</text>
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          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
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                <text>Jack London First Editions</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64756">
                <text>Jack London Digital Collection</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64757">
                <text>Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Libraries Special Collections Books Curator, phone (435) 797-2661.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64758">
                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL V Gr. 2, No. 42.</text>
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                <text>London, Jack, 1876-1916; Authors, American--20th century; Indians of North America--Drama; London, Charmian; Authors' presentation inscriptions;</text>
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                <text>Acorn Planter</text>
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                  <text>Jack London at Utah State University</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>Jack London, legendary author of adventure classics such as Call of the Wild and White Fang, came from blue-collar beginnings and was largely self-taught. He based many of his exciting literary yarns on his hard-scrabble life experiences which included poaching oysters, laboring at a cannery, jute mill, and coal power plant, and panning for gold in the Alaskan Klondike. Broken by personal despair, two unsuccessful attempts to have children with second wife Charmian, the destruction of his California dream home, and slow kidney failure from years of alcohol abuse, London died on November 22, 1916, at age forty. This selective small digital collection highlights his will, letters, and book inscriptions that offer insights into his complex relationships with the important women in his life: first wife Bessie, second wife Charmian, daughters Joan and Bess, mother Flora, &amp;ldquo;mammy&amp;rdquo; Jennie, and friend/collaborator Anna Strunsky. Other items in the digital collection include photographs and book covers. For more details about London&amp;rsquo;s life as well as a full inventory of USU&amp;rsquo;s larger print collection of Jack and Charmian London materials, see &lt;a href="http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206"&gt;http://uda-db.orbiscascade.org/findaid/ark:/80444/xv27206&lt;/a&gt;. Merrill-Cazier Library's Special Collections and Archives houses one of the largest Jack London manuscript collections in the world, second only to the prestigious Huntington Library in San Marino, California. This acquisition was a result of the close personal and professional relationship between Irving Shepard, Jack London's nephew and executor of his literary estate, and King Hendricks, a prominent London scholar and English professor at USU. Thanks to a series of purchases and donations from the London estate made between 1964 and 1971, USU is now proud to provide online access to selected material from the collection.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="64762">
                <text>Piedmont (California); Alameda County (California); California; United States;</text>
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            <name>Creator</name>
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                <text>London, Jack, 1876-1916;</text>
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                <text>1903-06-26</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Book cover, inscription, and title pages of The God of His Fathers: And Other Stories by Jack London.  Published by McClure, Phillips, &amp; Co. in 1901, this book is a first edition copy composed of 229 pages and is 20 cm. tall. It is inscribed to Charmian London and signed by Jack London.</text>
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            <name>Format</name>
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                <text>GodofHisFathers</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="65551">
                <text>&lt;a href="http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jacklondon/id/681"&gt;http://digital.lib.usu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/jacklondon/id/681&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64769">
                <text>eng;</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>McClure, Phillips &amp; Company;</text>
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                <text>Digitized by : Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library</text>
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                <text>Jack London First Editions</text>
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                <text>Jack London Digital Collection</text>
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            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64774">
                <text>Reproduction for publication, exhibition, web display or commercial use is only permissible with the consent of the USU Libraries Special Collections Books Curator, phone (435) 797-2661.</text>
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            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="64775">
                <text>The original of this item is located at Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections and Archives, COLL V Gr. 2, No. 2.</text>
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                <text>London, Jack, 1876-1916; Authors, American--20th century; London, Charmian; Authors' presentation inscriptions;</text>
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                <text>God of His Father: and other stories</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
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                <text>Text; Image;StillImage;</text>
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