Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.

December 14th, 1897R. W. GILDER, EDITOR.R. U. JOHNSON,ASSOCIATE EDITOX.C. C. BUEL,ASSISTANT EDITOX.Mr. John Muir,Martinez, Cal.My dear Muir,Your cheerful shout of the 6th of December gave me much pleasure, and so did the first paragraph of your postscript, in which you say that you may possibly take...

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Main Author: Johnson, Robert Underwood
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Scholarly Commons 1897
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/2042
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/3041/viewcontent/muir09_1194_let.pdf
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spelling ftunivpacificdc:oai:scholarlycommons.pacific.edu:muir-correspondence-3041 2023-10-01T04:00:06+02:00 Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14. Johnson, Robert Underwood 1897-12-14T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/2042 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/3041/viewcontent/muir09_1194_let.pdf eng eng Scholarly Commons https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/2042 https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/3041/viewcontent/muir09_1194_let.pdf Some letters written to John Muir may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user. John Muir Correspondence (PDFs) Environmentalist naturalist travel conservation national parks John Muir history correspondence letters text 1897 ftunivpacificdc 2023-09-02T22:31:07Z December 14th, 1897R. W. GILDER, EDITOR.R. U. JOHNSON,ASSOCIATE EDITOX.C. C. BUEL,ASSISTANT EDITOX.Mr. John Muir,Martinez, Cal.My dear Muir,Your cheerful shout of the 6th of December gave me much pleasure, and so did the first paragraph of your postscript, in which you say that you may possibly take a trip through the interior of Alaska next summer, and if you do will be glad to write a sketch for The Century.By the interior of Alaska we presume you mean the Klondike, and if so it is a bargain; but we want to make more of it than a single article. If it is worth doing at all it is worth doing in an Important way, so that It would attract public attention.We are about to print articles on two routes to the Klondike -- one a description of the Yukon River route from St. Michaels, the other a very brief sketch of the rush over the mining passed from Skaguay; but these would in no way militate against your description of the mining region and the people. You are the only first-class writer, up to date, who thinks of going there. Can you not plan out, even tentatively, the trip, telling us when you could probably go, how long you would have to stay, when you could return, and how much It would cost us. 02373 J. M. 2.The rest of the postscript. I own, gave me a shock. We cannot, of course, complain of your printing elsewhere any material that may have been declined here, and of course you know we have declined nothing of yours except where we have been shooting through the same hole for a long time, being afraid that we had bored our readers with the subject of forestry, as up to six or eight months ago we were absolutely the only magazine in the country that had touched that subject at all, and we had identified "The Century" with it. But we hoped that before you came to book publication you would have naturally turned to us, even if later you should have concluded in the long run to accept a more advantageous offer elsewhere. Mr. Scott, our President, does not remember any unwillingness to take the risk of ... Text Yukon river Alaska Yukon University of the Pacific: Scholarly Commons Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Pacific: Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftunivpacificdc
language English
topic Environmentalist
naturalist
travel
conservation
national parks
John Muir
history
correspondence
letters
spellingShingle Environmentalist
naturalist
travel
conservation
national parks
John Muir
history
correspondence
letters
Johnson, Robert Underwood
Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.
topic_facet Environmentalist
naturalist
travel
conservation
national parks
John Muir
history
correspondence
letters
description December 14th, 1897R. W. GILDER, EDITOR.R. U. JOHNSON,ASSOCIATE EDITOX.C. C. BUEL,ASSISTANT EDITOX.Mr. John Muir,Martinez, Cal.My dear Muir,Your cheerful shout of the 6th of December gave me much pleasure, and so did the first paragraph of your postscript, in which you say that you may possibly take a trip through the interior of Alaska next summer, and if you do will be glad to write a sketch for The Century.By the interior of Alaska we presume you mean the Klondike, and if so it is a bargain; but we want to make more of it than a single article. If it is worth doing at all it is worth doing in an Important way, so that It would attract public attention.We are about to print articles on two routes to the Klondike -- one a description of the Yukon River route from St. Michaels, the other a very brief sketch of the rush over the mining passed from Skaguay; but these would in no way militate against your description of the mining region and the people. You are the only first-class writer, up to date, who thinks of going there. Can you not plan out, even tentatively, the trip, telling us when you could probably go, how long you would have to stay, when you could return, and how much It would cost us. 02373 J. M. 2.The rest of the postscript. I own, gave me a shock. We cannot, of course, complain of your printing elsewhere any material that may have been declined here, and of course you know we have declined nothing of yours except where we have been shooting through the same hole for a long time, being afraid that we had bored our readers with the subject of forestry, as up to six or eight months ago we were absolutely the only magazine in the country that had touched that subject at all, and we had identified "The Century" with it. But we hoped that before you came to book publication you would have naturally turned to us, even if later you should have concluded in the long run to accept a more advantageous offer elsewhere. Mr. Scott, our President, does not remember any unwillingness to take the risk of ...
format Text
author Johnson, Robert Underwood
author_facet Johnson, Robert Underwood
author_sort Johnson, Robert Underwood
title Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.
title_short Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.
title_full Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.
title_fullStr Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.
title_full_unstemmed Letter from R[obert] U[nderwood] Johnson to John Muir, 1897 Dec 14.
title_sort letter from r[obert] u[nderwood] johnson to john muir, 1897 dec 14.
publisher Scholarly Commons
publishDate 1897
url https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/2042
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/3041/viewcontent/muir09_1194_let.pdf
geographic Yukon
geographic_facet Yukon
genre Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
op_source John Muir Correspondence (PDFs)
op_relation https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/muir-correspondence/2042
https://scholarlycommons.pacific.edu/context/muir-correspondence/article/3041/viewcontent/muir09_1194_let.pdf
op_rights Some letters written to John Muir may be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Transmission or reproduction of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners. Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
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