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Horace Ezra Bixby

Horace Ezra Bixby (May 8, 1826 – August 1, 1912) was a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi-Missouri-Ohio river system from the late 1840s until his death in 1912.[1] Bixby is notable in his own right for his high standing in his profession, for his technical contributions to it, and for his service in the American Civil War. However, he is best known for having had as his "cub pilot" (that is, apprentice or trainee) the young man known to him as Sam Clemens, later to become famous under his pen name as American author Mark Twain. Twain's descriptions of Bixby's character and pedagogic style form a good part of his memoir Life on the Mississippi, and it was through this medium that Bixby—much to his annoyance—became well-known beyond the circles of his family, friends and profession.

Horace Ezra Bixby
Born(1826-05-08)May 8, 1826
DiedAugust 1, 1912(1912-08-01) (aged 86)
Resting placeBellefontaine Cemetery, St. Louis, Missouri, US
Occupation(s)Steamboat pilot, steamboat captain, inventor
Years active1848-1912
Spouses
Susan Weibling
(m. 1859⁠–⁠1867)
Mary Sheble
(m. 1869⁠–⁠1912)
ChildrenEdwina, Edwin, George Mason

Early life Edit

Horace Bixby was born in Geneseo, New York, a town near Rochester in the Finger Lakes region of New York, on May 8, 1826, to Sylvanus and Hanna Bixby.[2] While still in his teens, he left home and moved to Cincinnati, Ohio where he first worked in a tailor's shop, and then became a mud clerk on the packet boat Olivia. Within two years, he had become the Olivia's pilot.[3]

Pre-Civil War career Edit

As Twain describes at length in Life on the Mississippi, a rare combination of skills and talents, honed to perfection and maintained there by unremitting drill, was required in the mid-nineteenth century, in order to safely navigate a steamboat on the Mississippi and the Missouri, "vast streams...whose alluvial banks cave and change constantly, whose snags are always hunting up new quarters, whose sandbars are never at rest, whose channels are for ever dodging and shirking, and whose obstructions must be confronted in all nights and all weathers without [at that time] the aid of a single light-house or a single buoy."[4] The pilot needed to have total, perfect, and instantaneous recall for every detail of the river's meandering and ever-changing channel, with its chutes, islands, sandbars, underwater rocks, "reefs", snags, and sunken wrecks. He needed to be able to intuit exactly how any rise or fall in the river would affect its minimum depth at hundreds of shoal places, and know how to read the surface of the water "like a book."[5] Finally, and most importantly, the successful pilot required "good and quick judgment and decision, and a cool, calm courage that no peril can shake."[6] Successful pilots were able to command a salary variously reported as six times that of a clergyman[7] and greater than that of the Vice President of the United States.[8] In this demanding profession, Horace Bixby was an acknowledged master.[9]

A steamboat's pilot had not only to keep the boat safe from navigational hazards, but also to complete each journey in the shortest possible time. The unusually good speed that he was able to make without compromising safety earned him the title "Lightning" Bixby. Switzer attributes this sobriquet to his having once completed the voyage from New Orleans to St. Louis in only 4 days, 14 hours and 20 minutes.[10] Twain recounts an incident in which Bixby saved his steamboat a full night's delay by a tour de force of piloting, prompting another pilot aboard at the time to exclaim, "By the Shadow of Death, but he's a lightning pilot!"[11]

Bixby was also unusual in that he held a pilot's licence for all three of the major inland waterways—the lower Mississippi, the Missouri, and the Ohio—rather than only for one, as was the case with most pilots.[12] Piloting on the Missouri during Bixby's first years there (1856–58) presented special challenges due to the undeveloped nature of the country through which it passed; a steamboat might find its forward progress impeded "by buffalo herds crossing the river one day and by Sioux warriors the next."[1]

A partial list of the boats on which Bixby was employed as pilot during this period includes Olivia, Hungarian, Paul Jones, Colonel Crossman, Crescent City, Rufus J. Lackland, William M. Morrison, New Falls City, and Aleck Scott. Bixby's time on the Colonel Crossman included an explosion in which 14 people were killed.[13]

Early relationship with Twain Edit

Bixby first met Twain in February 1857, when the latter was 21 years old.[14] Twain was traveling to New Orleans on the Paul Jones, on the way to South America, where he planned to raise coca, a legal crop at the time, as the process of extracting cocaine from it had not yet been invented.[15] However, he had harbored a boyhood dream of becoming a river pilot, which he decided to make one more effort to pursue. After some negotiations, Bixby agreed to teach him the lower Mississippi for $500, of which $100 was paid in advance and the balance was to be paid out of his salary after becoming a pilot. As it happened, Twain was able to pay only $300 before the outbreak of the Civil War shut down all commercial traffic on the Mississippi. He and Bixby agreed between them to cancel the remaining balance.[9] For much of the next two years, Twain served his apprenticeship under Bixby, though occasionally his mentor placed him with other pilots, such as during the period when Bixby was learning, and working on, the Missouri River. After Twain got his licence, the two of them worked together as pilots on the Crescent City and the New Falls City. In Life on the Mississippi, Twain portrays Bixby as an "irascible but lovable mentor."[15]

One point on which Bixby's friends took issue with Twain was his portrayal of Bixby as "a profane man," that is, as someone who occasionally used profanity for emphasis in conversation.[1] They reported him to be a person who was always "gentle of speech." Note however that there was a difference in the etiquette of shore-based discourse and that on board a vessel, where the use of bad language by the crew (among themselves) was commonplace, and even expected.[16]

Civil War service Edit

Horace Bixby served as pilot of the USS Benton from October 25, 1861 until August 28, 1862.[17] The Benton was the flagship of the Mississippi River Squadron, and both Twain and Bixby's obituary refer to him as having been the squadron's "Chief Pilot" at the time of the Battle of Memphis.[18][1] Bixby's obituary states that he "always held the Union victory at Memphis due to the information he gave Commodore Foote."[1]

Post-war career Edit

Horace Bixby was one of the pilots of the steamboat Bertrand, which sank on April 1, 1865, after hitting a snag in the Missouri River, north of Omaha, Nebraska, in what was to become the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge.[19] The wreck of the Bertrand was excavated in 1968, and much of its cargo as survived—over 500,000 artifacts—are on display at the museum of the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge near Missouri Valley, Iowa.

In the last few decades of his life, Bixby worked on the river both as pilot and as captain. (A captain was in charge of all aspects of his boat's management except for its navigation while underway, which was the exclusive province of the pilot on duty, and in which the captain was forbidden to interfere.[20]) During much of this period, Bixby worked as a captain for the Anchor Line, and owned more stock in the company than any other employee, having heavily invested in one of its predecessor companies.[2]

Together with George Richey, Bixby was granted a patent for a new type of binnacle light in 1871.[21] This invention was part of a larger project to improve the safety of navigation on the river. As described by Twain, "Horace Bixby and George Ritchie [sic] have charted the crossings and laid out the courses by compass; they have invented a lamp to go with the chart, and have patented the whole. With these helps, one may run [the boat] in the fog now, with considerable security, and with a confidence unknown in the old days."[22]

A partial list of the boats on which Bixby served during this period, and the positions he held, includes City of Natchez (Master, 1885-1886), Crystal City (Captain, 1887), City of Hickman (Master, 1890), City of Alton (Captain), and City of Baton Rouge (Master).[3] Bixby was a part-owner of the City of Alton, having purchased it in partnership with his father-in-law and two other men.[23]

Bixby remained professionally active until the very end of his life. His final command assignment, of the government snagboat Horatio G. Wright, was completed on July 30, 1912. He was awaiting a call to take out the government tugboat Nokomis when he died two days later, in Maplewood, Missouri, on August 1. As his obituary stated, "He died as he often said he wished to die, 'in the harness.'"[1][3]

Later relationship with Twain Edit

When Twain returned to the Mississippi River, in the spring of 1882, to collect material for the later chapters of Life on the Mississippi, Bixby was happy to meet him in New Orleans. By all evidence, they remained life-long friends.

Although it appears that Bixby did not greatly blame Twain for his portrayal of him, the charm of being associated with him in the public mind, and of being pestered by reporters for yet more details about their time together, quickly paled. Bixby's obituary states that "Captain Bixby received hundreds of letters from strangers, who knew him solely through Mark Twain's books. This became distasteful to him, and during late years he had avoided all mention of Mark Twain's name."[1] Waterways Journal of April 30, 1910 reports that, "In Memphis one time, [Bixby] told a reporter that he wished Mark Twain were dead so he wouldn't be bothered in retailing reminiscences about him longer. He was annoyed when the remark was printed, but there is no record that Mark Twain ever heard of it, and if he had, it was just the sort of a whimsicality that he would have appreciated."[9]

Family and portrait Edit

Bixby was first married to Susan Weibling of New Orleans. According to Switzer, the marriage took place in 1853, but other sources date it in 1860.[23][3] They had no children who survived infancy, and she died in 1867. In 1869, he married Mary Sheble, daughter of Captain Edwin A. Sheble of St. Louis, with whom he had three children, a daughter, Edwina, and two sons, Edwin and George Mason. Edwina married Dr. Louis T. Pim in 1901, and by 1910 Horace and Mary had come to live with them.[9] Mary Bixby survived her husband by nine years, dying in 1921. The two of them are buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri.

A portrait photograph of Horace Bixby may be viewed in the collection of UW-La Crosse.[3]

Portrayal in media Edit

Horace Bixby was portrayed by Robert Barrat in the 1944 film The Adventures of Mark Twain, by Robert Lansing in the Great Performances episode Life on the Mississippi,[24][25] and by Doug Mancheski in the American Folklore Theatre production of the musical Life on the Mississippi.[26]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bryan Times 1912.
  2. ^ a b Switzer 2013, p. 53.
  3. ^ a b c d e UW-La Crosse 2014.
  4. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 10.
  5. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 9.
  6. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 13.
  7. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 8.
  8. ^ Loving 2010, p. 60.
  9. ^ a b c d Thomson.
  10. ^ Switzer 2013, pp. 53–54.
  11. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 7.
  12. ^ Sattelmeyer 2011.
  13. ^ Loving 2010, pp. 56–60.
  14. ^ Loving 2010, p. xvii.
  15. ^ a b Loving 2010, p. 55.
  16. ^ Bennett 2004, pp. 53, 115–116.
  17. ^ Bureau of Navigation 1900.
  18. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 29.
  19. ^ Switzer 2013, pp. 50–54.
  20. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 14.
  21. ^ Bixby & Richey 1871.
  22. ^ Twain 1883, Ch. 28.
  23. ^ a b Switzer 2013, p. 54.
  24. ^ Britton 2011.
  25. ^ Roberts 2009.
  26. ^ American Folklore Theatre 2010.

References Edit

  • Bennett, Michael J. (2004). Union Jacks: Yankee sailors in the Civil War. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-807-82870-0.
  • Britton, Wesley (April 22, 2011). "Media Interpretations of Mark Twain's Life and Works". In LeMaster, J.R.; Wilson, James D. (eds.). The Routledge Encyclopedia of Mark Twain (Reprint ed.). London: Routledge. p. 501. ISBN 978-0-415-89058-8.
  • US 116631, Bixby, Horace & Richey, George, "Improved Binnacle and Compass Chart", published 1871-07-04 .
  • Bureau of Navigation (April 12, 1900). "Typed letter from Chief of Bureau of Navigation [signature illegible], Navy Department, Washington, D.C., to Horace E. Bixby, St. Louis, Mo., and certificate of service for Bixby, April 12, 1900". Missouri History Museum and Partners St. Louis Area Civil War Digitization Project. St. Louis: Missouri History Museum. Retrieved August 26, 2014.
  • "Old Pilot is Dead". The Bryan Times. September 3, 1912. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  • "LOTM". Door Country's American Folklore Theatre - Musical Theatre Under The Stars. Fish Creek, Wisconsin: American Folklore Theatre. 2010. Retrieved August 20, 2014.
  • Loving, Jerome (March 31, 2010). Mark Twain: The Adventures of Samuel L. Clemens. Oakland, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25257-8. Author website:
  • Roberts, Jerry, ed. (2009). "Peter H. Hunt". Encyclopedia of Television Film Directors. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 266. ISBN 978-0-810-86138-1.
  • Sattelmeyer, Robert (April 22, 2011). "Bixby, Horace E.". In LeMaster, J.R.; Wilson, James D. (eds.). The Routledge Encyclopedia of Mark Twain (Reprint ed.). London: Routledge. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-415-89058-8.
  • Switzer, Ronald R. (October 29, 2013). The Steamboat Bertrand and Missouri River Commerce. Norman, Oklahoma: The Arthur H. Clark Company. ISBN 978-0-870-62426-1.
  • Thomson, David. "Steamboat Men Mark Twain Knew - Horace Bixby". Samuel Clemens' Mississippi Steamboat Career. Barbara Schmidt. Retrieved August 20, 2014.
  • Twain, Mark (1883). Life on the Mississippi (Project Gutenberg ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: James R. Osgood & Company.
  • "UW-La Crosse Historic Steamboat Photographs collection". UW-La Crosse Historic Steamboat Photographs. University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center. Retrieved August 20, 2014. Portrait photograph of Horace Bixby and biographical note: [1]

horace, ezra, bixby, 1826, august, 1912, steamboat, pilot, mississippi, missouri, ohio, river, system, from, late, 1840s, until, death, 1912, bixby, notable, right, high, standing, profession, technical, contributions, service, american, civil, however, best, . Horace Ezra Bixby May 8 1826 August 1 1912 was a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi Missouri Ohio river system from the late 1840s until his death in 1912 1 Bixby is notable in his own right for his high standing in his profession for his technical contributions to it and for his service in the American Civil War However he is best known for having had as his cub pilot that is apprentice or trainee the young man known to him as Sam Clemens later to become famous under his pen name as American author Mark Twain Twain s descriptions of Bixby s character and pedagogic style form a good part of his memoir Life on the Mississippi and it was through this medium that Bixby much to his annoyance became well known beyond the circles of his family friends and profession Horace Ezra BixbyBorn 1826 05 08 May 8 1826Geneseo New York USDiedAugust 1 1912 1912 08 01 aged 86 Maplewood Missouri USResting placeBellefontaine Cemetery St Louis Missouri USOccupation s Steamboat pilot steamboat captain inventorYears active1848 1912SpousesSusan Weibling m 1859 1867 wbr Mary Sheble m 1869 1912 wbr ChildrenEdwina Edwin George Mason Contents 1 Early life 2 Pre Civil War career 3 Early relationship with Twain 4 Civil War service 5 Post war career 6 Later relationship with Twain 7 Family and portrait 8 Portrayal in media 9 Notes 10 ReferencesEarly life EditHorace Bixby was born in Geneseo New York a town near Rochester in the Finger Lakes region of New York on May 8 1826 to Sylvanus and Hanna Bixby 2 While still in his teens he left home and moved to Cincinnati Ohio where he first worked in a tailor s shop and then became a mud clerk on the packet boat Olivia Within two years he had become the Olivia s pilot 3 Pre Civil War career EditAs Twain describes at length in Life on the Mississippi a rare combination of skills and talents honed to perfection and maintained there by unremitting drill was required in the mid nineteenth century in order to safely navigate a steamboat on the Mississippi and the Missouri vast streams whose alluvial banks cave and change constantly whose snags are always hunting up new quarters whose sandbars are never at rest whose channels are for ever dodging and shirking and whose obstructions must be confronted in all nights and all weathers without at that time the aid of a single light house or a single buoy 4 The pilot needed to have total perfect and instantaneous recall for every detail of the river s meandering and ever changing channel with its chutes islands sandbars underwater rocks reefs snags and sunken wrecks He needed to be able to intuit exactly how any rise or fall in the river would affect its minimum depth at hundreds of shoal places and know how to read the surface of the water like a book 5 Finally and most importantly the successful pilot required good and quick judgment and decision and a cool calm courage that no peril can shake 6 Successful pilots were able to command a salary variously reported as six times that of a clergyman 7 and greater than that of the Vice President of the United States 8 In this demanding profession Horace Bixby was an acknowledged master 9 A steamboat s pilot had not only to keep the boat safe from navigational hazards but also to complete each journey in the shortest possible time The unusually good speed that he was able to make without compromising safety earned him the title Lightning Bixby Switzer attributes this sobriquet to his having once completed the voyage from New Orleans to St Louis in only 4 days 14 hours and 20 minutes 10 Twain recounts an incident in which Bixby saved his steamboat a full night s delay by a tour de force of piloting prompting another pilot aboard at the time to exclaim By the Shadow of Death but he s a lightning pilot 11 Bixby was also unusual in that he held a pilot s licence for all three of the major inland waterways the lower Mississippi the Missouri and the Ohio rather than only for one as was the case with most pilots 12 Piloting on the Missouri during Bixby s first years there 1856 58 presented special challenges due to the undeveloped nature of the country through which it passed a steamboat might find its forward progress impeded by buffalo herds crossing the river one day and by Sioux warriors the next 1 A partial list of the boats on which Bixby was employed as pilot during this period includes Olivia Hungarian Paul Jones Colonel Crossman Crescent City Rufus J Lackland William M Morrison New Falls City and Aleck Scott Bixby s time on the Colonel Crossman included an explosion in which 14 people were killed 13 Early relationship with Twain EditBixby first met Twain in February 1857 when the latter was 21 years old 14 Twain was traveling to New Orleans on the Paul Jones on the way to South America where he planned to raise coca a legal crop at the time as the process of extracting cocaine from it had not yet been invented 15 However he had harbored a boyhood dream of becoming a river pilot which he decided to make one more effort to pursue After some negotiations Bixby agreed to teach him the lower Mississippi for 500 of which 100 was paid in advance and the balance was to be paid out of his salary after becoming a pilot As it happened Twain was able to pay only 300 before the outbreak of the Civil War shut down all commercial traffic on the Mississippi He and Bixby agreed between them to cancel the remaining balance 9 For much of the next two years Twain served his apprenticeship under Bixby though occasionally his mentor placed him with other pilots such as during the period when Bixby was learning and working on the Missouri River After Twain got his licence the two of them worked together as pilots on the Crescent City and the New Falls City In Life on the Mississippi Twain portrays Bixby as an irascible but lovable mentor 15 One point on which Bixby s friends took issue with Twain was his portrayal of Bixby as a profane man that is as someone who occasionally used profanity for emphasis in conversation 1 They reported him to be a person who was always gentle of speech Note however that there was a difference in the etiquette of shore based discourse and that on board a vessel where the use of bad language by the crew among themselves was commonplace and even expected 16 Civil War service EditHorace Bixby served as pilot of the USS Benton from October 25 1861 until August 28 1862 17 The Benton was the flagship of the Mississippi River Squadron and both Twain and Bixby s obituary refer to him as having been the squadron s Chief Pilot at the time of the Battle of Memphis 18 1 Bixby s obituary states that he always held the Union victory at Memphis due to the information he gave Commodore Foote 1 Post war career EditHorace Bixby was one of the pilots of the steamboat Bertrand which sank on April 1 1865 after hitting a snag in the Missouri River north of Omaha Nebraska in what was to become the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge 19 The wreck of the Bertrand was excavated in 1968 and much of its cargo as survived over 500 000 artifacts are on display at the museum of the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge near Missouri Valley Iowa In the last few decades of his life Bixby worked on the river both as pilot and as captain A captain was in charge of all aspects of his boat s management except for its navigation while underway which was the exclusive province of the pilot on duty and in which the captain was forbidden to interfere 20 During much of this period Bixby worked as a captain for the Anchor Line and owned more stock in the company than any other employee having heavily invested in one of its predecessor companies 2 Together with George Richey Bixby was granted a patent for a new type of binnacle light in 1871 21 This invention was part of a larger project to improve the safety of navigation on the river As described by Twain Horace Bixby and George Ritchie sic have charted the crossings and laid out the courses by compass they have invented a lamp to go with the chart and have patented the whole With these helps one may run the boat in the fog now with considerable security and with a confidence unknown in the old days 22 A partial list of the boats on which Bixby served during this period and the positions he held includes City of Natchez Master 1885 1886 Crystal City Captain 1887 City of Hickman Master 1890 City of Alton Captain and City of Baton Rouge Master 3 Bixby was a part owner of the City of Alton having purchased it in partnership with his father in law and two other men 23 Bixby remained professionally active until the very end of his life His final command assignment of the government snagboat Horatio G Wright was completed on July 30 1912 He was awaiting a call to take out the government tugboat Nokomis when he died two days later in Maplewood Missouri on August 1 As his obituary stated He died as he often said he wished to die in the harness 1 3 Later relationship with Twain EditWhen Twain returned to the Mississippi River in the spring of 1882 to collect material for the later chapters of Life on the Mississippi Bixby was happy to meet him in New Orleans By all evidence they remained life long friends Although it appears that Bixby did not greatly blame Twain for his portrayal of him the charm of being associated with him in the public mind and of being pestered by reporters for yet more details about their time together quickly paled Bixby s obituary states that Captain Bixby received hundreds of letters from strangers who knew him solely through Mark Twain s books This became distasteful to him and during late years he had avoided all mention of Mark Twain s name 1 Waterways Journal of April 30 1910 reports that In Memphis one time Bixby told a reporter that he wished Mark Twain were dead so he wouldn t be bothered in retailing reminiscences about him longer He was annoyed when the remark was printed but there is no record that Mark Twain ever heard of it and if he had it was just the sort of a whimsicality that he would have appreciated 9 Family and portrait EditBixby was first married to Susan Weibling of New Orleans According to Switzer the marriage took place in 1853 but other sources date it in 1860 23 3 They had no children who survived infancy and she died in 1867 In 1869 he married Mary Sheble daughter of Captain Edwin A Sheble of St Louis with whom he had three children a daughter Edwina and two sons Edwin and George Mason Edwina married Dr Louis T Pim in 1901 and by 1910 Horace and Mary had come to live with them 9 Mary Bixby survived her husband by nine years dying in 1921 The two of them are buried in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St Louis Missouri A portrait photograph of Horace Bixby may be viewed in the collection of UW La Crosse 3 Portrayal in media EditHorace Bixby was portrayed by Robert Barrat in the 1944 film The Adventures of Mark Twain by Robert Lansing in the Great Performances episode Life on the Mississippi 24 25 and by Doug Mancheski in the American Folklore Theatre production of the musical Life on the Mississippi 26 Notes Edit a b c d e f g Bryan Times 1912 a b Switzer 2013 p 53 a b c d e UW La Crosse 2014 Twain 1883 Ch 10 Twain 1883 Ch 9 Twain 1883 Ch 13 Twain 1883 Ch 8 Loving 2010 p 60 a b c d Thomson Switzer 2013 pp 53 54 Twain 1883 Ch 7 Sattelmeyer 2011 Loving 2010 pp 56 60 Loving 2010 p xvii a b Loving 2010 p 55 Bennett 2004 pp 53 115 116 Bureau of Navigation 1900 Twain 1883 Ch 29 Switzer 2013 pp 50 54 Twain 1883 Ch 14 Bixby amp Richey 1871 Twain 1883 Ch 28 a b Switzer 2013 p 54 Britton 2011 Roberts 2009 American Folklore Theatre 2010 References EditBennett Michael J 2004 Union Jacks Yankee sailors in the Civil War Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 807 82870 0 Britton Wesley April 22 2011 Media Interpretations of Mark Twain s Life and Works In LeMaster J R Wilson James D eds The Routledge Encyclopedia of Mark Twain Reprint ed London Routledge p 501 ISBN 978 0 415 89058 8 US 116631 Bixby Horace amp Richey George Improved Binnacle and Compass Chart published 1871 07 04 Bureau of Navigation April 12 1900 Typed letter from Chief of Bureau of Navigation signature illegible Navy Department Washington D C to Horace E Bixby St Louis Mo and certificate of service for Bixby April 12 1900 Missouri History Museum and Partners St Louis Area Civil War Digitization Project St Louis Missouri History Museum Retrieved August 26 2014 Old Pilot is Dead The Bryan Times September 3 1912 Retrieved August 10 2014 LOTM Door Country s American Folklore Theatre Musical Theatre Under The Stars Fish Creek Wisconsin American Folklore Theatre 2010 Retrieved August 20 2014 Loving Jerome March 31 2010 Mark Twain The Adventures of Samuel L Clemens Oakland California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25257 8 Author website Jerome Loving Roberts Jerry ed 2009 Peter H Hunt Encyclopedia of Television Film Directors Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 266 ISBN 978 0 810 86138 1 Sattelmeyer Robert April 22 2011 Bixby Horace E In LeMaster J R Wilson James D eds The Routledge Encyclopedia of Mark Twain Reprint ed London Routledge p 86 ISBN 978 0 415 89058 8 Switzer Ronald R October 29 2013 The SteamboatBertrandand Missouri River Commerce Norman Oklahoma The Arthur H Clark Company ISBN 978 0 870 62426 1 Thomson David Steamboat Men Mark Twain Knew Horace Bixby Samuel Clemens Mississippi Steamboat Career Barbara Schmidt Retrieved August 20 2014 Twain Mark 1883 Life on the Mississippi Project Gutenberg ed Boston Massachusetts James R Osgood amp Company UW La Crosse Historic Steamboat Photographs collection UW La Crosse Historic Steamboat Photographs University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center Retrieved August 20 2014 Portrait photograph of Horace Bixby and biographical note 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horace Ezra Bixby amp oldid 1138792865, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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