New Acquisitions in Western Americana from Clark Rare Books
New Acquisitions in Western Americana from Clark Rare Books
Willard Glazier was an unwilling prisoner during the Civil War. He escaped Confederate prisons and was recaptured twice before finding the third escape was the charm. He had earlier been involved in an attempt to tunnel out of Libby Prison but was unsuccessful. After twice being recaptured, he was finally able to escape from Sylvania, Georgia, in December of 1864 and make his way to federal lines in Savannah. His account was given in 1868 in The Capture, the Prison Pen, and the Escape, giving a complete history of prison life in the South... Glazier went on to live an exciting life in the years after the war. According to his obituary in 1905, he rode from Boston to San Francisco on horseback in 1876, being captured briefly by Indians and, of course, being compelled to escape. It says he escaped by taking one of their horses. More notably, Glazier canoed the entire length of the Mississippi in 1881. It was then that he claimed to have discovered the true headwaters of the Mississippi. Henry Schoolcraft had found that to be Lake Itasca in Minnesota, but Glazier found a smaller lake that drains into Itasca. That lake, Elk Lake, which he modestly renamed "Glazier Lake" (it is now again called "Elk Lake"), does drain into Itasca, but the flow is small, another stream also drains into Itasca, and several tiny streams in turn drain into Elk Lake. The result is Lake Itasca is still considered the headwaters of the Mississippi, and Elk Lake is still Elk Lake. Item 168. $65.
The new titles being offered by Arthur H. Clark Publishing cover the Utah War of 1858, steamboating on the Missouri, the journals of Prince Maxmilian from 1832-33, and Oklahoman Billy McGinty. Clark Rare Books may be contacted at 405-307-0088 or info@clarkrarebooks.com.