# 2197a FDC - 1986-95 25c Jack London, booklet pane of 6
Â
25¢ Jack London
Great Americans Series
City: San Francisco, CA
Quantity:Â 48,675,900
Printed By: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Engraved
Perforations: 10
Color: Blue
Birth Of Jack London
Born John Griffith Chaney, the future author adopted the name âJackâ at an early age. And he took the surname London from his step-father John London, a Civil War veteran.
The young London credited his rise to literary success to his reading of the Victorian novel Signa in 1885. He spent many of his childhood hours in the Oakland Public Library with librarian and future poet laureate, Ina Coolbrith.
When he returned home, London took a job in a jute mill earning 10¢ an hour. One day he told his mother the dramatic story of the typhoon, and she convinced him to enter it in a local writing contest. With just an eighth-grade education, London won the $25 first prize, beating college students. London believed he had found his calling.
But making a living as a writer wasnât as easy as London had hoped. Unable to find a publisher, he briefly attended the University of California at Berkeley. In 1897, London then travelled north, hoping to strike it rich in the Klondike Gold Rush. Though he didnât find the riches he had hoped for, he had a wealth of stories to tell from his own experiences and from people he met there.
In 1904, London took a job with the San Francisco Examiner covering the Russo-Japanese War. Over the course of six months there, he was arrested four times and eventually returned to America.
London also used the earnings from his writing to buy a yacht, which he and his second wife used to visit Hawaii and Australia. During their 1907 visit to Hawaii, London witnessed surfing for the first time. He tried it himself and then wrote a long essay about it, titled, âA Royal Sport.â It was published in Womenâs Home Companion that October, and is often credited with giving surfing national attention in America.
Londonâs adventurous life and alcoholism took a toll on his health, leading to his death at just 40 years old on November 22, 1916.
Click here to read some of Londonâs stories.
Â
Â
25¢ Jack London
Great Americans Series
City: San Francisco, CA
Quantity:Â 48,675,900
Printed By: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Engraved
Perforations: 10
Color: Blue
Birth Of Jack London
Born John Griffith Chaney, the future author adopted the name âJackâ at an early age. And he took the surname London from his step-father John London, a Civil War veteran.
The young London credited his rise to literary success to his reading of the Victorian novel Signa in 1885. He spent many of his childhood hours in the Oakland Public Library with librarian and future poet laureate, Ina Coolbrith.
When he returned home, London took a job in a jute mill earning 10¢ an hour. One day he told his mother the dramatic story of the typhoon, and she convinced him to enter it in a local writing contest. With just an eighth-grade education, London won the $25 first prize, beating college students. London believed he had found his calling.
But making a living as a writer wasnât as easy as London had hoped. Unable to find a publisher, he briefly attended the University of California at Berkeley. In 1897, London then travelled north, hoping to strike it rich in the Klondike Gold Rush. Though he didnât find the riches he had hoped for, he had a wealth of stories to tell from his own experiences and from people he met there.
In 1904, London took a job with the San Francisco Examiner covering the Russo-Japanese War. Over the course of six months there, he was arrested four times and eventually returned to America.
London also used the earnings from his writing to buy a yacht, which he and his second wife used to visit Hawaii and Australia. During their 1907 visit to Hawaii, London witnessed surfing for the first time. He tried it himself and then wrote a long essay about it, titled, âA Royal Sport.â It was published in Womenâs Home Companion that October, and is often credited with giving surfing national attention in America.
Londonâs adventurous life and alcoholism took a toll on his health, leading to his death at just 40 years old on November 22, 1916.
Click here to read some of Londonâs stories.
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