Calgary Herald

THE HOME OF TWAIN’S CLASSICS

Great American author wrote his greatest works in Hartford until tragedy struck

- DAVE COLLINS

HARTFORD, CONN.

Mark Twain once said his large Connecticu­t home was “combinatio­n Mississipp­i River steamboat and cuckoo clock.”

That’s not exactly how Pieter Roos views the historic Gothicstyl­e home today.

For the new executive director of the Mark Twain House and Museum in Hartford, it’s “the primary public steward” of the legendary author and humorist’s legacy and “one of the finest historical house museums in the country.”

Roos, 57, will take the helm of the landmark property July 5 after recently finishing an 18-year stint as executive director of the Newport Restoratio­n Foundation in Rhode Island.

He said the museum has one of the most important things aspiring executive directors look for — “great subject material.”

“There are not a lot of places that are up to the subject level of Mark Twain,” Roos said.

“He was not only a legendary writer, but a legendary character.”

MARK TWAIN AND HIS HARTFORD HOME

Twain, whose real name was Samuel Clemens, grew up in Hannibal, Mo., along the Mississipp­i River.

He and his wife, Olivia, moved in 1871 to Hartford, which at the time was one of the wealthiest cities in the United States.

Twain wrote his most popular books over the next 17 years while living in Hartford and retreating to his summer home in Elmira, N.Y., including The Adventures of Huckleberr­y Finn, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and A Connecticu­t Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.

Twain and his family moved to Europe in 1891 and never returned to the Hartford home after their daughter, Susy, died during a visit there in 1896.

Twain died at age 74 in Redding, Conn., in 1910.

PRESERVING NEWPORT

From 1999 to February, Roos led the Newport Restoratio­n Foundation, which has restored or preserved 83 buildings in Newport and owns 80 historic buildings.

The foundation also owns and runs three museum properties.

Roos is credited with turning the foundation into a nationally respected organizati­on and creating a national conference on the impact of climate change on historic preservati­on.

“Pieter’s leadership transforme­d the NRF from a sleepy preservati­on entity with few staff whose main focus was as a rental agency of historic residences, into a museum and preservati­on organizati­on that has earned recognitio­n and respect on a regional and national scale,” said Roger Mandle, the foundation’s board chairman.

PAST AND PRESENT

Roos graduated from Drew University in New Jersey with an anthropolo­gy degree.

He went on to earn his master’s in museum studies and later administer­ed historic sites in New Jersey.

He then headed to Newport in 1993 to become education director for the Newport Historical Society.

Roos said the museum is doing well after surviving financial problems several years ago and a mould problem that tainted nearly a third of the museum’s 16,000 artifacts.

“I see this place as a nexus for American writers and thoughtful humorists,” he said.

Joel Freedman, president of the museum’s board of trustees, said Roos was chosen for his “wealth of knowledge, experience and enthusiasm to the position.”

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