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[[Category:People from pre-statehood California]] |
[[Category:People from pre-statehood California]] |
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[[Category:History of San Francisco]] |
[[Category:History of San Francisco]] |
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[[Category:Explorers of Mexico]] |
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[[Category:American explorers of North America]] |
[[Category:American explorers of North America]] |
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[[Category:19th-century American explorers]] |
[[Category:19th-century American explorers]] |
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Latest revision as of 03:20, 4 February 2026
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Colonel Albert S. Evans |
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Colonel Albert S. Evans, from A La California |
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| Died | 22 October 1872 |
| Pen name | Fitz Smythe[1] |
Albert S. Evans was an American explorer and writer. Prior to 1856, he lived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and worked as a broker.[2] He lived in Chicago and worked for many years at the Daily Journal. Evans arrived in San Francisco in 1861, began working as a journalist for the Morning Call[3] and served on the staff of the Governor of California during the Civil War.[2]
He published two travelogues, Our Sister Republic: A Gala Trip through Tropical Mexico in 1869 – 1870, (1870) and Á La California: Sketches of Life in the Golden State (1873). The books were published by A. L. Bancroft of San Francisco, the publishing partner and brother of Hubert Howe Bancroft.[4] In 1863, Evans became local editor for some years of The Daily Alta California in San Francisco, and continued in that capacity for several years.[3] He lived in the city for 12 years, and he famously feuded with Mark Twain when both were in the city.[4] Evans died 22 October 1872,[5] a passenger on the steamship Missouri, when it burned at sea.[6]
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