Frances Auretta Fuller Victor

American author and historian
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Also known as: Frances Auretta Fuller
Quick Facts
Née:
Frances Auretta Fuller
Born:
May 23, 1826, Rome, N.Y., U.S.
Died:
Nov. 14, 1902, Portland, Ore. (aged 76)
Also Known As:
Frances Auretta Fuller
Notable Family Members:
sister Metta Victoria Fuller Victor
Subjects Of Study:
Northwest
Oregon
Washington

Frances Auretta Fuller Victor (born May 23, 1826, Rome, N.Y., U.S.—died Nov. 14, 1902, Portland, Ore.) was an American writer and historian who wrote prolifically, and sometimes without acknowledgement, on the history of the western United States, particularly the Pacific Northwest.

Frances Fuller grew up in Erie, Pennsylvania, and in Wooster, Ohio. She and her younger sister Metta Fuller Victor both contributed poems and stories to local periodicals and to the Home Journal of New York, and in 1848 they moved to New York City. In that year Frances published her first book, Anizetta, the Guajira; or, The Creole of Cuba.

Frances left New York in 1851 to help care for her widowed mother and younger sisters in St. Clair, Michigan. In 1853 she married and homesteaded near Omaha, Nebraska Territory, but she eventually left her husband and rejoined Metta in New York. She wrote East and West; or, The Beauty of Willard’s Mill (1862) and The Card Claim: A Tale of the Upper Missouri (1862) for Beadle & Company’s dime novel series edited by Metta’s husband, Orville J. Victor.

4:043 Dickinson, Emily: A Life of Letters, This is my letter to the world/That never wrote to me; I'll tell you how the Sun Rose/A Ribbon at a time; Hope is the thing with feathers/That perches in the soul
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Frances married Orville Victor’s brother, Henry C. Victor, in 1862, and a year later they moved to San Francisco. There she contributed to the Golden Era, the Overland Monthly, and the San Francisco Bulletin under the name “Florence Fane.” In 1864 she and her husband settled in Oregon. She became deeply interested in local history, and over the next 13 years she wrote The River of the West (1870), All Over Oregon and Washington (1872), a travel book, and The New Penelope (1877), a collection of stories. From 1878 through 1890 she worked with Hubert H. Bancroft on his monumental 28-volume History of the Pacific States. Although Bancroft claimed authorship of the entire series, Victor was in fact the author of The History of Oregon (1886–88), The History of Washington, Idaho, and Montana (1890), The History of Nevada, Colorado, and Wyoming (1890), a large part of The History of the Northwest Coast (1884), and portions of the volumes on California and British Columbia. In 1890 she retired to Oregon, where she wrote Atlantis Arisen (1891), a revision of her earlier travel book on Washington and Oregon, The Early Indian Wars of Oregon (1894), and Poems (1900).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.