Albert Falvey Webster

Albert Falvey Webster (born Boston, Massachusetts, 1848; died at sea, 27 December 1876) was an author from the United States. His father was a confectioner in Boston. After engaging for a short time in various kinds of business, he became a writer for the magazines, and published many short stories in Scribner's Monthly, the Atlantic Monthly, and Appletons' Journal in which appeared his “Boarding-House Sketches.” He also published a series of articles exposing abuses in the administration of criminal law and in the management of prisons. He was consumptive and went to California by way of the isthmus of Panama, and died on his way from San Francisco to Honolulu, and was buried in the Pacific. At the time of his death, Webster was engaged to be married to Una, eldest daughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne. He left an unfinished novel. His most notable stories are “Our Friend Sullivan,” “My Daughter's Watch,” “The Clytemnestra,” and “An Operation in Money.”

Notes

    References

    •  Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1889). "Webster, Albert Falvey". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.


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