Mary Evelyn Hitchcock


Mary Evelyn Hitchcock was an American author and explorer. She was part of the Floradora Company in the early 20th century, and also worked from the New York World as a reporter.

Early life and education

Mary Evelyn Higgins was born in Virginia, March 10, 1849. She was the daughter of Capt. Thomas A. and Cecelia Higgins. She was educated at Lawrence Academy, where she received academic honors.

Career

She married Commander Roswell D. Hitchcock, USN, and they had one daughter, Harriet Bradford Hitchcock Harriman. Hitchcock accompanied her husband to the Vienna Exposition, 1873, Paris Exposition, 1878, to Japan, 1882, where his ship remained two years; and again in 1892, when he was captain of USS Alert. After the death of the husband, she made a tour of the world.
on the St. Paul with their dogs.
In 1898, she went to Klondike with her friend Edith Van Buren, embarking from San Francisco on a steamer. Their luggage included multiple pets and an early motion picture device called an animatoscope. Hitchcock climbed Skagway Pass on foot before the days of the railroad. She subsequently wrote the book, Two Women in the Klondike, which described this visit to the Yukon.
Hitchcock was so impressed with the mining and agricultural possibilities of the Yukon that she spread the knowledge she had gained through lectures, which added largely to funds for churches and hospitals. She returned to the north, where she staked more than 100 claims and because so deeply interested financially that she spent the greater part of five years there.
In 1904, Hitchcock organized and was president of The Entertainment Club, in New York City. She was also a Fellow of the National Geographic Society, as well as a member of the Daughters of the Confederacy.

''Two women in the Klondike''

Two women in the Klondike: the story of a journey to the gold-fields of Alaska describes the adventures of Hitchcock and Edith Van Buren, a grandniece of President Van Buren, during a perilous and eventful journey taken in the summer of 1898. Owing to the waters of the Yukon River being low, the two women were delayed for some time at Dawson City where they located miner's claims and lived as squatters. Besides the interesting incidents of travel included, the book included graphic descriptions of the Klondike region, and accounts of local customs and superstitions, as well as mining methods. She died April 6, 1920 and is buried at Oak Grove Cemetery, Fall River, Massachusetts.

Selected works