Orville James Victor


Orville James Victor was an American writer and editor in chief.

Biography

Victor was born in Sandusky, Ohio to Henry Clay Victor and Gertrude Nash Victor, and had seven siblings; his father operated a hotel in Sandusky.
He studied in the Norwalk Seminary and graduated in 1847. He decided to pursue writing as a profession and in 1852 was hired as an assistant-editor of the Sandusky Daily Register. After marrying Metta Victoria Fuller in 1856, he moved with his wife to New York City where he edited the Cosmopolitan Art Journal and other publications. In 1861, Erastus Flavel Beadle recruited him as an editor for the Beadle firm, and Victor worked there for the next thirty-six years. Gilbert Patten wrote, "Mr. Victor taught me much... He was a cold-appearing, austere man, but one of the kindest and most helpful editors I've ever known."
During the American Civil War Victor wrote two books, History of the Southern Rebellion and History of American Conspiracies. In 1863 he visited England and published a pamphlet there entitled, "The American Rebellion; Its Causes and Objects: Facts for the English People."
Victor died at his home in Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey, on March 14, 1910, eighty-three years old.

Family

His wife, Metta Victoria Fuller, an author, died in Hohokus Township, New Jersey on June 26, 1886. He did not remarry and grieved her death until the end of the life.
John Harvey Whitson, a contributor to the Beadle's dime novel series, described Victor's loss in the following words,

Recognition

The now-defunct Orvil Township, in Bergen County, New Jersey, was named in his honor in 1885.
Orville James Victor is remembered for his long-time editorial work, from 1861 till 1897, for Beadle publishing company and for his own historical biographies and history books.