
Colonel Albert S. Evans (c. 1831–1872) was an American journalist, explorer, author, and adventurer known for his colorful accounts of life in the American West, Mexico, and California during the mid-19th century. He wrote under the pen name “Fitz Smythe” and is best remembered today for his vivid travelogues and his role in popularizing the legend of the “Lost Ship of the Desert” (also called the Lost Ship of the Mojave or Colorado Desert).
Early Life and Career
Details about Evans’ early years are sparse. He was born around 1831 (some sources suggest New Hampshire ties). Prior to 1856, he lived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he worked as a broker. He later moved to Chicago and spent several years working for the Daily Journal. In 1861, amid the excitement of the Gold Rush era and the Civil War period, Evans relocated to San Francisco, California. There, he began a career in journalism with the Morning Call and served on the staff of the Governor of California during the Civil War.
Evans became a prominent figure in San Francisco’s literary and journalistic scene. He served for some years as local editor of the Daily Alta California, a leading newspaper, and feuded publicly with Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) while both were in the city. He was known for his adventurous spirit, exploratory travels, and engaging writing style that blended observation, humor, and drama. Evans was also a friend of New York Herald publisher Horace Greeley.
Major Works
Evans authored two notable travelogues:
- Our Sister Republic: A Gala Trip through Tropical Mexico in 1869–70 (1870), detailing his journeys in Mexico.
- A La California: Sketches of Life in the Golden State (1873, published posthumously), a collection of sketches about California life, including desert adventures, which incorporated his earlier writings.
These books were published by A. L. Bancroft of San Francisco and captured the spirit of the American West and borderlands with lively prose.
Involvement in the Search for the Lost Ship of the Mojave/Colorado Desert
Evans’ most enduring contribution to Western folklore stems from his claimed sightings of a mysterious shipwreck in the Colorado Desert (part of the broader Mojave/Colorado Desert region in California), which helped spark the “Lost Ship of the Desert” legend. This tale, one of many desert ship legends, describes a Spanish galleon or other vessel stranded far inland, possibly from the 16th or 17th century, laden with treasure and left behind due to shifting waters or floods of the Colorado River and ancient Lake Cahuilla.
In the autumn of 1863, during a period of intense gold and copper mining rushes across the Colorado Desert toward Arizona, Evans and a companion (Uncle Billy Thompson) took a “short cut” from San Gorgonio Pass eastward. They became lost, endured severe dehydration and hardship on the scorching sands and adobe mountains, and survived thanks to a small water deposit from a recent cloudburst. After reaching safety and later venturing into Arizona, Evans made a return trip. His horse, the faithful buckskin steed “Muchacho Juan,” died from eating poisonous desert weed near Dos Palmas (in the area of the modern Salton Sink). Evans continued on foot alone toward San Bernardino.
In his account “In the Valley of the Shadow” (published in The Galaxy magazine, January 1870, and later reprinted in A La California), Evans described walking westward from Dos Palmas across a vast, desolate playa (dry lakebed) under moonlight. He recounted seeing, far out in the center of what appeared as a “ghostly sea” of salt and alkali:
“Southward to the very horizon stretched a great plain of snowy salt, the white ghost of a dead sea which once covered all this accursed land but has passed away forever. Right in this burning pathway of light, far out in the center of the ghostly sea, where foot of man had never trod, lay in the distance the wreck of a gallant ship, which might have gone down there centuries ago, when the bold Spanish adventurers were pushing their way to the northwest in search of the fabled treasures of the famed Kingdom of Cibola.”
He portrayed the moon casting a shimmering track of light on the half-buried hulk, with masts or ribs visible like those of a “mighty monster.” Evans claimed this was not a mirage and later stated he had seen the ship on two occasions. The location was roughly west of Dos Palmas, near Palma Seca (also called Soda Springs or similar), about 100 miles or more from the sea in an alkali marsh or saline lakebed.
His published story in 1870 ignited widespread interest. Newspapers like the Los Angeles Daily News, Sacramento Union, and others reported on the wreck, describing it as a teak-built vessel visible from mesas. Expeditions, including one led by Charley Clusker from San Bernardino, set out to find it, but searchers returned empty-handed or with inconclusive results. Some theories suggested it was an optical illusion, a ferryboat or schooner hauled by oxen that broke down, or remnants from Colorado River floods. The legend persisted, with later variations linking it to Spanish pearl ships (e.g., Juan de Iturbe’s vessel) or pirate treasure. Today, much of the area is under the Salton Sea, making searches difficult.
Evans’ account stood out for its firsthand detail and literary flair, helping transform a regional rumor into a lasting American folklore staple, later inspiring poems (e.g., by Joaquin Miller) and further searches.
Death
Colonel Albert S. Evans died on October 22, 1872, at sea aboard the steamship Missouri, which burned during its passage from New York toward Havana. He perished in the disaster along with other passengers. His book A La California was published posthumously the following year.
Evans embodied the restless, adventurous spirit of the 19th-century American West—a journalist who lived the stories he told, from desert ordeals to political feuds and international travels. While his desert ship sighting remains unverified and likely exaggerated or misperceived (common in mirage-prone deserts), it cemented his place in California and Southwestern lore.