Arthur Inkersley (born 5 September 1855)[1] was an English journalist and writer active in the United States.
[4][5][6] Inkersley was registered at the Hastings College of Law of the University of California in 1888–9, with a college address in Hyde Street, San Francisco;[7] and is recorded in the 1910 Directory of Graduates of the University of California as a journalist living on 10th Street in Oakland, of Oxford, and class of 1890.
XXV (1894–95) on San Francisco's Olympic Club and as a sports reporter on rowing, yachting, college football and track and field.
[10] In 1897 he took part in the Mazamas expedition to Mount Rainier, writing an article on it in 1901 for Good Words, illustrated with photographs by Edward S.
[13] The aftermath of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake saw Inkersley write articles of reportage and prospect: "Effects of the earthquake and fire upon the City of San Francisco and its buildings" (May) in Scientific American;[14] "Salving "Fireproof" Safes and Their Contents After the Great Fire of San Francisco" (May) in Scientific American;[15] "An Amateur's Experience of Earthquake and Fire" (June) in Camera Craft;[16] "What San Francisco Has to Start With," Overland Monthly (June–July);[17] "Recovering Metals Melted in the San Francisco Fire" (October) in Scientific American;[18] In 1910 Inkersley married in Salisbury Cathedral Frances Fearn, widow of Walker Fearn.