The San Francisco Call: Difference between revisions

From The Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia
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* 05.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Empty House]] (5 ill. by [[Stanley E. Armstrong]])
* 05.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Empty House]] (5 ill. by [[Stanley E. Armstrong]])
* 12.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Norwood Builder]] (4 ill. by [[R. Thomson]])
* 12.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Norwood Builder]] (4 ill. by [[R. Thomson]])
* 19.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Dancing Men]] (3 ill. by [[Stanley E. Armstrong]], 1 by [[R. Thomson]])
* 19.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Dancing Men]] (1 ill. by [[Stanley E. Armstrong]], 3 by [[R. Thomson]])
* 26.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Solitary Cyclist]] (3 ill. by [[Reginald G. Russom]])
* 26.03.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Solitary Cyclist]] (3 ill. by [[Reginald G. Russom]])
* 02.04.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Priory School]] (3 ill. by [[Walter W. Francis]])
* 02.04.1905 : [[The Adventure of the Priory School]] (3 ill. by [[Walter W. Francis]])

Revision as of 14:02, 21 April 2022

The San Francisco Call (19 march 1899)

The San Francisco Call / The Sunday Call is an American daily newspaper from San Francisco (California, USA) founded on 1 december 1856 as the Daily Morning Call. The 5 march 1895, it was reanamed as The San Francisco Call. In 1913 M. H. de Young, owner of the San Francisco Chronicle, purchased the paper and sold it to William Randolph Hearst. In december 1913, Hearst merged The San Francisco Call with the Evening Post and the papers became The San Francisco Call & Post.

Between 1893 and 1911, in the Sunday editions of the newspapers, the newspaper published 30 short stories written by Arthur Conan Doyle.


By Conan Doyle in The San Francisco Call

1893

1899

1903

1905
The Return of Sherlock Holmes series

The Best of the Sherlock Holmes Stories

1910

1911

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1907

1909

1910