EVANS
EVARTS
zensliip. William I. then ilevised a si^ecial order
for Doctor Evans. France made him grand com-
mander of the Legion of Honor. His ordei's re-
ceived from the different comitries of Europe
nimibered over two hundred. He refused many
titles offered him because of his intense love for
his country. He attended, as a friend, Prince
Frederick in his illness at San Remo, and his skill
in the operation of tracheotomj- prolonged the
patient's life until after the death of William I.,
Frederick thus succeeding to the throne. In
August, 1897, Dr. Evans brought to Woodland
cemetery, Philadelphia, the body of his wife who
had died in Paris, June 17, 1.S97. While in
America on this occasion he planned various pro-
jects for founding and maintaining educational
institutions in different cities in the United
States. His will, dated at Davos-Platz, Switzer-
land, Aug. 26, 1896, provided for the erection in
Philadelphia. Pa., and endowment of "The
Thomas W. Evans Museum and Dental Insti-
tute ' ■ and for a mausoleum to cost not over §300. -
000 for his family. Some of his heirs, including
his brother Rudolph H., contested the will. He
was the proprietor of the American lieyister, a
Paris weekly journal, and he published several
books including The ilemnirs of Heinrich Heine
(1884). He died in Paris. France, Nov. 13, 1897.
EVANS, Walter, representative, was born in Barren county, Ky., Sept. 18, 1842, son of Joseph W. and Matilda (Ritter) Evans; and grandson of Alexander Evans and of John Ritter. He was edu- cated at Harrodsburg, Ky , served in the Union army, 1861-63, and was admitted to the bar in 1864, in Christian county, Ky. He was a Repub- lican representative in the state legislature in 1871 and in the state senate, 1873-74. He was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1868, 1872, 1880, and 1884. In 1874 he removed to Louisville, Ky., and in 1876 was the unsuccess- ful candidate for representative in congress. He was nominated for governor in 1879 and was de- feated by Luke P. Blackburn. He was appointed by President Arthur commissioner of internal revenue, and served from May 21, 1883, to April 20, 1885. He was a representative from the fifth Kentucky district in the r)4th and .5.ith con- gresses, 189.J-99. On March 4. 1899, President McKiuley appointed him judge of the LT.S. dis- trict court for the district of Kentucky.
EVARTS, William Maxwell, statesman, was born in Boston, Mass., Feb. 6, 1818; son of Jere- miah and Mehetabel (Sherman) Evarts, and grandson of James and Sarah (Todd) Evarts and of Roger and Rebecca (Prescott) Sherman. His father (1781-1831) was a graduate of Yale in the class of 1802; a lawyer, 1806-10: editor, ■1810-31; treasurer A.B.C.F.M., 1812-21, and corre- sponding secretary, 1821-31. William Maxwell
Lin-
studied at the Boston Latin school, was gradu-
ated at Yale in 1837 and was one of the four
founders of the Yale Literary Magazine in 1836.
He studied law at Harvard, and in New York city
under Daniel Lord, and became a practising law-
yer in New York in
1841. He was assist
ant U.S. district at
torney, 1849-53. As
chairman of the New
Y'ork delegation in
the Rei^ublican na
tional convention of
1800 he presented to
that convention the
name of William H
Seward for the pres-
idential nomination,
and cast the seventy
votes of the delega-
tion for him at every
roll-call. The vote
of the state was never changed to Mr. coin, although Mr. Evarts moved his unani- mous nomination and was one of the committee to notify him of his selection, then first meet- ing Mr. Lincoln at his home in Springfield, 111. He was a candidate before the state legislature of 1861 for U.S. senator, his rival being Horace Greeley, and after a protracted and close contest Mr. Evarts's name was withdrawn that his friends might support Ira Harris who was elected. In 1868 President Johnson made him his chief counsel in the impeachment trial before the U.S. senate, and on July 15, 1868, made him attorney -general in his cabinet. In 1872 he was thecounsel
of the United > -fl- ^
States before j^ ^^ -»
the Alabama ""^ ^
claims arbitra- r " t^ ,
tion tribunal at k , 1 i J Geneva, and he L * ' . ' 1""" presented the » ^ ^~ M^S arguments that ! "" ^ 'isssis.
led to the final
decision in favor of his client. In 1877 he was the advocate of the Republican party before the electoral commission, and President Hayes made him his secretary of state. In 1881 he was delegate from the United States to the Inter- national monetarj- conference in Pans. He was a U S. senator from New Y'ork, 1885-91, and at the close of his term he resumed the practice of his profession with the law firm of Evarts, Choate & Beaman in New York city. Among his more notable law cases are: the prosecution of the Cuban filibusterers on board the Cleopatra (1851) ; the Lemmon slave case in which he opposed
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