History of Taylor County, Iowa: from the earliest
historic times to 1910 by Frank E. Crosson. Chicago, The S.J.
Clarke Publishing Co. 1910
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(transcribed by Linda Kestner: lfkestner3@msn.com)
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Page 567
A. P. EVANS
A. P. Evans, who for many years has been numbered among the prominent
business men and agriculturists of Taylor county, was one of the early
pioneers who settled in Iowa while this state was still under territorial
rule. Born in Illinois, near Chicago, in 1840, he is a son of the
Rev. Jesse Evans, a native of Virginia. The latter was reared and
educated in his native state and there wedded Priscilla Cade, who was
born in Ohio. On leaving the Old Dominion, he removed (page 568)
to Illinois and in 1840 came to Iowa, locating in Davis county, where
he followed farming for a time. Later he engaged in business in
Bloomfield and in 1854 came to Taylor county, establishing the second
store in the village of Bedford. He became a prominent figure in
community affairs and was a pioneer preacher of the Methodist Episcopal
church in Taylor county. He served two or more terms as probate
judge and also as postmaster of Bedford, taking an active interest in
all matters of public moment. He continued a resident of that village
for twenty-five years and then removed to Oregon, where his remaining
years were passed.
Coming to Iowa in infancy, A. P. Evans was here reared and acquired
his education in the common schools of Bedford. He remained at home
until twenty-one years of age, when, hearing and heeding his country's
call for aid, he joined the Fourth Iowa Volunteer Infantry as a member
of the regimental band in the fall of 1861 and served until discharged
on account of disability, the whole band being mustered out in 1862.
Returning to his home he clerked in the post office until 1864, and in
that year, deciding to try his fortune in the west, he went to California,
where he engaged in the manufacture of lumber and also in mining for about
four years. At the expiration of that period he returned east by
way of Nicaragua and New York. After arriving home he clerked in
a store in Bedford for some time and then established a hardware store
in that village, being engaged in this line of business for about
sixteen years. He was very successful in this undertaking, being
accorded a large and lucrative patronage, and he was recognized as one
of the leading business men of the town. In 1886, however, he sold
his hardware interests in Bedford and purchased a farm on section 35,
Bedford township, where he now makes his home. He later added to
his holdings until at present his home farm consists of four hundred and
twenty acres, the property adjoining the Taylor county fair grounds.
He has greatly improved the place, erecting upon it a large and attractive
residence and two substantial barns, while he has also set out a fine
orchard of fruit trees. Aside from general farming he devotes much
time to the raising and feeding of stock, the high grade of which insures
a ready sale upon the market.
On the 3d of June, 1869, in Bedford, Mr. Evans was united in marriage
to Miss Sarah Fordyce, a daughter of Alfred Fordyce her birth occurring
in Pennsylvania, where she was reared and educated. In their family
are two children, namely: Edna V., the wife of B. E. Paschal, a business
man of Ingersoll, Oklahoma; and George R., who married Mabel Archer, a
daughter of Dr. Archer of Bedford.
Mr. Evans still has a large number of friends in Bedford and is well
known in financial circles of that town as the vice-president and also
a stockholder and director of the Citizens Bank of Bedford. He is
a member of the Baptist church and formerly belonged to the Masonic lodge
but was recently demitted. His political allegiance is given to
the republican party, upon which ticket he was elected township trustee
and also a member of the city council, and he has been closely identified
with school interests for several years. Coming to Iowa when he
had scarcely completed his first year, almost his entire life has been
spent in Taylor county, where he has witnessed the work of transformation
that has been steadily and rapidly carried on, converting Bedford, which
at the time of his arrival consisted of only a few log cabins into a city
with all the semblance of a (page 569) growing and flourishing town.
During his early residence here the people used to take up a collection
and hire some one to go to Hawleyville for mail, as a post office had
not been established in Bedford. Mr. Evans brought the first mail
directed to the town. He has at all times borne his full share in
the work of improvement and development and is recognized as one of the
public-spirited citizens of this community. Upright and honorable
in all of his dealings with his fellowmen, he has gained the confidence,
respect and good will of all with whom he has been associated.
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