| Dr. & Mrs. John M. Evans Sr.
Home
104 West Main Street, Evansville, WI 53536
Researched and Written by Ruth
Ann Montgomery

The building that is now the Masonic
Temple at 104 West Main was once the home of Evansville's namesake, Dr.
John M. Evans. Built in 1884, this beautiful High Victorian Gothic style
home replaced an earlier brick home Evans had built in 1850. Both buildings
used locally manufactured vermilion-colored brick. When the old house was
taken down, it was reported to be one of the oldest in the city.
In 1846, Dr. Evans, a young carpenter
turned physician, came to the small settlement along Allen's Creek called
"The Grove". He was poor, but determined to find a community where he could
use his new skills as a doctor. From 1846, until 1903 when he died, Evans
lived in Evansville, with the exception of a few months in Janesville and
four years that he served in the 13th Volunteer Wisconsin Infantry during
the Civil War. He watched as every house, school and church was built and
took a personal interest in the success of the community.
His story begins years before.
Evans was born in February 13, 1819 in Rutland County, Vermont. He was
one of five children born to Calvin and Penelope Goodrich Evans. When John
was fifteen, his mother died. His father remarried and moved with
his new wife to La Porte, Indiana. For about more four years, young
John Evans lived with his maternal grandparents, the Allen Goodrich's near
Benton, Vermont.
In the late 1830s, other Evans family
members moved west during the settlement period in Indiana. John's brother,
Jason, moved to LaPorte, Indiana and with his father, Calvin, operated
the La Porte Hotel.
In November 1838, Jason wrote to
John who was still living with his grandparents in Benton,
Vermont. Jason urged John to come west. "Land sales commence
next Friday, then we shall be full all the while. This is a very pleasant
place and if you and Sarah and Martha (sisters of John and Jason) were
out here we should be happy. You must come out here as soon as you can."
At the age of 19, John decided to
join his father, his step-mother, Anna, and his brother, Jason, in La Porte.
John traveled by stage coach. Along the way he became sick and had
to stay in Ohio for a few days. John's journey from Vermont to Indiana
took nearly two weeks.
John found a job as a carpenter's
apprentice. After spending three years in the building trades, he was advised
by a doctor to find another occupation. Carpentery was very strenuous and
John suffered from severe pain in one of his hips.
Seeking a new line of work, Evans
entered the new La Porte Medical College run by Dr. Daniel Meeker. When
John enrolled in the school in 1842 there were 12 men in the first class
taught by Dr. Meeker. In 1846, after four years of study, Evans was a member
of the first class to graduate from the school. The La Porte Medical College
existed only a few years, then merged with Rush Medical College in Chicago.
After graduation, Evans began looking
for a suitable place to begin his practice. The young medical school graduate
purchased medicine in La Porte, loaded it into his saddle bags and traveled
by horse to Chicago. In this emerging city, he purchased more medical supplies
and spent $18 for books on surgery, midwifery and children's illnesses.
Evans then headed west to Freeport, Illinois. Not satisfied with the opportunities
in Freeport, he decided to follow some of his Indiana friends to Wisconsin.
John Evans arrived at the settlement
near Allen's Creek that was called "The Grove" for the large stand of oak
trees located in the heart of what would later become Evansville. The young
doctor found one frame house, owned by Henry Spencer; one log school-house
and one double log-cabin owned by Amos Kirkpatrick.
Living quarters were in short supply
and since there were no other rooms available Evans was invited to live
at the Henry Spencer home. Spencer had built the first frame house in 1845
which was located along the top of the hill on what is now Mill Street.
Henry's wife, Margaret, would later
tell Dr. Evans, "I remember well when you lived with me, and your riding
from morning till night. You had a hard time. I was sorry for you, but
I could not help you only to give you needs."
The Spencer's allowed Evans to use
their upstairs as an office. Since there were few people in the new settlement
and others were spread out across the countryside, Evans rode his horse
from homestead to homestead to care for the sick.
It was not easy for a young man to
come into a new territory and make a living as a physician. Most people
used the barter method to get goods and service, or purchased on credit
until crops or animals could be sold.
Country doctors were often paid in
goods rather than cash. Dr. Evans' own supplies of medicine and other supplies
were purchased on credit from pharmacists in La Porte, Indiana.
Evans stayed with the Spencers for
two years, then bought a house that stood on the south east corner of Main
and Madison Streets from Henry Spencer's brother, Lewis. In May 1848, Evans
gave Lewis Spencer $375 for an acre of land and a small house that faced
Main Street. (This house was later moved to Liberty Street). Lewis Spencer
held a mortgage for the entire amount.
Evans quickly earned the trust of
the community. Soon after he arrived, many people became sick with a fever
that was thought to be caused by rotting grass from the sod turned over
by plowing the prairies. His remedy was to give them quinine.
The young doctor rode day and night
to care for his patients and did not have enough quinine to give all of
those who needed it. So many people were sick, that there were few able
bodied enough to help those who were ill.
Many gave young Dr. Evans credit
for saving the lives of those who survived the fever. By the
time the epidemic subsided, Evans was a local hero, known for his kindness
and tender care for his patients.
When a post office was established
in 1849, the citizens named it Evansville, in honor of their new doctor.
To help with the household duties,
the bachelor doctor invited his sister, Sarah, to live with him. Evans
had so many patients that he soon needed assistance and employed
two apprentices, William Quivey and Egbert Winston.
In September 1849, he sent the two
young men to La Porte for medical training. Quivey later returned to Evansville
and practiced with Dr. Evans. Egbert Winston also practiced medicine in
the Evansville and in the Albany area.
With a successful practice established,
the young bachelor doctor decided to build a new house. In 1850,
Evans purchased land on West Main Street from Henry Spencer. The 10-acre
site was one of the prettiest in town and included a portion of the village's
original oak grove. Evans' property extended from West Main north to the
mill pond.
Although the rough timbers for the
new house could be cut from oak logs at the local saw mill owned by Erastus
Quivey, the finishing lumber had to be transported to the site from Milwaukee
lumber yards. Evans purchased lumber, shingles and other building materials
from the St. Clair Lumber Yard in Milwaukee and the material was brought
to Evansville by wagon. Another early settler, Jacob West, manufactured
the brick for the house at his brick yard near Allen's creek.
The 1850 census taker recorded "farmer"
as the occupation of most men living in the vicinity. Only one carpenter
was listed, 30 year-old Lyman Nash, who may have helped Evans build his
new house. No records exist of the builder and since he already had skills
as a carpenter, Evans may have worked on the house himself.
The new house was a two-story intersecting-gabled
structure with one-story addition to the north and a large veranda facing
south. The large house was used for living quarters and Evans' medical
practice. A barn was built to accommodate the horses and grain storage.

Although the residence may have seemed
large for a single man to build, Dr. Evans had several members of his family
living with him. When the 1850 census was taken, the 30-year-old Evans
was listed as the head of the household that included his father and stepmother,
as well as his 29-year-old sister, Sarah, and a nephew, William Whitman.
William's age was listed as 4 and he was living with his uncle because
the young boy's mother, Martha Evans Whitman, had recently died of consumption.
The size of the household changed
in the early 1850s. John Evans' father, Calvin Evans, died in 1851. Dr.
Evans' stepmother, Anne, purchased a home further west on Main Street where
she lived until her death in 1877. John's sister, Sarah, married
and moved to Chicago.
Kindness to family and friends was
one the characteristics of young Dr. Evans. Although his own income was
uncertain, there is much evidence that Dr. Evans was generous with his
neighbors and willing to invest what little excess money he had help others.
When Erastus Quivey needed money
to purchase castings for his mill on Allen's Creek, Evans signed a note
to secure the loan. When Erastus' son, William, needed money to attend
La Porte Medical College and later Rush Medical College, Evans gave him
the funds.
His generosity and the fact that
a depressed economy in the early 1850s kept patients from being able to
pay him cash for his services, meant that Dr. Evans was often forced to
borrow money from others. His inability to meet his debts brought urgent
requests for payment of bills for medical supplies that he ahd purchased
on credit. Overdue bills plagued the young doctor throughout his early
career.
There were few social distractions
for the young doctor. While living in La Porte, he had joined the Masonic
Lodge. In 1851, he joined the Janesville chapter of Masons and in the next
few years was devoted to organizing an Evansville area group. The Union
Lodge of Masons was formed and Evans helped to consecrate the Lodge's hall
on October 5, 1852.
In 1857, he joined the Knights Templar
order of Masons in Janesville. Ironically, seventy years later, his home
at 104 West Main became the Masonic Lodge hall.
In the spring of 1853, another epidemic
broke out. This time it was small pox. Several cases had already been reported
in Janesville and Dr. Evans received a letter from residents in Magnolia
asking him to bring vaccine to help protect the children living in that
area.
His work in saving people from the
small pox epidemic enhanced his reputation as a doctor and the community
expressed their satisfaction by electing the young doctor to political
office. In 1853, the 33-year-old doctor received 168 votes and won the
election for assemblyman of the 2nd District of Wisconsin. The district
was one of four assembly districts in Rock County and included Avon, Spring
Valley, Plymouth, Magnolia, Porter, Newark and Union townships.
With his busy schedule, Evans still
found time to court his young sweetheart, Emma Clement, who lived in La
Porte, Indiana. Emma was born in 1821 in Erie, Pennsylvania and moved with
her family to La Porte, Indiana. John Evans and Emma were married in La
Porte, Indiana on June 1, 1854.
For a few months after their marriage
the couple lived in Janesville, where Evans entered a partnership with
Drs. Treat and St. John. By September 1855, the firm dissolved and Evans
and Emma moved back to Evansville. Once more took up residence in the brick
house on West Main Street.
Their first child, Elizabeth Emma,
was born on April 7, 1855. A second child, Annie Penelope, was born in
September 1856. When Annie died a month before her second birthday, Emma
was already pregnant with her third child, John M., who was born in November
1858.
In the fall of 1861, recruiters were
organizing a regiment of men to fight in the Civil War. Dr. Evans was persuaded
to go with the men from Evansville into the Wisconsin 13th Regiment. He
enlisted in October 1861 and became the surgeon for the Regiment that went
into camp at Janesville.
Evans served until March, 1865 when
he returned home. He had resigned due to ill health. The strain of caring
for the sick and dying had taken a hard toll on the doctor.
While he was in the south, other
doctors took over his practice in Evansville. Dr. William Quivey, the young
student Evans had helped in medical school, had completed his studies and
was practicing in Evansville. He lived in a house on West Main Street,
directly across the street from Dr. Evans.
In Evans' absence during the 1860s
several other doctors also started up practices. Dr. Egbert Winston opened
an office in 1862 and almost immediately began looking for a position in
another town because times were so hard in the Evansville area. Winston
was still a medical student in the winter time and needed a lucrative practice
to help pay his school costs. Dr. Evans generously loaned Winston the use
of his horse to use in his practice.
Another physician, Dr. Stephen E.
Robinson opened an office in early 1862, but he also found that the business
was not very lucrative. By November of that year, Robinson had decided
to go Iowa and establish a practice in new territory opening up for settlement.
It was no wonder the doctors were
anxious to move away from the village of Evansville. Jacob West had been
given the responsibility of collecting Dr. Evan's bills and everyone was
complaining of hard times. "Some of your claims are forever lost", West
wrote to Evans.
People still paid bills by the barter
system. Butter and cheese, corn and oats and even potatoes were offered
in lieu of cash to pay doctor bills. The doctor found his army salary to
be a great benefit. In letters to his wife, he commented that although
his pay in the army was not great, at least he did not have to beg for
the money the way he did when he tried to collect from his patients at
home.
For a short period of time, while
Dr. Evans served with the 13th Regiment in the south, Emma Evans took the
two children to LaPorte, Indiana and lived near relatives. George Backenstoe,
a painter who had recently lived in the nearby village of Cooksville, offered
to rent Dr. Evans' home while Emma and her children visited in Indiana.
Emma Evans frequently wrote to her
husand and told him about Evansville's growth during the Civil War. She
told him that new houses were being built and older houses were moved to
make room for new ones on West Main Street.
Henry Spencer had sold his hotel
and his house on Mill Street and in 1863, built a new house on a lot west
of Dr. Evans' home on Main Street. To make room for more spacious dwellings
some houses were moved. Dr. Quivey's house was sold to a Mr. Plaisted and
moved to a site near Dr. Evan's stepmother's house on West Main. At the
corner of Main and Fourth Street, the Semans house stood in the way of
a road improvement and was moved ten rods north of its original location.
Trees in "The Grove" that had once
extended north and west of the main intersection of Madison and Main Streets
were cut down to make room for the new building sites in the business and
residential areas. New houses and barns were built in the village that
had been named Evansville in 1855. Progress could be seen on every street.
Dr Evans' letters to his wife and
her correspondence with him during that period reveal much of the history
of Evansville and their own personal history. Emma begged him to come home
and he patiently said no because he was needed with the regiment. He made
every effort to take care of her financial needs through his business agent,
Jacob West and even arranged a visit for his wife and children to his army
camp.
A rare look at some housekeeping
techniques was found in one of Emma Evan's letter to her husband. She wrote
that moths had invaded the parlor carpet and to rid the house of the pests,
the carpet was removed. Then the floor was thoroughly swept and washed
with scalding water. Ground cloves, pepper and snuff were rubbed into the
cracks of the floor.
Emma was also troubled by mice that
invaded the pantry. On a more pleasant note, she wrote that the strawberries
were blossoming. The cow was giving good milk and was sleek and fat.
Dr. Evans returned home from the
Civil War to find a changed community. Not only were there more houses,
but the long awaited railroad line between Evansville and Beloit had been
completed in 1863. Dr. Evans had helped to support this project.
In 1862, Evansville promoters of
the Beloit-Madison line sent urgent requests to Dr. Evans at his regimental
post asking him to purchase stock in the railroad. Dr. Evans responded
with his usual willingness to help his fellow townsmen. Evans had to mortgage
property to buy the railroad stock.
The population of Evansville was
near 500 people by 1865. The business district had nearly doubled in size.
A cheese factory, planing mill, blacksmiths shops and other businesses
had opened in Evansville. There were three stores, two hotels and a large
livery barn. The grain mill had a new owner who was digging a new mill
race for a deeper fall of water that would increase the mill's power.
When Dr. Evans returned home from
the Civil War, he joined Dr. Charles M. Smith and his former apprentice,
William Quivey, in the drug store business. In August 1865, they built
a new brick store on the southeast corner of Main and Madison streets and
hired Daniel Lovejoy, another veteran, to clerk in the store. The doctors
continued their medical practices and Lovejoy acted as pharmacist. The
drug store also had a soda fountain for summer time refreshments.
Dr. Evans now took up the cause of
promoting the welfare of the soldiers who had served in the Civil War.
In 1866, he was chosen as one of the state delegates to attend the Soldiers
Convention in Pittsburg. The veterans hoped to find jobs for the disabled,
support widows and children of those who had died in defense of their country.
That same year, the first Evansville
newspaper, The Citizen, owned by Isaac Hoxie, began publication. Later
Hoxie changed the name of the paper to the Evansville Review. With the
publication of the first paper, the little village at last had a public
voice to record its history. Dr. Evans began to advertise immediately and
Hoxie responded by picking up interesting news items about the Evans'.
By 1870, Dr. Evans was 50 years old
and was leading a more comfortable lifestyle than he had during the early
years of his practice. Though he was by no means wealthy, Evans could afford
some of the services other businessmen were enjoying.
Evansville's doctors had owned and
cared for their own horses but by 1870 there were several livery stables
in town. The firm of Evans and Smith decided to let others take care of
their horses, carriages and robes. The doctors sold their buggies and animals
to the local liveries and hired the stable owners to take them on house
calls. The doctors advertised that they would still maintain their very
extensive ride, but they would no longer have to care for the horses and
vehicles.
In 1872, Dr. Evans once again ran
for the state assembly. He ran as the Democratic candidate, although he
claimed that he did not agree with all of their principles. The campaign
was filled with mud-slinging. Evans' opponent, David L. Mills, was said
to have been in league with the liquor interests and Evans was accused
of being opposed to the temperance movement.
Dr. Evans' personal character was
attacked by his political enemies. His partner, C. M. Smith, a staunch
Republican, openly opposed Evans' nomination and supported Mills. It was
the end of their business relationship and the partnership of J. M. Evans
and C. M. Smith dissolved in October 1872. Patients of Dr. Evans worried
that he could not longer attend to his duties as a physician if he was
serving in the legislature.
In 1873, the Evans house was featured
in the Rock County Atlas. A drawing gave an artist's rendition of the structure.
It seemed only fitting that such a prominent physician should be recognized
in a promotional atlas that sang the praises of the prosperity of the county.
The home was the site of many pleasant
events that were held in the Grove north of the Evans house. In 1874, the
grounds were cleared for a picnic and there were games of croquet, boat
riding on the mill pond and other festivities to mark the day. People from
town and country came to the celebration planned by D. C. Griswold and
J. C. Sharp. Ice water was provided on the grounds.

His children were growing up. Lizzie
graduated in 1874 from the Evansville Seminary. John, Jr. graduated in
1876 from Evansville high school and went to Rush Medical College in Chicago
to train to become a physician. When school was not in session, John, Jr.
worked with his father.
In 1877, Lizzie was married in her
parent's home. Her husband, DeWitt C. Griswold, was a young druggist and
medical student who had come to Evansville in 1872. He worked in the Pioneer
Drug Store operated by Evans and Smith and was hired on the recommendation
of Dr. C. M. Smith..
Griswold started out as a clerk and
later became a partner in the drug store business. He courted Lizzie and
they were married. They had one child, a son, Roy.
In 1881, Griswold sold his interest
in the business back to Evans and moved his family east. DeWitt and Lizzie's
marriage was troubled and did not last. They were divorced in January 1886.
Lizzie and her son, Roy, returned to Evansville to live with her parents
when the marriage ended.
Census records give a snapshot view
of the economic life of a family. The 1880 census was taken in the summer
of that year and J. M. Evans was reported to have 14 acres of land, 3 horses
and 1 cow. He had four acres in corn and 1/2 acre in potatoes.
Newspaper "personals" give a view
of the social life of the Evans'. In the summer of 1880, Evans' grove to
the north of the house was once again used for the 4th of July community
picnic. The organizers put up a stand for the political and patriotic speakers
who addressed the crowd that gathered. The Evans' lawn provided the site
for other entertainments including Evansville Cornet Band concerts and
ice cream socials.
The difficulties of a country doctor's
practice included the hazards of weather. In 1881, southern Wisconsin was
the scene of a terrible blizzard. Roads were blocked by snow but Dr. Evans
still tried to make house calls to the sick. When Dr. Evans and his driver,
Charley Winship tried to make their way through the drifts to the Searles
farm, drifts were higher than the horses' backs and the sled got stuck.
The doctor and Winship had to dig their way out several times before they
were able to get to the farm so the doctor could tend to the sick.
On June 1, 1882, John and Emma Evans
celebrated their 28th wedding anniversary in their home. Their friend and
fellow pioneer, Daniel Johnson, gave a speech on the occassion and the
Evans' served cofee and cake to their many friends. The Evansville Review
noted that their friends had presented the Evans' with a set of chinaware
and $18.50. In the 1880s it was common for the local newspaper to print
a list of gifts received for weddings and anniversaries.
Prosperity was the reward Dr. Evans
and Emma had hoped for and a large beautiful house was one of the signs
of a successful business life. At the age of 64, Evans began to make plans
to rebuild his 1850s home. In May 1884, the Evansville Review reported
that the Evans house was being dismantled so that a new one could be built
in a style "more comfortable and convenient" for the aging physician and
his wife.
This time the Evans' chose a style
of architecture that was unique compared to other Evansville houses. The
only other building in Evansville similar in style was the Methodist Church.
The Gothic Revival style featured
steeply pitched roofs with steep cross gables. The doors and windows had
brick moldings and a rounded keystone arch. Carpenters installed wooden
hoods above the windows and doors with dentils at the base of a crown-like
design. The front center gable was lighted with a Palladian window in the
attic and decorated with a cut-work wood piece at the apex of the gable.
The masons incorporated the old brick
from the house that was dismantled and used new brick manufactured in Evansville.
Although the village of Evansville had no water works system, the Evans
designed a plan for running water in their home. The bedrooms had sinks
with faucets. The water was supplied from two large rainwater tanks in
the attic.
Improvements in the house and modern
conveniences were added over the next few years. A small one-story porch
was added to the home in 1885. The following year, a phone was installed
between Evans' drug store on the corner of Main and Madison and his home
at the corner of West Main and First Street.
John M. Evans, Jr. completed medical
school and joined his father in practice in the early 1884. He continued
to live at home until he was married in the fall of 1885 to Mae Johnson,
the daughter of Reuben Johnson, a pioneer farmer.
With his son established in his medical
practice, Dr. John M. Evans and Emma were finally able to enjoy some leisure
activties. Although he continued to practice medicine, at the age of 69,
Dr. Evans entrusted his patients to his son for brief periods of time and
took well deserved vacations.
The Evansville Review reported in
the summer of 1889 that John and Emma traveled with Mr. & Mrs. Daniel
Johnson, Mr. & Mrs. C. H. Wilder and Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Winston
to Yellowstone National Park. They boarded the train in Evansville for
the trip. Later that same year, Dr. Evans and several of his fellow club
members went to a National Knights Templar meeting in Washington D. C.

The doctor suffered from rheumatism,
as many Civil War veterans did. He frequently traveled to a resort in Mt.
Clemmens, Michigan to try to relieve the disability. However, he did not
let his physical problems keep him from being active in promoting public
improvements.
With several other prominent Evansville
men, Dr. Evans pushed for a water works system to create better sanitary
conditions in Evansville. The project was put on the ballot for village
voters in 1892 and the voters rejected the $25,000 proposal because it
would raise taxes. As with many civic projects that were proposed, the
cost rose dramatically when the improvements were delayed. The water system
was finally approved in 1902, just ten years later, and the cost was nearly
double the 1892 proposal.
In 1893, the two Doctor Evans' built
a small two-story addition at the south end of their drug store to use
as a hospital. They named it the Evansville Sanitarium. While the senior
Evans had all but retired from practice, he added his name to the roster
to strengthen the public's trust in the facility. The adminstration of
the hospital was in the hands of Dr. John M. Evans, Jr.
Evansville continued to grow and
large houses were built by many of the businessmen that moved to Evansville.
To accommodate the growth, the pasture behind Dr. Evan's house and barn
was subdivided in the early 1890s and became blocks 1 and 2 of the Evans
addition. Blocks 1 and 2 were separated by Garfield Street. Eleven building
lots were in block 1 of the addition, including the home of Dr. Evans.
Eight building lots were in the block 2, running north from Garfield Street.
The first to purchase building lots
were John P. Porter and Dr. John M. Evans, Jr. In 1893, the two men had
large new homes built on the vacant lots fronting on West Main Street.
The following year, Mary and Robert Antes purchased a lot facing North
First Street.
The population of Evansville continued
to grow and the voters decided Evansville should become a city. In 1896,
Dr. Evans was honored by his fellow residents and chosen as Evansville's
first mayor.
The following year he received another
honor for his eighteen years of service as the Evansville school district
treasurer. His thoughtfulness and affectionate interest in children and
the kindness to women teachers and women on the school board was praised
by Mrs. Minnie Savage.
Three local newspapers, the Badger,
the Enterprise and the Tribune, supported Dr. Evans. The editors thought
it was appropriate for the first mayor to be the namesake of the community.
They praised Evans for his devotion and service to the community. At the
first council meeting, Evans was presented with a gavel made from pieces
of an apple tree that had once been planted on the grounds of his home.
As the turn of the century neared,
many of the old settlers had either moved away, died or were in their final
years. John Evans' beloved wife, Emma Clement Evans, had been married to
the doctor for nearly 45 years when she died in 1899.
Emma had also earned the love and
respect of her fellow townsmen. Her obituary listed her achievements, "a
tireless worker and supporter in the Episcopalian congregation". She left
her devoted husband, her daughter, Lizzie and son John, Jr. to mourn her.
Her grandson, Roy Griswold, was also named as a survivor, in the obituary.
The funeral was held in the house.
The Evans home at the northwest
corner of First and Main Street 1900
Lizzie and her son continued to live
with her father in Evansville until 1902, when she remarried. Her second
marriage also took place at the Evans home on West Main Street. Dr. Ed
L. Cary of Whitewater was the bridegroom. Her son, Roy Griswold was one
of the attendants. An orchestra from Janesville was hired to provided music
for the festive occasion.
Dr. Evans survived his wife by just
four years. He died in 1903. His obituary described him as a man of genial
nature; quiet and unassuming in manner; courteous and gentlemanly in deportment.
He was the last surviving charter member of the Masonic lodge formed in
Evansville in the 1850s.
The Grand Army of Republic post took
charge of the service and stood guard over the body, first at the house,
and later at the Episcopal Church. The Masonic order took the remains to
the church for the funeral service. The Episcopal Bishop of Milwaukee,
Bishop Nicholson, assisted the local rector and others in performing the
service at the church. The Grace Episcopal choir of Madison, joined the
local church choir in singing for the service.
P. C. Wilder, Mayor of Evansville,
gave the following tribute; "Dr. J. M. Evans; Patriot of Nation, Godfather
to Evansville: Respected by business associates; honored by our people;
adored by all the children has gone to his reward."
Dr. John M. Evans and his two
grandchildren ca. 1900
Lizzie Evans Griswold Cary was living
in California and when the estate was settled, the house was put in John
M. Evans, Jrs. name. Lizzie received other compensation from the estate.
John Jr. had built a house next door
but had sold it in 1903 and moved in with his father so that he could care
for him. John, Jr.and his wife, continued to live in the house until his
death in January 1918. May Johnson Evans then sold the contents of the
house and eventually moved to Cleveland, Ohio to be with her daughter,
Mrs. Robert Harris
In 1921 the Masonic Lodge purchased
the Evans house at the northwest corner of Main and First streets. They
made plans to enlarge the north wing of the building and tore off the old
brick north wing.
In 1922, a new two-story brick addition,
33 x 55 feet, was built. The wing included a dining room and auditorium
on the first floor. The second story was to be used for lodge meetings.
The lodge installed a new steam heating
system and laid hardwood floors in the new addition. A large fireplace
with a beautiful mahogany mantle was built on the north wall of the north
wing.
The main part of the Evans house
was used for parlors and club rooms for the Masons and the Eastern Star.
A conservative value of $30,000 was placed on the 1922 improvements to
the building.
The responsibility for the contract
and overseeing the project was in the hands of lodge members Lev Frantz,
J. W. Ames and V. A. Axtell. The Masons also added a large porch and furnished
it with wicker chairs.
The Evansville Review called the
new Masonic Temple a credit to Evansville. "Union Lodge, now has a home
which for size, comfort and beauty and value is surpassed by few buildings
of its kind in the state, having now a brick temple, which will last for
generations to come."
By the late 1960s, the large porch
had deteriorated and needed repair, the Masons decided to restore the original
smaller porch. Local building contractor, Roger Thompson, built a new porch
similar to the size and design a porch shown in a photograph of the house
taken in 1900. Stains showing the outline of the larger porch remained
on the south wall of the building.
The house at 104 West Main Street
is a stately reminder of the homes that were built by Evansville's prominent
families. The home of Evansville's first doctor has served as a home for
the Union Lodge No. 32 and the Eastern Star for more than 75 years. The
adaptive reuse of this building as a meeting place for the Masonic Lodge
and Eastern Star has preserved the integrity of the building for future
generations. |