James A. Evans
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James Armstrong Evans (1827–1887) was a British-born
civil engineer A civil engineer is a person who practices civil engineering – the application of planning, designing, constructing, maintaining, and operating infrastructure while protecting the public and environmental health, as well as improving existing i ...
who was part of the effort to build the Union Pacific railroad to Promontory Point, Utah in 1869. Evans was present at the
Golden spike The golden spike (also known as the last spike) is the ceremonial 17.6-Carat (purity), karat gold final Rail spike, spike driven by Leland Stanford to join the rails of the first transcontinental railroad across the United States connecting t ...
ceremony on May 10, 1869, connecting the Central Pacific and
Union Pacific The Union Pacific Railroad is a Class I freight-hauling railroad that operates 8,300 locomotives over routes in 23 U.S. states west of Chicago and New Orleans. Union Pacific is the second largest railroad in the United States after BNSF, ...
railroads at
Promontory Summit, Utah Territory Promontory is an area of high ground in Box Elder County, Utah, United States, 32 mi (51 km) west of Brigham City and 66 mi (106 km) northwest of Salt Lake City. Rising to an elevation of 4,902 feet (1,494 m) above s ...
. Evans was also in the Russell photograph of the same date Haycox Jr, Ernest. "'A very exclusive party'." Montana; The Magazine of Western History 51.1 (2001): 20.


Early life and career

Evans was born on February 3, 1827, in
Dover Dover ( ) is a town and major ferry port in Kent, southeast England. It faces France across the Strait of Dover, the narrowest part of the English Channel at from Cap Gris Nez in France. It lies southeast of Canterbury and east of Maidstone. ...
,
England England is a Countries of the United Kingdom, country that is part of the United Kingdom. It is located on the island of Great Britain, of which it covers about 62%, and List of islands of England, more than 100 smaller adjacent islands. It ...
.Bruce, William George, ed. History of Milwaukee, City and County. Vol. 3. SJ Clarke Publishing Company, 1922. Accessed a

His brother John A. Evans, jr. born in 1852 in Pennsylvania, was also a civil engineer. In 1872, Evans then living in San Diego, California married Jessie Hunt Henriques (1846–1930) in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a descendant of Edward Howell. They had one child, Percy Henriques Evans (1873–1964).


Union Pacific Railroad

Evans was a division engineer and superintendent of construction in the building of the first transcontinental railway, the
Union Pacific Railroad The Union Pacific Railroad is a Railroad classes, Class I freight-hauling railroad that operates 8,300 locomotives over routes in 23 U.S. states west of Chicago and New Orleans. Union Pacific is the second largest railroad in the United Stat ...
(UPRR) for 1863 thru 1869.Savage, James Woodruff, John Thomas Bell, and Consul Willshire Butterfield. History of the City of Omaha, Nebraska. Munsell, 1894. In the summer of 1863, UPRR president Thomas C. Durant hired Evans along with J.E. House, Samuel B Reed, Percy T Brown and Ogden Edwards for conducting engineering surveys for a possible route to Salt Lake, Utah. Evans was responsible for the Green River to the eastern base of the Black Hills (now known as the Laramie Mountains) segment of the proposed route, a distance of almost 400 miles thru present-day Rawlins, Medicine Bow, Laramie and
Cheyenne, Wyoming Cheyenne ( or ) is the List of capitals in the United States, capital and List of municipalities in Wyoming, most populous city of the U.S. state of Wyoming. It is the county seat of Laramie County, Wyoming, Laramie County, with 65,132 reside ...
. The main challenge for Evans was crossing the
continental divide A continental divide is a drainage divide on a continent such that the drainage basin on one side of the divide feeds into one ocean or sea, and the basin on the other side either feeds into a different ocean or sea, or else is endorheic, not ...
between the latter two cities. In 1867, Evans had a survey party with an engineering assistant named L. L. Hills, working just east of Cheyenne was killed by a band of
Arapaho The Arapaho ( ; , ) are a Native American people historically living on the plains of Colorado and Wyoming. They were close allies of the Cheyenne tribe and loosely aligned with the Lakota and Dakota. By the 1850s, Arapaho bands formed t ...
on June 18, 1867. Percy T. Browne ("P. T. Browne") was shot by a band of Sioux warriors and died at LaClede Station also in June 1867. Evans also worked on the
Texas & Pacific Railroad The Texas and Pacific Railway Company (known as the T&P) was created by federal charter in 1871 with the purpose of building a southern transcontinental railroad between Marshall, Texas, and San Diego, California. However its lines never went we ...
, the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad, and other western railroad lines.


Works

* Union Pacific Railroad Company., Evans, J. A., & Durant, T. C. (1865). Report of Jas. A. Evans of exploration from Camp Wallach to Green River. New York: W.C. Bryant & Co., Printers. an
map
* Denver South Park and Pacific Railroad: Extension to the Gunnison Valley and anthacite iccoal fields of the Elk Mountains. (1880
map
* Denver, South Park, and Pacific Railroad Company., Evans, J. A., & Evans, J. (1880). Surveys of the line of the company's road (Leadville to Buena Vista in Chaffee and Lake Counties, Colorado). John Evans, President; James. A. Evans, Chief Engineer; March 10, 1880. * Denver, South Park, and Pacific Railroad., Evans, J. A., & Evans, J. (1882). Summit County branch of the Denver South Park and Pacific Railroad: From sta. 895 on Blue River to the crossing of Grand River. * Denver, South Park, and Pacific Railroa
map
(1883)


Death and interment

Evans died in Denver Colorado on December 26, 1887 and was interred on December 28, 1887, at Riverside Cemetery, also in Denver, Colorado.


Legacy

Several landmarks are named for Evans. *Evans Pass (now known as
Sherman, Wyoming Sherman is a ghost town in Albany County, Wyoming, United States. Sherman is southeast of Laramie in the Laramie Mountains and is named for Civil War and Indian Wars general William Tecumseh Sherman, purportedly at his request. From the 1860 ...
) ::In 1869, Albert D. Richardson then a correspondent for the New York Tribune wrote that at that time, Evans pass was ::''"...the highest railway point in the world -- eight thousand two hundred and forty feet above the sea. Still, it is not the backbone of the Rocky Mountains, but only of the (Laramie mountains), an outlying eastern range. The continental divide is two hundred miles further west and one thousand feet lower. ... Evan's Pass ... bears the name of its discoverer. ... The pass is in no sense a gorge or canyon -- but looks, topographically, like a vast rolling prairie disfigured by rocks and reached by a gentle ascent. Nor are the distant mountains on the north and south such slender peaks and pyramids as fanciful artists depict, but only low, irregular, broken ridges."'' *
Evanston, Wyoming Evanston is a city in and the county seat of Uinta County, Wyoming, United States. The population was 11,747 at the 2020 census. It is located near the border with Utah. History Evanston was named after James A. Evans, a civil engineer for th ...
* Evans Avenue, Cheyenne Wyoming


References

Sources * Athearn, R. G. (1971). Union Pacific country. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. * Dodge, Grenville Mellen. ''How We Built the Union Pacific Railway: And Other Railway Papers and Addresses.'' Vol. 447. US Government Printing Office, 1910. List of civil engineers on page 37 of 1910 material. * Galloway, John Debo. The First Transcontinental Railroad: Central Pacific, Union Pacific. Simmons-Boardman, 1950. Accessed a

* Heier, Jan Richard. "Building the Union Pacific Railroad: A study of mid-nineteenth-century railroad construction accounting and reporting practices." Accounting, Business & Financial History 19.3 (2009): 327–351. Accessed a


''The New York Civil List''
compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858) g. 109 and 441 for Senate districts; pg. 132 for senators; pg. 148f for Assembly districts; pg. 221ff for assemblymanfor Hurd's uncle Davis Hurd. * Klein, Maury. Union Pacific: 1862–1893. Vol. 1. U of Minnesota Press, 2006. {{DEFAULTSORT:Evans, James A. American civil engineers 1827 births 1887 deaths