TROUP COUNTY, GA - BIOS W.S. Evans Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Typed by Carla Miles Table of Contents page: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/troup.htm Georgia Table of Contents: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/gafiles.htm Memoirs of Georgia, Vol. II, Atlanta, Ga., pages 917-918 Published by The Southern Historical Association in 1895 TROUP COUNTY W.S. Evans, farmer, LaGrange, Troup Co., Ga., son of Thomas C. and Rhoda B. (Swanson) Evans, was born in Georgia in 1838. His father was born and raised in Edgefield district, S.C., and came to Georgia sometime in the twenties, when a young man. He was a captain during the Indian war of 1836, and was with the forces which escorted and guarded the Cherokees on their way to their new home. He was a party to the contract to convey the Indians from Georgia; and after the treaty he was selected to settle with and pay the Indians for their lands. While thus engaged he ate, and held councils with them in their wigwams, securing their friendship and confidence. He was fond of military display and life, and for years was a general of the local militia, when to hold the office was no insignificant local distinction. In 1843 he came to Troup county, soon after which he was elected sheriff, holding the office several years to the entire satisfaction of the people. In 1856 he was elected ordinary of Troup county and held the office until he died, in 1857. He was a member of the masonic fraternity. Mr. Evans was reared and educated at the common schools in Troup county, and had entered the university of Georgia when his father died, and he had to abandon his college course. In April 1861, he enlisted as a private in the LaGrange Light guards - the first company that left LaGrange - which afterward became Company B, Fourth Georgia regiment. Not long after the regiment went to the field he was elected lieutenant; and the officers of the Twiggs county volunteers and the West Point guards having been captured, the command of these forces devolved on him. He was in all the engagements in which his company bore an honorable and conspicuous part, among them - King’s School-house; Malvern Hill; Sharpsburg; Second Manassas; Morton’s Ford; the Gettysburg campaign; the fights around Richmond; Cold Harbor, and Monocacy, where he lost his right leg. At one time during his service he crossed the Potomac three times with his company, and was wounded each time. At Sharpsburg he was shot in the head and left on the field for dead; but he recovered consciousness and rejoined his command. At the battle of Monocacy, July 9, 1864, when he lost his leg, he was captured, but was soon exchanged and came home, and as soon as he was able resumed farming. In 1888 he was appointed postmaster at LaGrange by President Cleveland, and retained the office several months during President Harrison’s administration. Mr. Evans stands very high with his fellow citizens as a man of stern integrity and uprightness of character. Mr. Evans was married in 1866 to Miss Maggie, daughter of Walker and Margaret (McCalley) Dunson, native Georgians. To them seven children have been born: Lucy Lee, Mary Virginia, Maggie, Ruth, Willie, Thomas C., and Frank T. The mother, who was an exemplary member of the Methodist church, died Aug. 10, 1891. It is a singular coincidence that all their children were born on Sunday but one, and that on was born on Saturday night. Mr. Evans is a Knight of Honor - was made a master Mason as soon as he was of full age, and is now a royal arch Mason. Himself and all his children are members of the Methodist church.