BIOGRAPHY: John Evans, Mifflin County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by P. S. Barr Copyright. All rights reserved. http://files.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/mifflin/ _______________________________________________ The Commemorative Biographical Encyclopedia of the Juniata Valley, Comprising the Counties of Huntingdon, Mifflin, Juniata, and Perry, Pennsylvania. Chambersburg, Pa.: J. M. Runk & Co., 1897, Volume 1, 436-437. JOHN EVANS, Lewistown, Mifflin county, Pa., was born near Belleville, Union township, Mifflin county, Pa., on March 7, 1807. He is the son of John and Catharine (Duff) Evans. To his parents were born eleven children: Mary (Mrs. John Zook); Elizabeth (Mrs. Jacob Zook); Daniel; Samuel; Ann (Mrs. Henry Fagan); Katy (Mrs. James Ritchie); John; Naomi (Mrs. Dennis Coder); Obed; Cornelius; and Israel Walker. The honoured parents of Mr. Evans lived to a ripe age, his father dying at the age of seventy-four, and his mother at ninety-three. His mother was a daughter of Cornelius Duff, who through most of the years of the war of the Revolution was a soldier in the American army, and also served under Gen. Anthony Wayne in his campaign against the Indians of the West. After selling his farms in Mifflin county and buying in Barre township, Huntingdon county, Pa., John Evans, Sr., on April 5, 1814, removed with his family to the latter place. The son spent his boyhood on the farm, receiving his education in the "subscription schools" of the day. When eighteen years of age he took charge of the farm for his father, and continued in this occupation until he was twenty. Remote from the markets, and not satisfied with the necessarily meager returns to farming, he removed in May, 1827, to Lewistown, and entered on an apprenticeship of three years with Samuel J. Stewart at the trade of painting and paper-hanging. Purchasing from his employer the last few weeks of his time, in the spring of 1830, he established himself in business, adding thereto the manufacture of chairs, and pursued with success his chosen occupation until the year 1872, when he retired from active business pursuits. On May 12, 1831, John Evans, Jr., was united in wedlock with Amelia, who was born December 9, 1810, daughter of Benjamin and Elizabeth (Brannan) Major, and granddaughter of Peacock and Amy (Barton) Major. Her grandfather, Peacock Major, was a lieutenant in the Pennsylvania Flying Camp of the war of the Revolution, 1776, and subsequently served in other organizations of the American army of the period. Unto Mr. and Mrs. Evans were born eight children. Of these two survive: Rev. William Wilson Evans, D.D., now presiding elder of the Harrisburg district, Central Pennsylvania Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church; and Catharine Amelia, wife of Edward Frysinger, of Lewistown, Pa. Their deceased children are: four who died in early infancy; Mary Steele, wife of Hiram Willis Junkin; and Agnes Major. In her girlhood, Mrs. Evans became a member of the Methodist Episcopal church at Lewistown, Pa., and Mr. Evans united with that communion in 1830. On July 10, 1888, the beloved wife and mother ended a sweet and lovely earthly life in the holy triumph of the Christian faith. Now past the age of ninety, Mr. Evans, with his mental faculties quite unimpaired, highly esteemed and venerated, cheerful and happy in spirit and mien, lives among the grandchildren of that generation in which he was numbered when he came to Lewistown in 1827. Besides himself, of the male population of Lewistown when he removed thereto, only two survive, and they were little children at that time, aged respectively two and four years. Mr. Evans has six surviving grandchildren: John Evans Junkin, Esq., of Sterling, Kan.; William Willis Junkin, optician, of Erie, Pa.; Mrs. Margaret Amelia (Junkin), wife of Mr. Means J. McCoy, of Lewistown, Pa.; Mary Evans, wife of Prof. Edward Bennett Rosa, Ph. D., of Wesleyan University, Middletown, Conn.; Frysinger Evans, esq., of Philadelphia, Pa.; and Agnes Frysinger, of Lewistown, Pa. He has five great-grandsons: three, the sons of John Evans Junkin, Esq., and two, the sons of Mr. William Willis Junkin.