Education
After the end of hostilities he returned to Cambridge and graduated in 1922.
After the end of hostilities he returned to Cambridge and graduated in 1922.
Born in Neath in 1894, Evans left Wales to study at Street Catharine"s College, Cambridge. He returned to Neath during his vacations where he played for the Neath Rugby Club. The outbreak of the First World War prevented Evans completing his university education and he was posted at Gallipoli.
He returned to Wales and became English master and rugby coach of Cardiff High School.
He was a director of the Cardiff Arms Park Company and was a freeman of Haverfordwest. In 1948 Evans would replace fellow Neath stalwart, Walter East. Rees, as secretary of the Welsh Rugby Union, after acting as honorary assistant secretary for the previous two years.
In his first season as secretary he brought clear administration and a sense of professionalism. During his first Christmas in charge he returned nearly a hundred gifts from various donors who were hoping for some consideration in the distribution of international tickets.
In 1923 he was one of the founding members of the Welsh Secondary Schools Rugby Union (WSSRU), to which the turn in fortune in Welsh rugby in the 1930s is attributed. Evans was a popular choice having been a member of the union for the last twenty one years and proving through his connections with the WSSRU his commitment to the advancement of the Welsh game.