Career
He also served as United States. Commissioner of Pensions from 1897 to 1902, and as United States. consul to London from 1902 to 1905. A supporter of progressive causes such as the Lodge Bill, Evans frequently found himself at odds with the Southern Democrat-controlled state legislature. He also consistently quarreled with fellow Tennessee Republicans, initially Congressman Leonidas C. Houk, and later the faction led by Congressman Walter P. Brownlow.
Brownlow helped thwart Evans"s bid for the vice presidential nomination at the 1896 Republican National Convention.
Evans was also active in local politics in his adopted hometown of Chattanooga, where he championed education. He served two terms as Mayor of Chattanooga (1882–1883), and in his later years served as the city"s Commissioner of Education.
He attended the common schools, a business school in Madison, and graduated from a business school at Chicago in 1861. During the Civil War, Evans enlisted on May 6, 1864, as a corporal in Company A, 41st Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry and served until he was discharged as a quartermaster sergeant on September 24, 1864.
Foreign a year, he was an agent with the quartermaster department in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
He then spent some time in Texas and New New York In 1870 Evans returned to Chattanooga and engaged in the manufacture of freight cars. Elected mayor in 1881, he served two terms.
He organized the public-school system of Chattanooga and served as first school commissioner.
From 1884 to 1885 he worked as cashier of Chattanooga"s First National Bank. Evans became president of the Chattanooga Carolina and Foundry Company and remained principal owner until 1917.
Elected as a Republican to the Fifty-first Congress, Evans served from March 4, 1889 to March 3, 1891. He was not a successful candidate for reelection in 1890 to the Fifty-second Congress and was First Assistant Postmaster General from 1891 to 1893.
He was appointed Commissioner of Pensions April 1, 1897, and served until May 13, 1902, when he resigned to enter the diplomatic service.
Appointed United States consul general to London, England on May 9, 1902, Evans resigned from that position in 1905. He was chosen commissioner of health and education of Chattanooga in 1911. Evans died from heart disease in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on December 12, 1921 (age 78 years, 177 days).
He is interred at Forest Hills Cemetery, Saint Elmo, Chattanooga, Tennessee.