Background
Evins was a native of the Blend Community of DeKalb County, Tennessee, the son of James Edgar Evins and Myrtie Goodson Evins. His father was a Tennessee state senator and a successful local businessman.
United States representative politician
Evins was a native of the Blend Community of DeKalb County, Tennessee, the son of James Edgar Evins and Myrtie Goodson Evins. His father was a Tennessee state senator and a successful local businessman.
Joe L. Evins graduated from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee in 1933 and the Cumberland School of Law in Lebanon, Tennessee in 1934, as well as The George Washington University.
He was admitted to the bar in that same year and began practice in Smithville, county seat of DeKalb County. In 1935 Evins was named a staff attorney for the Federal Trade Commission, and served in this position until 1938, when he was named the Federal Trade Commission"s assistant secretary, a position which he held until 1940. Shortly after United States. entry into World World War II, he was commissioned in the United States Army Judge Advocate General Corps, serving on active duty until 1946, when he resumed his law practice in Smithville.
Upon his return, he was also elected chairman of the DeKalb County Democratic Party.
His district was renumbered the 4th after the 1950 Census, when Tennessee lost a congressional district. Evins was a powerful figure in Congress.
He was chairman of the House Select Committee on Small Business for six years, and for the following Congressional session of the United States House Committee on Small Business, and served on the important House Appropriations Committee. Like most of his constituents, Evins was a conservative Democrat.
He was slow to accept racial desegregation, not because of deep-seated personal bigotry but because it was a change to what had long been the accepted order of things.
However, he was one of three Tennessee Democratic congressmen not to sign the Southern Manifesto. Evins decided not to stand for re-election in 1976, after serving a total of 15 terms. At the time of his retirement in January 1977, his continuous service in the United States. House of Representatives was longer than that of any other House member from Tennessee.
Evins" family was, and remains, very prominent in Middle Tennessee.
His father is the namesake of Edgar Evins State Park near Smithville. Evins died in Nashville March 31, 1984, and is buried in the Smithville Town Cemetery in Smithville.
He used his influence to make sure that his district, a mostly rural area east and south of Nashville, was well taken-care of. Smithville was the smallest city chosen for participation in the Model Cities Program and its major thoroughfare was renamed "Congressional Boulevard." The Tennessee Technological University Appalachian Center for Craft near Smithville was built with a $5 million federal grant that Evins secured as a member of the Appropriations Committee.