Robert Morgan Evans
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General Robert Morgan Evans (February 17, 1782 – December 14 1842) was born in Frederick County,
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. In 1803 in the town of
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, he was married to Jane Trimble, a sister of Judge Robert Trimble of the Supreme Court of the United States. Evans, for whom
Evansville, Indiana Evansville is a city in, and the county seat of, Vanderburgh County, Indiana, United States. The population was 118,414 at the 2020 census, making it the state's third-most populous city after Indianapolis and Fort Wayne, the largest city in ...
is named, did not actually found the city, but his influence played a role in determining the future of the town. He was the ninth Speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives. At the age of twenty-two, he moved to
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in what was then Knox County about two miles north of present-day
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in Gibson County. He settled in the wilderness and at the first sale of public lands in 1807, bought the settlement that he had selected for a home. After living at this pioneer home for four years, he moved to
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and opened a tavern, which he kept for two years until returning to his settlement in the woods. He was a captain in the militia, and after his duties in the
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was promoted to the rank of brigadier general. After the war, he returned to his homestead and was elected by his fellow citizens to the office of county clerk. Eventually he was elected to the territorial legislature from Knox County. Evans remained in Gibson County until about 1820 when he moved to what is now
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, where he had bought land from
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, the original owner of the land now called Evansville. He moved to New Harmony for a few years after becoming fascinated with the German socialist movement there, and worked as assistant postmaster. He moved back to Evansville and remained there until his death in 1844. He was Vanderburgh County clerk, helped plot lots and streets in Evansville, and was a successful dealer in farm implements and real estate. He remained active in the legislature and was elected Speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives in 1825. In the legislature he put forth bills to establish railroad service to Evansville. His efforts were unsuccessful, although shortly after his death the legislature did approve a railroad into Evansville.


Personality and physical appearance

He was a man of sterling integrity and a radical advocate of the right. In stature General Evans was above six feet and with a smooth shaved face, small hands and feet, and with an open expression of countenance his personal appearance was such as to attract the attention and admiration of all. Kind and affable in his disposition; possessed of rare conversational powers, in his declining years, he enjoyed the friendship and veneration of all who knew him. On all occasions he was agreeable and entertaining, and in business transactions a man of sterling integrity.Living relatives include Louie Laplante of Chicago, Illinois
History of Vanderburgh County, Indiana
Brant & Fuller, 1889


Sources

{{DEFAULTSORT:Evans, Robert Morgan Speakers of the Indiana House of Representatives Members of the Indiana House of Representatives 1844 deaths 1780s births People from Frederick County, Virginia People from Vincennes, Indiana People from Gibson County, Indiana Politicians from Evansville, Indiana 19th-century American politicians