Richard Evans
(circa 1735 - circa 1774)
[Source: Dictionary
of North Carolina Biography edited by William S. Powell; Vol. 2; pgs. 170-171]
Richard Evans, planter, legislator and town founder, was born in Bath, Beaufort County, the son of Richard Evans, "Mariner", and Mary Lillington Evans. In 1758 Evans and his brother, George, sold their property in Bath and bought several tracts of land on the Tar River in the part of Beaufort that became Pitt County in 1760. Richard was a captain in the Pitt County militia in 1764 and represented Pitt in the colonial Assembly in 1769. In 1771, the Assembly passed an act authorizing him to lay out a town on his one hundred acres on the south side of Tar River in the county of Pitt. For the town, called Martinborough, commissioners were also appointed in the act. In addition to Richard Evans, Wyriot Ormond, Charles Forbes, Henry Ellis, and George Evans were named. Richard Evans died before the Assembly passed a special act in 1774 confirming the lot holders in their titles. The act also moved the courthouse of Pitt County to Martinborough. In 1787, the name of Martinborough was changed to Greenville.
Evans was buried in the Evans family cemetery on Evans Street in Greenville. His will has been lost, but from deeds and other sources he appears to have had sons Benjamin, Richard, Michael Coutanche, and George, and daughters whose names are not known. The name is his wife is not known. In 1769 Evans had acquired from his first cousins, James and Lillington Lockhart, the fine plantation known as Scotch Hall, in Bertie County. His son Michael resided there and left a will in Bertie in 1796. On Michael's death Scotch Hall was sold to the Jacocks family which has owned it since that time. Among the prominent descendants of Richard Evans were Colonel Fred Olds, of the Hall of History in Raleigh, whose mother was Pauline Evans; and Dr. Augustus Coutanche Evans, who was a special agent for the Confederate government in Europe.
© 2010 Kay Midgett Sheppard