Sarah A. Evans

Sarah Ann Shannon Evans (1854 — December 8, 1940) was an American clubwoman and suffragist based in Portland, Oregon, president of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs from 1905 to 1915. She was the first woman in Portland to carry a police badge, in her work as the city's first Market Inspector. She also worked for state funding of free public libraries in Oregon.

Sarah A. Evans
Sarah Ann Shannon
Born
Mrs. Sarah A. Evans, from a 1909 publication.

1854 (1854)
Bedford, Pennsylvania
DiedDecember 8, 1940(1940-12-08) (aged 85–86)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materLutherville Female Seminary
Spouse(s)
William M. Evans
(
m. 1873)

Early life

Sarah Ann Shannon was born in Bedford, Pennsylvania, the daughter of Oliver Shannon and Mary Virginia Washabaugh Shannon.[1] Her father was a lawyer.[2] She was educated at the Lutherville Female Seminary in Maryland.[3]

Career

Sarah Ann Evans moved to Portland with her husband and children in 1893. She was a founding member of the Portland Woman's Club, the Portland YWCA, and of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs in 1899.[4] She was president of the Federation from 1905 to 1915. During her presidency, Oregon women won the vote (in 1912).[5] She wrote a weekly column on women's concerns in the Oregon Journal newspaper.[6] She was also active in the state's League of Women Voters when that was established.[3]

When suffragist Abigail Scott Duniway spoke at the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs meeting in 1913, she summarized Evans's club career to date:

When Mrs. Sarah A. Evans, the faithful and able presiding officer of this Federation took the chair eight years ago, we had less than a dozen affiliated clubs to call upon for assistance. Today we have sixty Clubs in the Federation, all working in harmony, along the lines of social, domestic, educational, philanthropic and civic improvements, giving tangible proof of her executive ability and your loyalty. Her formative work is finished. Whether she may or may not be chosen to again succeed herself, her arduous labors as a pioneer are completed.[7]

She worked for a state tax to support free public libraries,[2] and for enforcement of child labor laws.[8] She also raised funds and support for a bronze statue of Sacajawea and Jean-Baptiste by artist Alice Cooper, erected in the city on the occasion of the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in 1905.[9] Also in 1905 she was appointed City Market Inspector for Portland,[10] a position she worked to establish,[11] and which made her the first female member of the city's police force.[12] During World War I Evans led the public health committee of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs, and led fundraising with the first Liberty Loan drive in Oregon in 1917.[13] She also founded a cooking school in the city.[3]

Personal life

Sarah Ann Shannon married William M. Evans in 1873. They had three daughters, Laura, Gertrude, and Elizabeth.[2] Sarah was widowed when William died in 1917. Evans was injured in a car accident in 1934, and died in 1940, aged 86 years.[14]

gollark: We can now rebrand all Mars missions as manned rover rescue missions
gollark: I was talking more about "one person with nukes can just blow up everything" and "a bunch of important people in China can probably wreck the global economy".
gollark: Except now due to interconnectedness and advanced technology and whatnot it's even easier for one person to break everything.
gollark: It's not hard to be cynical given the terrible stuff which happens and increasing ability to know about it!
gollark: Yes, in the cool space future they can fix their unvaccinatibility.

References

  1. "Mrs. Mary Shannon Buried in Yankton" Oregon Daily Journal (August 1, 1910): 8. via Newspapers.com
  2. Joseph Gaston, Portland, Oregon, Its History and Builders (1911): 718-719.
  3. Kimberly Jensen, "Sarah Ann Shannon Evans (1854-1940)" The Oregon Encyclopedia (Oregon State Historical Society).
  4. Kimberly Jensen, Doctor to the World: Esther Pohl Lovejoy and a Life in Activism (University of Washington Press 2012): 90. ISBN 9780295804408
  5. Tayleranne Gillespie, "The Portland Woman's Club and the 1912 Campaign" Century of Action: Oregon Women Vote, 1912-2012.
  6. Kimberly Jensen, "'Neither Head Nor Tail to the Campaign': Esther Pohl Lovejoy and the Oregon Woman Suffrage Victory of 1912" Oregon Historical Quarterly 108(3)(2007): 361.
  7. Abigail Scott Duniway, "Greeting and Reminiscence" (October 16, 1913), "She Flies with Her Own Wings": The Collected Speeches of Abigail Scott Duniway (1834-1915).
  8. "Leading Women Unite in Support of New Newsboys Ordinance" Oregon Daily Journal (March 28, 1913): 12. via Newspapers.com
  9. Sarah A. Evans, "Sacajawea: An Unconscious Heroine" Medical Sentinel (June 1905): 240-241.
  10. Sarah A. Evans, "Market Inspection, its Value and the Difficulties Encountered" Pacific Municipalities (July 1914): 368-370.
  11. Carolyn Wasson Thomason, "Interesting Westerners" Sunset Magazine (March 1918): 38.
  12. Kerry Segrave, Policewomen: A History (McFarland 2014): 49. ISBN 9780786477050
  13. "Women Urged to Help Save U. S. Integrity" Corvallis Gazette-Times (April 10, 1919): 3. via Newspapers.com
  14. "Pioneer Oregon Suffragette Dies" Klamath News (December 10, 1940): 10. via Newspapers.com
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