Photo Gallery Page 2

In
1855 the Langford Family moved to the western corner of Coryell County
and settled on a creek in a valley surrounded by hills all around
except on the northeast. The small creek came to be known as Langford
Branch.
In their family at the time were the children, Mary
Elizabeth, Juriah Ann, Jane Adaline, Asa, Jr., Asa's mother, Mary, and
two slaves, Sukey and Anderson (also known as Dudley) and a boy named
Latham. The first white child born in this area was born to Asa and
Elizabeth October 10, 1855, Charlotte Langford.
Other early
settlers were Robert Carter, James A. Carter (no relation), Frederick
Bookerman, William Beauchamp (J.A. Carter´s brother-in-law), James
Wicher, Dr. Williams, John Willis, John Hurst, and Samuel Sneed.
When
Coryell County was organized, it still left the seat of county
government 25 miles away ... a very long trip by horseback or wagon.
Law enforcement was meager; the area was under the judicial
jurisdiction of Burnet county. It was a natural hangout for lawless
men; Indians were still a problem too.
The citizens of the
area made an unsuccessful attempt to have their area separated from
Coryell and annexed to Hamilton County. Hamilton was about twice as
close to them.

When
travelers stopped by the farm, it was the custom to give them a meal, a
place to sleep, and to exchange horses with them. Miss Naomi Adams, of
Waco and a granddaughter of Jane Kouger, a Langford slave, recalls
hearing her mother tell about the schoolhouse massacre at Hamilton in
which a young school teacher named Ann Whitney was murdered by Indians,
and about tonkawa Indians who camped near the Langfords for protection
from their dreaded Comanche enemy. Her mother played with the Tonkawa
Indian children and learned to speak their language; Miss Adams can
still count to ten in the Tonkawa language. After the Civil War her
family moved to Gatesville to become a part of the black community
there.
The first post office was established February 23, 1876
under the name of Cove, instead of Langford Cove. Asa was the
postmaster. After Asa came Henry Sawyer, September 26, 1889; Alexander
Wurts, December 31, 1897; Bessie Langford, September 12, 1912; Gyln D.
Shave, November 1, 1947; James L. Inabnet, November 30, 1949; R.D.
Rhodes is the present postmaster at the time that this article was
written. The post office changed its name from "Cove" to "Evant"
January 29, 1885.
The town was named Evant May 23, 1884. Mr.
Brooks laid out a 240 foot square block in the center for a public
square (he hoped it would one day hold a courthouse - perhaps for the
newly formed county of Mills to the west). Such was not to be, but the
square is really an asset to the people of Evant, even without a
courthouse.

The
only financial institution in Evant is the First National Bank of
Evant. It was founded as the Evant State Bank 24 September 1912, with a
capital of $10,000.00. The first president was W.C. Brooks; the first
vice-president was J.W. Burney.

The
dawn of public education came to Langford Cove when Prof. Raleigh
Hazard taught a school there about 1857. There is no record of any
schools having been taught during the Civil War. Andrew J. Hunter
taught a school just east of Langford Cove about 1872. In 1875, Asa
Langford donated four acres of land at the south east edge of the
present town "solely for literary purposes"; the present day Evant
school plant occupies a part of that tract today. In 1878, a one-room
rawhide lumber building was erected on the north west corner of the
four acres; it was ready for occupancy in the fall of 1879. By 1892
Evant had incorporated a four mile square school district and had a
two-story, native stone, 30 X 60 foot building with a one-story, 30 X
40 foot annex of the same material. From 1933 to 1937 a transportation
system to the outlying areas greatly increased the number of students
and helped upgrade the school system as well. A gymnasium was added in
1936. See a picture below of the gym now.

The
Evant Independent School District is located on a central campus on
Highway 281 in Evant, Texas. It is a community oriented school
committed to providing quality academic and extracurricular
opportunities to their students. With a 2000-2001 School Year
enrollment of around 300 (K-12), They provide a greater amount of
individualized instruction.