EVANS, Franck Taylor, CAPT

Deceased
 
 Service Photo   Service Details
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Last Rank
Captain
Last Primary NEC
111X-Unrestricted Line Officer - Surface Warfare
Last Rating/NEC Group
Line Officer
Primary Unit
1929-1930, USS Idaho (BB-42)
Service Years
1898 - 1930
Captain Captain

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

254 kb


Home Country
Switzerland
Switzerland
Year of Birth
1875
 
This Military Service Page was created/owned by Steven Loomis (SaigonShipyard), IC3 to remember EVANS, Franck Taylor (Frank), CAPT.

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Contact Info
Home Town
Born in Switzerland, raised in New York
Last Address
Naval Hospital in Brooklyn, New York
Date of Passing
Mar 07, 1934
 
Location of Interment
Arlington National Cemetery (VLM) - Arlington, Virginia

 Official Badges 

Presidential Service Badge US Navy Retired 30 World War I Victory Button US Navy Honorable Discharge




 Unofficial Badges 

Maritime Warfare Excellence Award Engineering/Survivability Excellence Award Command & Control Excellence Award


 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS)The Army and Navy Union USA Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United StatesNational Cemetery Administration (NCA)
  1898, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS) - Assoc. Page
  1918, The Army and Navy Union USA - Assoc. Page
  1919, Military Order of Foreign Wars of the United States
  1934, National Cemetery Administration (NCA)


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Franck Taylor Evans 
Captain, United States Navy
Navy Cross WWI

Captain Franck Taylor Evans, U.S.N., retired, son of Rear Admiral Robley D. (Fighting Bob) Evans. He was a veteran of the Spanish-American and the First World War and retired in 1930 after an adventurous career.

He fought in Battle of Santiago on board the USS Iowa with his father in command. 

When President Theodore Roosevelt visited Panama in 1906 Captain Evans acted as his spokesman. In 1908, when his father took the American fleet on its world cruise, Captain Evans was attached to the battleship Louisiana. While the fleet was in San Francisco young Evans was making a slumming tour in the Barbary Coast area when he saw two of his sailors about to be attacked by a gang in a dance hall. He drew his revolver and the roughs fled. A policeman appeared and Evans, who was in civilian clothes, was taken to a police station but later released.  

Lieutenant Frank Taylor Evans, was court martialed 18 November 1908. Evans had been in command of President Roosevelt's yacht, the USS Sylph (PY-5), before joining the USS Louisiana. He was charged with "leaving his station on deck without  permission, although he declared it was to stop a disturbance below; disrespectful language to a superior officer, and permitting two enlisted men to drink beer in his, Evans's, room." He was sentenced to a public reprimand and reduction of 150 number in rank. Upon the death of his father, Admiral Robley D. Evans on 1/4/12,  he was a Lieutenant Commander, commanding torpedo boat destroyer Monaghan at Boston Navy Yard, but no other news article is found on Frank Evans until 18 April 1919 when, as Captain Frank T. Evans, he commanded the Hamburg-American liner Kaiserin Auguste Victoria as the first enemy ship turned over to the U.S. and used to transport troops back to New York.  

During the First World War he was awarded the Navy Cross for distinguished service during convoy service, USS May, and later as commander of the Naval Aviation Station at Pauillac, France. He was an officer of the French Legion of Honor and held the Spanish Order of Naval Merit and Efficiency, third class, and the Cross of the Order of the Savior, conferred by the government of Greece. He also held Italian and Japanese decorations. Captain Evans was a member of the Army and Navy Club, the New York Yacht Club, the Loyal Legion and the Military Order of Foreign Wars.

After the World War Captain Evans served with the Pacific Fleet, returning to the Naval Air Station at Lakehurst as commander officer in 1921 and remaining there for three years. He was commander at the Newport Naval Training Station for two years and then went to Europe again, this time in command of the cruiser Pittsburgh. After two years as Captain of the Brooklyn Navy Yard in July, 1929, he took command of the battleship Idaho on the Pacific Coast. He was retired on Sept. 1, 1930, at his own request, after thirty-two years of service.  

   
Other Comments:

During 1925-1926 USS Pittsburgh, ACR-4, was under the command of Captain Franck Taylor Evans, USN. Captain Evans was the son of Rear Admiral Robley D. “Fighting Bob” Evans of Spanish-American War fame. Pittsburgh was relieved of her duties as Flagship European Forces in early summer 1926 and was ordered home to prepare for her next duties. She was to replace her sister ship the USS Huron, then on duty as Flagship, US Asiatic Fleet. Pittsburgh arrived in New York on 17 July 1926 where she under went a refit for her Asiatic duties and her fore stack was removed changing her to a 3-stack design. She was the only ship of her class to be so modified. Gun directors were placed on the bridge just abaft of the mainmast and one large ventilator installed just aft of the bridge area.  

The Pittsburgh, under command of Captain Franck Taylor Evans, accomplished what few ships and crews could… that of hoisting both the Gunnery Trophy and the Engineering Trophy at the same time. On September 1, 1926 President Calvin Coolidge awarded to Captain Frank Evans and the Pittsburgh the Gunnery and the Engineering Trophies. While the Pittsburgh was at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on September 1 she hoisted the Battle Efficiency Pennant, something that few ships of the line have accomplished.

   

  CAPTAIN F. T. EVANS
   
Date
Mar 7, 1934

Last Updated:
Sep 19, 2012
   
Comments

CAPTAIN F. T. EVANS, WAR VETERAN, DEAD
Son of Noted Rear Admiral, He Served Against Spain and in the World War.
WON MANY DECORATIONS
In 1917 Put Naval Air Station at Lakehurst Into Commission, Heading It 1921-1924.

Captain Franck Taylor Evans, U.S.N., retired, son of Rear Admiral Robley D. (Fighting Bob) Evans, died of pneumonia yesterday at Naval Hospital in Brooklyn, New York, at the age of 58. He was a veteran of the Spanish-American and World Wars and retired in 1930 after an adventurous career.

Captain Evans had long suffered from a heart malady and entered the Naval Hospital for treatment several months ago. He was progressing favorably until he caught a severe cold last Sunday when he left the hospital to visit his home at 52 East Sixty-seventh Street. The cold failed to yield to treatment and pneumonia developed.

Born in Switzerland on September 9, 1875, he belonged to a distinguished family. He was the great-grandson of General Morgan of the Morgan Rifles of the American Revolution. He was a nephew of the late Rear Admiral H. C. Taylor. One of his cousins is the wife of Rear Admiral W. R. Gherardi and another the wife of Captain E. S. Kellogg, U. S. N. (retired). President Cleveland appointed him to the Naval Academy, from which he was graduated in 1898. It was the year of the Spanish American War and the young ensign was assigned to the battleship Iowa, commanded by his father, who was then a Captain.

Fought in Battle of Santiago.

During the Battle of Santiago on July 3 the Iowa engaged the Spanish cruiser Vizcaya as she sought with the other Spanish warships to come out of Santiago Harbor. Her commander, Captain Antonio Eulate, was critically wounded in the fight, and when his ship was disabled he beached her to save the lives of his men. He was carried aboard the Iowa a prisoner and when he offered his sword to Captain Bob Evans the latter refused to accept it-an act which the Iowa's crew applauded.

When President Theodore Roosevelt visited Panama in 1906 Captain Evans acted as his spokesman. In 1908, when his father took the American fleet on its world cruise, Captain Evans was attached to the battleship Louisiana. While the fleet was in San Francisco young Evans was making a slumming tour in the Barbary Coast area when he saw two of his sailors about to be attacked by a gang in a dance hall. He drew his revolver and the roughs fled. A policeman appeared and Evans, who was in civilian clothes, was taken to a police station but later released.

At the entry of the United States into the World War Captain Evans was placed in command of the destroyer May. He served under Admiral William S. Sims in European waters in command of a destroyer division and as senior aide to Rear Admiral Hilary P. Jones in the Atlantic Coast patrol squadron. In 1918 Captain Evans was put in charge of the naval air station at Pauillac, near Bordeaux. He put the naval air station at Lakehurst, N. J., into commission in 1917 and received the ill-fated dirigible ZR-2 from Germany.

Once Brooklyn Navy Yard Captain.

After the World War Captain Evans served with the Pacific Fleet, returning to the Naval Air Station at Lakehurst as commander in 1921 and remaining there for three years. He was commander at the Newport Naval Training Station for two years and then went to Europe again, this time in command of the cruiser Pittsburgh. After two years as Captain of the Brooklyn Navy Yard in July, 1929, he took command of the battleship Idaho on the Pacific Coast. He was retired on Sept. 1, 1930, at his own request, after thirty-two years of service.

The Navy Cross for distinguished service during the World War was awarded him. He was an officer of the French Legion of Honor and held the Spanish Order of Naval Merit and Efficiency, third class, and the Cross of the Order of the Savior, conferred by the government of Greece. He also held Italian and Japanese decorations. Captain Evans was a member of the Army and Navy Club, the New York Yacht Club, the Loyal Legion and the Military Order of Foreign Wars.

He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Enid Scarritt Evans, a daughter of the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. William Russell Scarritt of Boston. She was his second wife. He also leaves two sisters, Mrs. Evans Sewall and Mrs. Charles Carleton March, both living in England, and two stepchildren, Nathaniel B. Wales, Jr. and Mrs. Kenelm Winslow of New York.

The funeral will be held in the chapel of the Naval Hospital at the Brooklyn Navy Yard at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Burial will be in the Arlington Cemetery, Washington, at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning.

   
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Capt. F.T. Evans
Capt. F.T. Evans
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Capt. F.T. Evans

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