California Biographies Source: History of Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo and Ventura Counties, California by: C M Gidney - Santa Barbara. Benjamin Brooks - San Luis Obispo. Edwin M Sheridan - Ventura Volumes II - Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago, ILL., 1917 This file is part of the California Genealogy & History Archives http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cagha/index.htm JUDGE HENRY N. EVANS. A practical, skilful and well-to-do agriculturist of Los Alamos, owning and occupying a well-managed and highly productive ranch, Judge Henry N. Evans is a man of influence in his community, and has there filled various official positions with ability and fidelity. He was born December 8, 1869, in Alabama, which was likewise the birthplace of his father and mother, Henry and Ann (Higginbotham) Evans. His parents came to California in 1870, and his father, who was a Methodist preacher, died in 1875, and his wife in 1872. Educated in the public schools, Henry N. Evans began life for himself as a teacher on the Buell ranch, and for fourteen consecutive years taught in Santa Barbara County, being well liked and quite popular as an educator. About seven years ago, in 1909, Mr. Evans purchased his home farm of twenty-seven acres, and has it now all under cultivation, raising beans, barley and cattle, and is meeting with unquestioned success in his operations. In fact, the Judge has been so fortunate in his work on his own ranch that he now rents a large tract of near-by land, 1,500 acres, which he also devotes to the growing of barley, beans and cattle. Judge Evans married, June 10, 1891, in Lompoc, Miss Annie A. Callis, who was born in Carpinteria, California, a daughter of the late Thomas C. Callis, a California pioneer, and one of the very earliest merchants of Montecito. Five children have blessed the union of Judge and Mrs. Evans, as follows: Reginald S., a clerk in the Lompoc Valley Bank; Gerald, foreman on the home ranch; Wallace, range boss of the ranch; Howard F., assisting his father on the farm; and Dorothy I., who assists her father as bookkeeper for the ranch. Although Judge Evans is a stanch advocate of the principles of the democratic party, he has ever been too busy to take an active part in political affairs, but for the last ten years he has rendered efficient service as justice of the peace, an office that was forced upon him by his constituents. He has also served for twelve years as a member, and the clerk of the board of school trustees, and has been deputy assessor several terms. He belongs to the Methodist Church and for many years was a leader in church work.