Evan Howell
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Evan Park Howell (December 10, 1839Template:Spaced ndashAugust 6, 1905) was an American politician and early telegraph operator, as well as an officer in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War.
Early years and education
Evan Howell was born on December 10, 1839, to Effie Howell (née Park) and Atlanta pioneer Clark Howell, Sr. in Warsaw, Georgia (then in Forsyth County, now Fulton County) on December 10, 1839.[1][2][3] He became a runner and pupil of Atlanta's first telegraph operator, D.U. Sloan, at the age of twelve. In 1855, he attended Georgia Military Institute in Marietta. He read law in Sandersville, and briefly practiced law in Atlanta before the outbreak of war.
Military service
In 1861, he joined the infantry, enlisting in Georgia's First Regiment.[1] Within 2 years, Howell was promoted to first lieutenant. He fought under Stonewall Jackson in Virginia, and then was sent west, where he fought in the Battle of Chickamauga and the Atlanta Campaign, in which he defended the city as a captain of artillery.[4] He ended the war in Hardee's Corps as captain of Howell's Battery, Georgia Light Artillery.
Business and political career
Upon his return, he farmed for two years, clearing and selling lumber on his father's land near Atlanta. Then for a year he was a reporter, then city editor, of Atlanta's Daily Intelligencer. In 1869, he returned to practicing law and served in a number of political positions including member of city council, member of the state Senate, and solicitor-general of the Atlanta circuit. One of his law clients was The Atlanta Constitution, where he learned E.Y. Clarke was willing to sell his one half interest in the paper.[4] In 1876, Howell purchased the 50% interest in The Constitution and became its editor-in-chief. For the next 25 years, the paper was owned by Howell and the managing partner, William Hemphill. Both Hemphill, and later Howell, would go on to serve as Mayor of Atlanta.
With Richard Peters, Samuel M. Inman, Lemuel Grant, and James W. English, he purchased the buildings on the site of the International Cotton Exposition of 1881 and made it the Exposition Cotton Mills, which were successful for many years.
While editor of the Constitution in 1895, he sent out transcripts of Booker T. Washington's separate as the fingers speech across the country.
He served on the Atlanta City Council numerous times, and served as mayor shortly before his death there on August 6, 1905, aged 65, in Atlanta.[2][5] His son Clark Howell took up his mantle at the Constitution.
References
External links
Template:S-endScript error: No such module "Navbox".Template:Authority control- Pages with script errors
- 20th-century mayors of places in Georgia (U.S. state)
- Mayors of Atlanta
- 1839 births
- 1905 deaths
- People of Georgia (U.S. state) in the American Civil War
- Confederate States Army officers
- People from Sandersville, Georgia
- American lawyers admitted to the practice of law by reading law