Evens' mother was
Romani, born in a
vardo (Romany wagon). His father was
Salvation Army Lieutenant George Evens, a native of
Plymouth. He was born at 3 Argyll Street, Anlaby Road, Hull, England and educated at Epworth College,
Rhyl, as boarder, then at Queens College,
Taunton. He married Eunice, the daughter of The Reverend Owen Thomas on 1 August 1911.
Simon Barnes has paid tribute to how his father (radio) and himself (books) were drawn to natural history by Romany: "I longed to walk through the country with the all-knowing, all-seeing Romany". As a Methodist minister, Evens' ministries included
Goole; the Methodist Central Hall,
Carlisle (1914–1926);
Huddersfield (1926–1929); and the King Cross Methodist Chapel,
Halifax (1929–1939), after which ill health forced him to give up the ministry. He retired to
Wilmslow, where he died, leaving his wife, son Glyn and daughter, Romany June.He lived at Number 1, Parkway, Wilmslow and he died in the house following feeling unwell building a Cumbrian stone rockery in the garden. His ashes were scattered, at his request, at Old Parks Farm,
Glassonby, Cumbria, which he had enjoyed visiting over a 22-year period: in 2001, a memorial to him was erected there by The Romany Society. The vardo was donated, unconditionally, by his widow, to the forerunners of
Cheshire East Borough Council (CEBC). For many years it was displayed by CEBC, outdoors, in
Wilmslow. In late 2012, having deteriorated badly, it was restored and moved to
Bradford Industrial Museum, to be displayed indoors. The
Romany Society, originally formed in 1943, disbanded in 1965, and re-founded in 1996, celebrates his life and work, with regular newsletters and an annual magazine. Its patron is
Terry Waite. The BBC radio programmes were all broadcast live, and only one recording survives – dated October 1943, just a month before his death. It was released on CD in 2006. ==Bibliography==