Inscription
John B. Sanford was born on a farm in Maine to Quaker parents. His father, then retired, had been captain of a whaling vessel. Sanford came to Montana in 1864 at the age of 29. On the journey west he formed a partnership with 24-year old Christmas Gift Evans, a native New Yorker whose unusual name was derived from the day of his MT NATIONAL REGISTER SIGN TEXT 1990 TO APRIL 2019 birth.
The two came to Helena in 1865 where they established the area’s first water-powered sawmill. Their highly successful business as dealers of hay, grain, flour, lumber, coal, and heavy farming equipment was located at the corner of Fuller and Lawrence Streets and operated well into the twentieth century.
Sanford built this splendid home circa 1877 for his bride, Eva. By 1883, Sanford had moved to another residence nearby and Evans, known to his friends as “Chris,” had purchased the property. Evan’s first wife, Margaret, died in 1894. The second Mrs. Evans was said to have been a charming hostess, presiding “with a natural grace over their beautiful home.
” Evans died here suddenly in 1915 following surgical amputation of his right leg, performed to treat cellular edema. He was 75. Mrs. Evans died at 83 in 1940, and her daughter and son-in-law continued to live in the home until the late 1970s. The home is a grand expression of the flamboyant Second Empire style, whose brief popularity during the 1870s coincided with the construction of Helena’s first substantial residences.
The bell-cast mansard roof, decorative bracketing, and exquisite ornamental iron cresting are noteworthy features of this beautiful, exceptionally well-preserved home.
Location
Sources
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