Monmouth Signal
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Radar Laboratory And Site
At Belmar Named In Honor
Of Late Lt. Col. Paul W. Evans
World War I Officer Formerly
Commanded 51st Signal Battalion
The present site
of the Signal Corps Radar Laboratory at Belmar, N.J., will be designated
as Camp Evans in memory of the late Lt. Col. Paul W. Evans, according to
a War Department special order dated Feb. 17, 1942.
The official dedication will take place Tuesday,
March 31, at 10:30A.M. The ceremony will be held at the site of the
present flagpole. Brig. Gen. G. L. Van Deusen, Fort Monmouth Commandant
and Staff and guests will be welcome by Lt. Col. Corput, Commanding Officer
of Camp Evans, and other officers of that post. Following music by
the Signals Corp Band and an invocation by Chaplain Coholan, the Adjutant
will read the official order of dedication. After the flag-raising
ceremonies, and the playing of the National Anthem, Brig. Gen. Van Deusen
and Lt. Col. Corput will deliver brief speeches. The benediction
by Chaplain Karl Schleede will close the dedication.
The late Lt. Col. Evans was born in Delaware,
Ohio, June 10, 1889, a descendant of pioneer stock dating back to the Revolution.
Graduating from Ohio Wesleyan College as an honor student, and with a B.S.
degree, he entered Yale as an engineering student in 1910. Upon receiving
a commission as Second Lieutenant in the Coast Artillery, Regular Army,
he left Yale Nov. 25, 1912. Lt. Col. Evans shortly was transfered
to the Signal Corps, and up to the entry of the United States in World
War I, he served at various stations in this country and its possessions.
During that war, Lt. Col. Evans sailed abroad with the 1st Division, and
was promoted along the line to major, having seen active service in the
important battles of Champaigne-Marne, Aisne-Marne, and St. Miheil.
Served as Signal Officer
Following his promotion to Lieutanant Colonel,
in the National Army, he became the Signal Officer of the 26th Div.
Later, he graduated from the Army War College in Washington, D.C., and
the Command and General Staff School at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
In addition to several tours at Fort Monmouth, where he headed the 51st
Signal Battalion, he served at various posts in the United States and the
Panama Canal Zone, where he died April 10, 1936, at the age of 46.
Complications following malaria ended his career.
A recent honor conferred upon Lt. Col. Evan's
memory was the naming of the "Evans", the largest craft owned and operated
by the Signal Corps. The "Evans," a 65 foot utility ship, was the
seventh vessel added for operations and service with the Signal Corps in
the Panama Canal Zone area, and was officially launched and named last
Aug. 1, at Oyster Bay, L.I.
Page updated December 1, 2004
created October 29, 2000, updated April 19, 2003 with link to Arlington
National Cemetary