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July 29, 2010
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CAPT. EDWARD ALBERT EVERS (1878-1954)

and the U.S.S. WILMETTE

Capt. Edward A. Evers
Capt. Edward A. Evers
Photo courtesy Great Lakes Naval Museum

Capt. Evers' long career
Evers was the commanding officer, Illinois naval militia, from 1909 to 1941, and is believed to be the first reservist ever to reach the rank of admiral. He joined the Naval Reserve in 1897. Serving as a seaman in the Spanish-American War on the U.S.S. Indiana, he participated in the Battle of Santiago on July 3, 1898 in which the Spanish fleet was destroyed. According to his obituary in the Wilmette Life published April 6, 1954, Evers was a member of the pulling boat crew which rescued Admiral Cevera from the burning Spanish flagship.

Headed Naval Reserve
Evers served as commanding officer, Illinois naval militia, from 1909 to 1941. During World War I he served as comanding officer of Grant Park Camp which trained men for duty on converted yachts and submarine chasers. He was also in charge of remodeling and fitting out seven steamships taken over by the Navy. His flagship was the U.S.S. Wilmette.

USS Constitution tour...
In 1927 Chicagoans were eagerly raising money for the restoration of the sailing ship, U.S.S. Constitution, known affectionately as Old Ironsides. Even school children were deeply involved in the project. On Aug 20, 1927 Capt. Evers, representing the national Save Old Ironsides committee, received a check for $25,143 raised in May by the sale of Old Ironsides buttons in the schools. Much of the excitement was generated by the promise that the historic ship would be brought to Chicago on a "glory cruise" manned by a crew of Chicago sailors. Capt. Evers was the choice to be its captain.

Chicago Crew Proposed for Old Ironsides

U.S.S. Constitution


“Capt. Evers is the choice of the naval post, and it is the post’s belief that he knows more about the rocks and shoals of the great lakes than any other individual. Therefore this great privilege and responsibility should be his..he alone is capable of the command.”

Chicago Tribune, May 14, 1927

Almost...
Unfortunately, when the ship was ready for the trip in 1930 careful measurements revealed the St. Lawrence seaway, through which Old Ironsides was to travel on its way to the Great Lakes, was too shallow to accomodate the ship. The victory tour to the west coast was accomplished via the Panama Canal.

Promoted to Admiral
Captain Evers was promoted to the rank of rear admiral in 1941 and was retired in 1942, after completing the World War II mobilization of Chicago Naval Reserve Division.

Evers was also a member of the original commission for the development of Chicago's lake front and was instrumental in having the State of Illinois construct the Naval Armory at the foot of Randolph street.

His hobby was sailing
According to the Book of Chicagoans 1917 Evers was born in New York City on January 16, 1878, the son of John William and Mary (Kelly) Evers. He was married to Florence Virginia King of Chicago on November 21, 1905 and had three daughters: Jean, Virginia and Marjorie. Evers' was engaged in contracting business with heating and power plants in Chicago since 1900. His hobby was sailing.

Evers a Wilmette resident for 40 years
Rear Admiral Edward Albert Evers died at the age of 74 on April 4, 1954 in Los Angeles, and was buried at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery, near San Diego.

The Chicago Historical Museum has posted additional photographs of Capt. Evers from the Chicago Daily News photograph archives on the Library of Congress American Memory site.

Local History Home

 

U.S.S. Wilmette
Naval Reserve Capt. Edward A. Evers, a Wilmette resident in the World War I era, was instrumental in salvaging the ill-fated excursion boat, Eastland, after it overturned on July 24, 1915 in the river near Clark St. in Chicago killing hundreds of passengers.

Working with electricity magnate, Samuel Insull, and a group of other prominent Chicagoans, Evers transformed the boat into a naval reserve training ship, the U.S.S. Wilmette. The ship was used extensively for training in both World War I and II. Evers wrote an article about the history and importance of the U.S.S. Wilmette for the Illinois Blue Book of 1935-36.

U.S.S. Wilmette leaving harbor Michigan City, Ind.
Postcard image courtesy Wilmette Historical Museum

Sinking of the UC-97
A little known story about the U.S.S. Wilmette was its role in the sinking of a German submarine in Lake Michigan. As a training exercise on June 7th, 1921, the U.S.S. Wilmette sank a captured German submarine, UC-97, about twenty miles off the coast of Highland Park. The German U-Boat, still lies at rest on the bottom of Lake Michigan. The wreckage of the UC-97 was located in 1992 by A&T Recovery, but it's location has not been made public.

Great Lakes Recruit, December 1918, cover by M.E. Harris
Photo courtesy Great Lakes Naval Museum

Famous Passengers
Naval reservist and war correspondent, Ernie Pyle, described his impressions of sailing on the U.S.S. Wilmette in his book, Home Country.

It was still in a sinking condition, I assure you
We sailed on the USS Wilmette, formerly known as the Eastland. ...It was still in a sinking condition, I assure you. It constantly shied to the right, and once in a while felt as though it wanted to lie down in the water.

Ernie Pyle, Home Country, p.136

The most noteworthy event of her later career occurred towards the end of World War II. In August 1943, the U.S.S. Wilmette took President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and other dignitaries on a ten day cruise of McGregor and Whitefish Bays to plot war strategies.

Sold for Scrap
On October 31, 1946, the U.S.S. Wilmette was sold as scrap by the US Government for $2,500 ending its long and lively career.

1974 Wilmette Vehicle Sticker

The Communicator, 1973, no.4, p.10

Wilmette's village newsletter, The Communicator, announced in its 1973, No. 4 issue, that the local vehicle sticker for the coming year would feature the U.S.S. Wilmette. The newsletter includes a concise history of the ship and the photograph that was used on the sticker. Bound copies of the newsletter are kept in the Library's Reference Room. Unfortunately samples of the actual sticker no longer exist.

Officers U.S.S. Wilmette, Evers front row, left
Officers U.S.S. Wilmette, Evers front row, left
Photograph courtesy Great Lakes Naval Museum

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