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Everman, Texas

Everman, Texas
City
City of Everman
Location of Everman in Tarrant County, Texas
Location of Everman in Tarrant County, Texas
Coordinates: 32°37′49″N 97°17′3″W / 32.63028°N 97.28417°W / 32.63028; -97.28417Coordinates: 32°37′49″N 97°17′3″W / 32.63028°N 97.28417°W / 32.63028; -97.28417
Country  United States
State  Texas
County Tarrant
Government
 • City Manager Donna Anderson
Area
 • Total 1.8 sq mi (4.6 km2)
 • Land 1.8 sq mi (4.6 km2)
 • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2)
Elevation 669 ft (204 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 6,108
 • Density 3,400/sq mi (1,300/km2)
Time zone CST (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) CDT (UTC-5)
ZIP code 76140
Area code(s) 817
FIPS code 48-24912
GNIS feature ID 1335589
Website http://www.evermantx.net/

Everman is a city in Tarrant County, Texas, United States. The population was 6,108 at the 2010 census.

Former Texas Supreme Court Justice Steven Wayne Smith, who served from 2002–2005, was reared in Everman.

Everman is an incorporated residential community on the southern edge of Fort Worth near Interstate 820 in southeastern Tarrant County. Members of the Kiowa, Apache and Wichita tribes inhabited the area until the arrival of Anglo-Americans in the early to middle 1850s. A hamlet named Oak Grove existed in the area for several years. A small community to the east of present-day Everman was known as "Enon". The "Enon" community name had been taken from the Bible. They had a doctor's office, a drug store, and a general store.

Upon the arrival of the International – Great Northern Railroad in 1902, the more established community of Everman Village was developed. The town moved closer to the railway, which was convenient because it gave the citizens transportation and a means to ship freight both to Houston and to Fort Worth, the nearest city. It was much easier and more pleasant to ride the train than to ride a horse, buggy, or wagon. The people named this new community Everman after John Wesley Everman, the man who was the head of the surveying party that platted the town site. A native of Philadelphia, he came to Texas as an engineer for the IGN Railroad and eventually became the general superintendent and assistant general manager for the Texas and Pacific Railway Company. He died in Dallas in 1946 at the age of 85. The names of some of his descendants still appear in the Fort Worth telephone book, though none live in the city of Everman. The original streets were named after the men who were in that survey party: Noble, Trammell, Trice, Parker, and Hansbarger. Enon Street was named after the first settlement. After the railroad was established, the town put up a cotton gin and started a land office business.


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