Draft:Victor J. Evans

Victor Justice Evans (1865-1931) was the founder one of the largest U.S. patent agencies of his time. Victor J. Evans & Company, Patent Attorneys, was founded in 1898. Evans built up a thriving business based in part on his willingness to offer full refunds to inventors who were unsuccessful in securing the patents they desired.

By the 1920s, Evans' firm was described as the “largest patent firm in the world”, with offices in in New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Chicago and San Francisco in addition to its headquarters location in Washington, D.C. His headquarters, the Victor Building, completed at Grant Place NW (now G Place) and 9th Street near the Patent Office in 1909. has a long history as an important Washington DC office building.

Patents and patent law
Evans was born in Delaware, Ohio, and lived in Minnesota before his family moved to Washington, D.C. Evans became a patent draftsman when he was 18, working with the firm J. Henry Kiser. There he learned about patents and patent law.

Evans founded Victor J. Evans & Company, Patent Attorneys, in 1898, and developed it into  one of the largest U.S. patent agencies by the 1920s. He offered inventors full refunds if the agency was unsuccessful in securing the patents they desired. Victor J. Evans and Company had a specialty for inventions related to aeronautics. He was a financial contributor to and president of the Rex Smith Aeroplane Company of Washington.

Evans published several books on patents including, , and the 80-page illustrated How to Obtain a Patent (1910).

The Victor Building
Evans planned and funded the Victor building which was used as the company headquarters for Victor J. Evans and Company. In 1907, Evans bought a site at Grant Place NW (now G Place) and 9th Street in Washington, D.C., right next to the Patent Office, for construction of his new headquarters. The Victor Building was completed in 1909 at a cost of $150,000. The six-story Renaissance Revival building is still standing, and has a long history as an important Washington DC office building. It was expanded twice by Evans, in 1911 and in 1925. The original building and the 1911 expansion were the work of architect Appleton P. Clark Jr. The 1925 expansion was done done by Waddy Butler Wood.

Collections and philanthropy
Evans was active in a number of areas in addition to his patent work. He was interested in exotic animals, and had his own private 10-acre zoo west of Foxhall Road off Hawthorne Lane NW. He became a significant supporter of the Smithsonian National Zoo and left the majority of his animals to them at his death, excepting any that his wife Zenobia wished to keep.

Evans was an avid collector of photos and art, in particular Native American artifacts and artworks. His collection was considered to be one of the largest in the world. As a result of this interest, he became an advocate for Native American tribes. Unsuccessful in convincing the federal government to establish a site to host his extensive collections during his lifetime, he left them to the Smithsonian American Art Museum at his death.