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keep the memory fresh and realize the importance of thememory (history), then our ancestors will never die.

So it is with Dr. Matilda Arabella Evans. The strength of her spirit, the love and respect that she inspired during her lifetime and her dynamic legacy will, and should, cause her to live forever in the memories of the countless spiirits that she touched directly and indirectly and as an ancestor, she will never die.

References:

1. Interview with her neice [[niece]] and nephew Mrs. Jessie T. Hill and Mr. Sidney Trottie

2. Hill, Jessie T. : Unpublished Biographical manuscripts 

[[highlight]]3. Evans, M.A.: [[underline]] The Fourth Annual Report of the Taylor Lane Hospital and Training School For Nurses. [[/underline]] Schofield School Press, Aiken, S.C., 1906[[/highlight]]

4. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education: [[underline]] Negro Education: A Study of the Private and Higher Schools For Colored People in the United States [[/underline]]. Volume I, Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C.,1917, p. 176

5. Caldwell, A.B. (Editor): [[underline]] History of the American Negro: South Carolina Edition [[/underline]]. A.B. Caldwell Publishing Co., Atlanta, Georgia, 1919, pp.393-396

6. The Palmetto Leader, Columbia, S.C. 
   : May 24, 1930: Dr. M.A. Evans, Columbia's Noted Physician, 
   Elected Trustee of The Haines College in Augusta, Georgia 
   (written by Prof. John R. Wilson)
   : June 21, 1930: Will Have Clinics For Colored Columbians 
   (written by Prof. John R. Wilson)
   : August 16, 1930: The Columbia Clinic: An Effective Reality: 
   Has Temporary Quarters in the Basement of Zion Baptist Church-- 
   A Number of Children Treated (written by Prof. John R. Wilson)
   : August 23, 1930: [[underline]] The Columbia Clinic Justifies 
   Expectation [[/underline]] (written by Prof. John R. Wilson)
   : September 13, 1930: [[underline]] The Columbia Clinic Now 
   Functions In [[/underline]]