Mr. Bevans played soccer and baseball at Forest Park High School, graduating in 1943. At Loyola College, where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1947, he pitched and played in the outfield. "He was the Pete Gray of Loyola College," said his brother-in-law, Hank Linz of Timonium, referring to the one-armed St. Louis Browns center fielder of the 1940s.
Mr. Bevans also excelled at golf. "He was invited in 1969 to play in the Andy Williams pro-am," said John Steadman, Evening Sun sports columnist. "In front of all of these celebrities and with knees shaking, he made his swing and hit the ball 270 yards splitting the fairway. The crowd fell silent and then erupted in applause. It was really an amazing moment." Mr. Bevans was a founder of the Towson Golf and Country Club and the Dulaney Springs Golf Club, and played in the National Amputee Golf Championship for many years.
He earned his law degree from the University of Maryland in 1953 and opened a law office on Courtland Avenue in Towson, retiring in 1987. The next year, he was appointed an assistant Maryland attorney general and retired a second time on Jan. 1.
He was the first president of the Towson Jaycees and was inducted into the state's Baseball Oldtimers' Hall of Fame in 1992.
Mr. Bevans, whose three sons are mentally handicapped, had been president of the St. Elizabeth's Special School of Education, an adviser to the Marian Guild for Retarded Children, a leader of Boy Scout Troop No. 730 for mentally retarded and handicapped children, and organizer of fund-raisers for the Francis X. Gallagher Retardation Center.
He is survived by his wife, the former Claire Linz, whom he married in 1951. His three sons, Raymond M. Bevans, T. Mark Bevans and Brian J. Bevans, all of Glenarm; two sisters, Janet Tjarks of Lutherville and Virginia Gourlay of Chester; and three grandchildren.
A. Raymond Bevans Jr. died Monday February 6, 1995 at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center of head injuries he suffered in a fall at his Glenarm home, he was 69 years of age.
Mr. Bevans played soccer and baseball at Forest Park High School, graduating in 1943. At Loyola College, where he earned a bachelor's degree in 1947, he pitched and played in the outfield. "He was the Pete Gray of Loyola College," said his brother-in-law, Hank Linz of Timonium, referring to the one-armed St. Louis Browns center fielder of the 1940s.
Mr. Bevans also excelled at golf. "He was invited in 1969 to play in the Andy Williams pro-am," said John Steadman, Evening Sun sports columnist. "In front of all of these celebrities and with knees shaking, he made his swing and hit the ball 270 yards splitting the fairway. The crowd fell silent and then erupted in applause. It was really an amazing moment." Mr. Bevans was a founder of the Towson Golf and Country Club and the Dulaney Springs Golf Club, and played in the National Amputee Golf Championship for many years.
He earned his law degree from the University of Maryland in 1953 and opened a law office on Courtland Avenue in Towson, retiring in 1987. The next year, he was appointed an assistant Maryland attorney general and retired a second time on Jan. 1.
He was the first president of the Towson Jaycees and was inducted into the state's Baseball Oldtimers' Hall of Fame in 1992.
Mr. Bevans, whose three sons are mentally handicapped, had been president of the St. Elizabeth's Special School of Education, an adviser to the Marian Guild for Retarded Children, a leader of Boy Scout Troop No. 730 for mentally retarded and handicapped children, and organizer of fund-raisers for the Francis X. Gallagher Retardation Center.
He is survived by his wife, the former Claire Linz, whom he married in 1951. His three sons, Raymond M. Bevans, T. Mark Bevans and Brian J. Bevans, all of Glenarm; two sisters, Janet Tjarks of Lutherville and Virginia Gourlay of Chester; and three grandchildren.
A. Raymond Bevans Jr. died Monday February 6, 1995 at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center of head injuries he suffered in a fall at his Glenarm home, he was 69 years of age.
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