[4] 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.
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.
The original streets were named after the men who were in that survey party: Noble, Trammell, Trice, Parker, and Hansbarger.
After the railroad was established, the town put up a cotton gin and started a land office business.
In 1976, the Everman Garden Club obtained a Texas Historical Marker for the Barron Munitions Building, which after the war had served as a schoolhouse for African-American schoolchildren.
Bonds were sold to build a public water supply system, and a volunteer fire department was organized.