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Oliver Phelps (politician)

Oliver Phelps (October 21, 1749 – February 21, 1809) was an American politician. He was early in life a tavern keeper in Granville, Massachusetts. During the Revolution he was Deputy Commissary of the Continental Army and served until the end of the war. After the war ended, he was appointed a judge, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, and became a land speculator in western New York state. A depressed real estate market forced him to sell most of his holdings.

Oliver Phelps
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 17th district
In office
March 4, 1803 – March 3, 1805
Preceded byNone; new seat
Succeeded bySilas Halsey
Personal details
Born(1749-10-21)October 21, 1749
Poquonock, Connecticut Colony, British America
DiedFebruary 21, 1809(1809-02-21) (aged 59)
Canandaigua, New York, U.S.
Resting placePioneer Cemetery, Canandaigua, New York
Political partyDemocratic-Republican
SpouseMary Seymour
ChildrenOliver Leicester, Mary
OccupationMerchant, commissary, land speculator
ProfessionJudge, politician

Personal life edit

Phelps was born in Poquonock in the Connecticut Colony. His father, Thomas Phelps, died in Oliver's first year of life, and his mother was left to raise their seventeen children. Phelps took a job at age seven in a local store to help support his family.[1]

When he was 21 in 1770, Oliver and his young wife Mary moved to Suffield, where he apprenticed to a local merchant, and in 1770 the couple moved to Granville, where he opened his own store.[1]

Career edit

At the beginning of the Revolutionary War, Phelps joined the Continental Army and fought in the Battle of Lexington.[1] He left the service in 1777 and, relying on his experience as a merchant, became Massachusetts Superintendent of Purchases of Army Supplies, a Deputy Commissary of the Continental Army. He was introduced to Robert Morris, the great financier of Revolutionary times.[2] He supplied troops and received commendation from General George Washington for his efforts. He was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1778 to 1780 and a member of the Federal Constitutional Convention in 1779 and 1780. After the war ended, he became a prominent businessman and was elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1785 and served on the Governor's council in 1786.[1] He was elected as a Democratic-Republican to the Eighth United States Congress, holding office from March 4, 1803, to March 3, 1805, and ran unsuccessfully for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1804 on the ticket headed by Aaron Burr.[3]

Land speculation edit

The connections he established during the Revolutionary War aided his efforts in forming in 1788 a syndicate with Nathaniel Gorham, also a former member of the Federal Constitutional Convention. They organized a company of speculators, retaining 82 shares for themselves, and brought in competing companies to join in their effort. They sold 15 shares to the Niagara Company, composed of Colonel John Butler, Samuel Street, and other Tory friends of the Indians, and another 23 shares were divided among 21 persons.[4] Following the American Revolution, there remained a confusing collection of contradictory royal charters from James I, Charles I, and Charles II, mixed with a succession of treaties with the Dutch and with the Indians, which made the legal situation intractable.[1] Massachusetts owned land west of the "Preemption Line" in New York that was disconnected geographically from the rest of the state. New York and Massachusetts reached a compromise settling their competing claims for the region in December 1786 with the signing of the Treaty of Hartford. The syndicate lobbied for a law that was passed by the Massachusetts legislature that enabled them to buy land, payable over three years, using Massachusetts Consolidated Scrip, which was worth about 20 cents on a dollar at the time.[4]

On July 4–8, 1788 a council was held with chiefs of the Five Nations of Indian at Buffalo Creek.[5] Phelps was the active agent for the syndicate[1] and negotiated with the Indians to purchase their title to the land. The Indians considered themselves to be the owners of the land, but Phelps persuaded the Chiefs that since they had been allies to the defeated British during the Revolutionary War, and since the British had given up the lands in the 1783 peace treaty, the tribes could only expect to retain whatever lands the United States would allow them to keep.[6] Phelps and Gorham wanted to buy 2,600,000-acre (11,000 km2), but the Indians refused to sell the rights to any land west of the Genesee River. Phelps suggested that the Indians could take advantage of a grist mill to grind their maize which would relieve the women of the grinding work. The Indians asked how much land was needed for a grist mill, and Phelps suggested a section of land 20 miles (32 km) wide and 12 miles (19 km) deep, about 288 square miles (750 km2), along the western bank of the river.[7] Phelps and Gorham finally bought the rights to 494,000-acre (2,000 km2) including a tract on the west bank of the river later named Mill Yard Tract where they planned to locate a saw mill and grist mill. The Indians were later much amazed that so large a tract of land was needed for the grist mill.

They paid US$1 million (about £300,000), or less than 25 cents per acre, between 1787 and 1788.[8]

At first Phelps and Gorham thought they would make the site of current-day Geneva their headquarters, but discovered that their survey had somehow left that site just east of their boundary. So they chose Canandaigua, New York, at the head of Canandaigua Lake, as the seat of the new Ontario County. The name Canandaigua is derived from the Iroquois word "Kanandarque" which means chosen spot. It was the site of the principal village of the Seneca Indians, burned by the whites during the war in the Sullivan Expedition.

Builds home in Suffield edit

After the purchase, Phelps returned to Suffield, Connecticut, and bought what was later named the Hatheway House from its builder Shem Burbank, who as a Tory sympathizer during the American Revolution had suffered financial difficulties afterward.[9] Phelps spent generously on furnishings for the home, hired servants, and added a wing to the home in 1794, a display of his wealth and an "architectural masterpiece" that still features original Paris-made wallpaper.[10]

He opened one of the first land sales offices in the U.S. in Suffield[8] and another in Canandaigua. During the next two years he and his partners sold 500,000-acre (2,000 km2) at a higher price to a number of buyers. But land sales failed to raise enough capital to meet their payment requirements, and in August 1790 they sold 1,276,569-acre (5,166.09 km2) to U.S. Senator Robert Morris of Pennsylvania, who Phelps had done business with during the Revolutionary War. Morris paid eight pence half penny or between 11 and 12 cents per acre, about half of what Phelps and Gorham had paid. They retained only two townships totaling 47,000-acre (190 km2) for themselves. Morris almost immediately sold the land to an English syndicate for £75,000 (about $333,000), netting a good profit.[4]

Phelps was appointed the first judge of Ontario County (1789–1793), even before he moved to Canandaigua in 1792. He built the first framed house in Canandaigua and a grist mill. Phelps retained extensive holdings in the infant Ontario County. He maintained an interest in its affairs and in further land speculations. He was a founder and the largest stock holder in the Hartford National Bank and Trust Co.[2] He was also the largest financial contributor to the Hamilton-Oneida Academy built in 1793 by Samuel Kirkland on 300-acre (1.2 km2) acres he donated. Kirkland, a Presbyterian minister and missionary among the Oneida, had aided Phelps in his land purchase from the Indians and had received 4,000-acre (16 km2) acres from the Oneidas and New York State.[11] He was also appointed the first judge of Ontario County and served in Congress between 1803 and 1805.[8]

Loses land holdings and home edit

Later in 1789, the value of the Massachusetts scrip had risen to par value and substantially inflated the cost to purchase the remaining 1,000,000-acre (4,000 km2) which they had not yet obtained title to from the Indians.[4] They gave up their contract for the land instead. Despite his remaining, vast land holdings, changing money values affected the mortgages held on the tracts of land and a depressed land market caused Phelps to get into financial difficulty. In August 1790, the reverses forced him to sell his Suffield home and his interest in the Hartford National Bank and Trust Co.

He continued to invest in land and by 1796 had purchased roughly a million acres of land along the Mississippi River. He also helped organize the Connecticut Land Company which for $1,200,000 bought all but the extreme western portion of the Connecticut Western Reserve in the Northwest Territory from the state of Connecticut. Phelps borrowed heavily to finance the company. In 1796, his creditors demanded payment.[3] Facing the possibility of debtors' prison, Phelps went into seclusion. In 1802 he moved to Canandaigua, New York, and he served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1803 to 1805.[1]

Personal life edit

He married Mary Seymour, daughter of Zachariah Seymour and Sarah (née Steele) Seymour. Together, they were the parents of a son and a daughter:[1]

  • Oliver Leicester Phelps (1775–1813), who married Elizabeth "Betsy" Law Sherman, a daughter of William Sherman and granddaughter of founding father Roger Sherman.[12]
  • Mary Phelps (1778–1859), who married Amasa Jackson, the first president of the Union Bank of New York; he was a son of General Michael Jackson, who commanded a regiment of minutemen in the Battle of Lexington.[13]

Purchasers of his land had continued difficulty paying off the mortgage loans which he held. He tried to help those who had bought his land contracts but who could not fulfill their contracts, and Phelps died on February 21, 1809,[1] in the town he sold and helped develop.[8] He was interred in the Pioneer Cemetery in Canandaigua, New York.[12]

Descendants edit

Through his daughter Mary, he was a grandfather of Harriet Jackson (1804–1868), who married John Albert Granger, son of U.S. Postmaster General Gideon Granger and younger brother to U.S. Representative Francis Granger.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Henry, Marian S. (February 25, 2000). . Archived from the original on February 27, 2014. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
  2. ^ a b Osgood, Howard Lawrence (1891). The Title of the Phelps and Gorham Purchase. Rochester Historical Society. p. 33. from the original on March 25, 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Oliver Phelps". Ohio Historical Society. from the original on May 8, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d Milliken, Charles F. (1911). A History of Ontario County, New York and Its People Vol. 1. Lewis Historical Publishing Co. pp. 15. Retrieved January 25, 2008.
  5. ^ McKeveley, Blake (January 1939). (PDF). Rochester History. Rochester Public Library. 1 (1). ISSN 0035-7413. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 3, 2007. Retrieved January 5, 2008.
  6. ^ McKelvey, Blake (January 1939). "Rochester History" (PDF). Rochester Library. (PDF) from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  7. ^ Shilling, Donovan A. "Rochester's Romantic Rogue: The Life and Times of Ebenezer Allan". The Crooked Lake Review. from the original on July 22, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d "Oliver Phelps (1749-1809)". from the original on February 11, 2012. Retrieved December 27, 2012.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on March 12, 2013. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  10. ^ "Hatheway House". Suffield Library. from the original on August 17, 2013. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  11. ^ Hauptman, Laurence M.; L. Gordon McLester III, eds. (1999). The Oneida Indian Journey: From New York to Wisconsin, 1784-1860. Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299161446.
  12. ^ a b Milliken, Charles F. (1911). A History of Ontario County, New York and Its People Vol. 1. Lewis Historical Publishing Co. pp. 15. Retrieved January 25, 2008.
  13. ^ Sons of the American Revolution New York State Society (1894). Yearbook of the Sons of the American Revolution New York State Society. p. 121. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  14. ^ Yale University (1910). Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale College: Deceased During the Academic Year ... New Haven, CT: Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Company. pp. 705–706. Retrieved May 6, 2018.

Further reading edit

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
new district
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 17th congressional district

1803–1805
Succeeded by

oliver, phelps, politician, oliver, phelps, october, 1749, february, 1809, american, politician, early, life, tavern, keeper, granville, massachusetts, during, revolution, deputy, commissary, continental, army, served, until, after, ended, appointed, judge, el. Oliver Phelps October 21 1749 February 21 1809 was an American politician He was early in life a tavern keeper in Granville Massachusetts During the Revolution he was Deputy Commissary of the Continental Army and served until the end of the war After the war ended he was appointed a judge was elected to the U S House of Representatives and became a land speculator in western New York state A depressed real estate market forced him to sell most of his holdings Oliver PhelpsMember of the U S House of Representatives from New York s 17th districtIn office March 4 1803 March 3 1805Preceded byNone new seatSucceeded bySilas HalseyPersonal detailsBorn 1749 10 21 October 21 1749Poquonock Connecticut Colony British AmericaDiedFebruary 21 1809 1809 02 21 aged 59 Canandaigua New York U S Resting placePioneer Cemetery Canandaigua New YorkPolitical partyDemocratic RepublicanSpouseMary SeymourChildrenOliver Leicester MaryOccupationMerchant commissary land speculatorProfessionJudge politician Contents 1 Personal life 2 Career 2 1 Land speculation 2 2 Builds home in Suffield 2 3 Loses land holdings and home 3 Personal life 3 1 Descendants 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksPersonal life editPhelps was born in Poquonock in the Connecticut Colony His father Thomas Phelps died in Oliver s first year of life and his mother was left to raise their seventeen children Phelps took a job at age seven in a local store to help support his family 1 When he was 21 in 1770 Oliver and his young wife Mary moved to Suffield where he apprenticed to a local merchant and in 1770 the couple moved to Granville where he opened his own store 1 Career editAt the beginning of the Revolutionary War Phelps joined the Continental Army and fought in the Battle of Lexington 1 He left the service in 1777 and relying on his experience as a merchant became Massachusetts Superintendent of Purchases of Army Supplies a Deputy Commissary of the Continental Army He was introduced to Robert Morris the great financier of Revolutionary times 2 He supplied troops and received commendation from General George Washington for his efforts He was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from 1778 to 1780 and a member of the Federal Constitutional Convention in 1779 and 1780 After the war ended he became a prominent businessman and was elected to the Massachusetts Senate in 1785 and served on the Governor s council in 1786 1 He was elected as a Democratic Republican to the Eighth United States Congress holding office from March 4 1803 to March 3 1805 and ran unsuccessfully for Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1804 on the ticket headed by Aaron Burr 3 Land speculation edit Main article Phelps and Gorham Purchase The connections he established during the Revolutionary War aided his efforts in forming in 1788 a syndicate with Nathaniel Gorham also a former member of the Federal Constitutional Convention They organized a company of speculators retaining 82 shares for themselves and brought in competing companies to join in their effort They sold 15 shares to the Niagara Company composed of Colonel John Butler Samuel Street and other Tory friends of the Indians and another 23 shares were divided among 21 persons 4 Following the American Revolution there remained a confusing collection of contradictory royal charters from James I Charles I and Charles II mixed with a succession of treaties with the Dutch and with the Indians which made the legal situation intractable 1 Massachusetts owned land west of the Preemption Line in New York that was disconnected geographically from the rest of the state New York and Massachusetts reached a compromise settling their competing claims for the region in December 1786 with the signing of the Treaty of Hartford The syndicate lobbied for a law that was passed by the Massachusetts legislature that enabled them to buy land payable over three years using Massachusetts Consolidated Scrip which was worth about 20 cents on a dollar at the time 4 On July 4 8 1788 a council was held with chiefs of the Five Nations of Indian at Buffalo Creek 5 Phelps was the active agent for the syndicate 1 and negotiated with the Indians to purchase their title to the land The Indians considered themselves to be the owners of the land but Phelps persuaded the Chiefs that since they had been allies to the defeated British during the Revolutionary War and since the British had given up the lands in the 1783 peace treaty the tribes could only expect to retain whatever lands the United States would allow them to keep 6 Phelps and Gorham wanted to buy 2 600 000 acre 11 000 km2 but the Indians refused to sell the rights to any land west of the Genesee River Phelps suggested that the Indians could take advantage of a grist mill to grind their maize which would relieve the women of the grinding work The Indians asked how much land was needed for a grist mill and Phelps suggested a section of land 20 miles 32 km wide and 12 miles 19 km deep about 288 square miles 750 km2 along the western bank of the river 7 Phelps and Gorham finally bought the rights to 494 000 acre 2 000 km2 including a tract on the west bank of the river later named Mill Yard Tract where they planned to locate a saw mill and grist mill The Indians were later much amazed that so large a tract of land was needed for the grist mill They paid US 1 million about 300 000 or less than 25 cents per acre between 1787 and 1788 8 At first Phelps and Gorham thought they would make the site of current day Geneva their headquarters but discovered that their survey had somehow left that site just east of their boundary So they chose Canandaigua New York at the head of Canandaigua Lake as the seat of the new Ontario County The name Canandaigua is derived from the Iroquois word Kanandarque which means chosen spot It was the site of the principal village of the Seneca Indians burned by the whites during the war in the Sullivan Expedition Builds home in Suffield edit After the purchase Phelps returned to Suffield Connecticut and bought what was later named the Hatheway House from its builder Shem Burbank who as a Tory sympathizer during the American Revolution had suffered financial difficulties afterward 9 Phelps spent generously on furnishings for the home hired servants and added a wing to the home in 1794 a display of his wealth and an architectural masterpiece that still features original Paris made wallpaper 10 He opened one of the first land sales offices in the U S in Suffield 8 and another in Canandaigua During the next two years he and his partners sold 500 000 acre 2 000 km2 at a higher price to a number of buyers But land sales failed to raise enough capital to meet their payment requirements and in August 1790 they sold 1 276 569 acre 5 166 09 km2 to U S Senator Robert Morris of Pennsylvania who Phelps had done business with during the Revolutionary War Morris paid eight pence half penny or between 11 and 12 cents per acre about half of what Phelps and Gorham had paid They retained only two townships totaling 47 000 acre 190 km2 for themselves Morris almost immediately sold the land to an English syndicate for 75 000 about 333 000 netting a good profit 4 Phelps was appointed the first judge of Ontario County 1789 1793 even before he moved to Canandaigua in 1792 He built the first framed house in Canandaigua and a grist mill Phelps retained extensive holdings in the infant Ontario County He maintained an interest in its affairs and in further land speculations He was a founder and the largest stock holder in the Hartford National Bank and Trust Co 2 He was also the largest financial contributor to the Hamilton Oneida Academy built in 1793 by Samuel Kirkland on 300 acre 1 2 km2 acres he donated Kirkland a Presbyterian minister and missionary among the Oneida had aided Phelps in his land purchase from the Indians and had received 4 000 acre 16 km2 acres from the Oneidas and New York State 11 He was also appointed the first judge of Ontario County and served in Congress between 1803 and 1805 8 Loses land holdings and home edit Later in 1789 the value of the Massachusetts scrip had risen to par value and substantially inflated the cost to purchase the remaining 1 000 000 acre 4 000 km2 which they had not yet obtained title to from the Indians 4 They gave up their contract for the land instead Despite his remaining vast land holdings changing money values affected the mortgages held on the tracts of land and a depressed land market caused Phelps to get into financial difficulty In August 1790 the reverses forced him to sell his Suffield home and his interest in the Hartford National Bank and Trust Co He continued to invest in land and by 1796 had purchased roughly a million acres of land along the Mississippi River He also helped organize the Connecticut Land Company which for 1 200 000 bought all but the extreme western portion of the Connecticut Western Reserve in the Northwest Territory from the state of Connecticut Phelps borrowed heavily to finance the company In 1796 his creditors demanded payment 3 Facing the possibility of debtors prison Phelps went into seclusion In 1802 he moved to Canandaigua New York and he served in the U S House of Representatives from 1803 to 1805 1 Personal life editHe married Mary Seymour daughter of Zachariah Seymour and Sarah nee Steele Seymour Together they were the parents of a son and a daughter 1 Oliver Leicester Phelps 1775 1813 who married Elizabeth Betsy Law Sherman a daughter of William Sherman and granddaughter of founding father Roger Sherman 12 Mary Phelps 1778 1859 who married Amasa Jackson the first president of the Union Bank of New York he was a son of General Michael Jackson who commanded a regiment of minutemen in the Battle of Lexington 13 Purchasers of his land had continued difficulty paying off the mortgage loans which he held He tried to help those who had bought his land contracts but who could not fulfill their contracts and Phelps died on February 21 1809 1 in the town he sold and helped develop 8 He was interred in the Pioneer Cemetery in Canandaigua New York 12 Descendants edit Through his daughter Mary he was a grandfather of Harriet Jackson 1804 1868 who married John Albert Granger son of U S Postmaster General Gideon Granger and younger brother to U S Representative Francis Granger 14 References edit a b c d e f g h i Henry Marian S February 25 2000 The Phelps Gorham Purchase Archived from the original on February 27 2014 Retrieved December 31 2012 a b Osgood Howard Lawrence 1891 The Title of the Phelps and Gorham Purchase Rochester Historical Society p 33 Archived from the original on March 25 2015 a b Oliver Phelps Ohio Historical Society Archived from the original on May 8 2012 Retrieved December 28 2012 a b c d Milliken Charles F 1911 A History of Ontario County New York and Its People Vol 1 Lewis Historical Publishing Co pp 15 Retrieved January 25 2008 McKeveley Blake January 1939 Historic Aspects of the Phelps and Gorham Treaty of July 4 8 1788 PDF Rochester History Rochester Public Library 1 1 ISSN 0035 7413 Archived from the original PDF on December 3 2007 Retrieved January 5 2008 McKelvey Blake January 1939 Rochester History PDF Rochester Library Archived PDF from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved December 28 2012 Shilling Donovan A Rochester s Romantic Rogue The Life and Times of Ebenezer Allan The Crooked Lake Review Archived from the original on July 22 2012 Retrieved December 28 2012 a b c d Oliver Phelps 1749 1809 Archived from the original on February 11 2012 Retrieved December 27 2012 Phelps Hatheway House amp Garden Archived from the original on March 12 2013 Retrieved December 28 2012 Hatheway House Suffield Library Archived from the original on August 17 2013 Retrieved December 28 2012 Hauptman Laurence M L Gordon McLester III eds 1999 The Oneida Indian Journey From New York to Wisconsin 1784 1860 Madison Wisconsin University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0299161446 a b Milliken Charles F 1911 A History of Ontario County New York and Its People Vol 1 Lewis Historical Publishing Co pp 15 Retrieved January 25 2008 Sons of the American Revolution New York State Society 1894 Yearbook of the Sons of the American Revolution New York State Society p 121 Retrieved May 6 2018 Yale University 1910 Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale College Deceased During the Academic Year New Haven CT Tuttle Morehouse amp Taylor Company pp 705 706 Retrieved May 6 2018 Further reading editUnited States Congress Oliver Phelps id P000298 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress External links editOliver Phelps at Find a Grave United States Congress Oliver Phelps id P000298 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress U S House of RepresentativesPreceded bynew district Member of the U S House of Representatives from New York s 17th congressional district1803 1805 Succeeded bySilas Halsey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oliver Phelps politician amp oldid 1177791345, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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