Charles A. Phelps

{{short description|American politician}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2025}}

{{Infobox officeholder

|name= Charles Abner Phelps

|image=

|caption=

|office=40th President of the
Massachusetts Senate

|term_start=1858

|term_end= 1858

|predecessor=Charles W. Upham

|successor=William Claflin

|office2= Member of the
Massachusetts Senate
Fourth Suffolk Senate District

|term_start2=1857

|term_end2= 1858

|predecessor2=Daniel Warren{{Citation|last= Poole|first=Alexis | title =Poole's Annual Register of the Executive and Legislative Department of the Government of Massachusetts, 1856 Tenth series| page = 4 | publisher = Dutton and Wentworth Son Printers| location = Boston, Massachusetts | year =1856}}

|successor2=George A. Shaw{{Citation|last= Brown|first=Edgar M. | title =Annual Register of the Executive and Legislative Department of the Government of Massachusetts, 1861| page = 4 | publisher = Wright & Potter Printers| location = Boston, Massachusetts | year =1861}}

|office3= Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives

|term_start3= 1856

|term_end3= 1856

|predecessor3=Daniel C. Eddy

|successor3=Julius Rockwell

|office4= Member of the
Massachusetts House of Representatives

|term_start4=1855

|term_end4= 1856

|predecessor4=

|successor4=

|birth_date=October 19, 1820

|birth_place=Boston, Massachusetts

|death_date={{death date and age|1902|4|27|1820|10|19}}

|death_place=Boston, Massachusetts

| alma_mater =Union College, 1841;
Harvard Medical School, 1844

|party=Know Nothing, Republican

|profession=Physician

|spouse=Phoebe Harris

|children=Charles Harris Phelps

|footnotes=

}}

Charles Abner Phelps (October 19, 1820 – April 27, 1902) was an American medical doctor, diplomat, and politician, who served as a member, and the Speaker, of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and as a member and the President of the Massachusetts Senate.{{Citation|last= Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association| title =The Harvard Graduates' Magazine Vol XI No. 42| page = 305 | publisher = The Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association| location = Boston, Massachusetts | date = December 1902}}{{Citation|last= Brown|first=Edgar M. | title =Annual Register of the Executive and Legislative Department of the Government of Massachusetts, 1859| page = 4 | publisher = Alfred Mudge & Son Printers| location = Boston, Massachusetts | year =1859}}{{Citation|first=Alfred Dupont|last= Chandler| title = Harvard College Class of 1868 Secretary's Report No. 8 186-1908| page =111 | publisher = E. O. Cockayne| location = Boston, Massachusetts | year=1909}}

Early life and education

Phelps was born to Dr. Abner Phelps and Delia Hubbell (Clark) Phelps on October 19, 1820 on Congress Street in Boston, Massachusetts. Phelps attended the Mount Pleasant Classical School in Amherst, Massachusetts, where one of his classmates was Henry Ward Beecher Phelps then went on to study at the Boston Latin School and then Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, he then studied with a private tutor in Cambridge, Massachusetts to prepare himself for Yale College. Phelps attended Yale for a year then he transferred to Union College where he graduated in 1841. Phelps then attended Harvard Medical School graduating in 1844, he did his post graduate work at the Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Family life

Phelps married Phoebe Harris of Albany, New York, she was the sister of U.S. Senator Ira Harris. On September 14, 1845 their son Charles Harris Phelps was born. Charles physically abused his wife and had her committed to an insane asylum following a confrontation about his extramarital affairs. Charles also attempted to deprive his wife of access to their children. Phoebe took her daughter and fled to a Quaker family but Charles tracked them down and brought them back, so Phoebe sought help from Susan B. Anthony. Anthony spirited the mother and daughter out of town, working to find a safe and confidential place for them. Anthony faced backlash from prominent reformers including Wendell Phillips and William Lloyd Garrison. Massachusetts law gave entire guardianship over children to fathers, and Phillips and Garrison argued that Anthony should obey the law and stay out of the domestic dispute. Anthony refused to reveal Phoebe and her daughter's location. However, Charles was relentless and his agents eventually recaptured the daughter. Phoebe never saw her daughter again.{{cite book |last1=Conking |first1=Winifred |title=Votes for Women: American Suffragists and the Battle for the Ballot |date=2017 |publisher=Algonquin |location=Chapel Hill |isbn=9781616207342 |pages=75–77}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

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{{succession box

| title = Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives

| before = Daniel C. Eddy

| years = 1856 – 1857

| after =Julius Rockwell }}

{{s-par|us-ma-sen}}

{{succession box

| title = Member of the Massachusetts Senate
4th Suffolk Senate District

| before = Daniel Warren

| years = 1858 – 1860

| after =George A. Shaw }}

{{succession box

| title = 40th President of the Massachusetts Senate

| before = Charles W. Upham

| years = 1859 – 1860

| after =William Claflin }}

{{s-dip}}

{{succession box

| title = United States Consul at Prague

| before = David McMurtie Gregg

| years = 1877 – 1885

| after =Charles Jonas }}

{{s-end}}

{{Presidents of the Massachusetts Senate}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Phelps, Charles A.}}

Category:Speakers of the Massachusetts House of Representatives

Category:Massachusetts Know Nothings

Category:Republican Party members of the Massachusetts House of Representatives

Category:Harvard Medical School alumni

Category:Union College (New York) alumni

Category:Phillips Academy alumni

Category:Republican Party Massachusetts state senators

Category:Presidents of the Massachusetts Senate

Category:Politicians from Boston

Category:19th-century American people

Category:19th-century American diplomats

Category:1820 births

Category:1902 deaths

Category:19th-century members of the Massachusetts General Court

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