Bill’s Family - Person Sheet
Bill’s Family - Person Sheet
NameElizabeth Morehead , M630, 1252, F
Birth1794, KY, US100
Death1875, Christian Co, KY, US Age: 81
FlagsLived in US
Census 185019 Oct 1850, Christian Co, KY, US44 Age: 56
MemoRoll 196, Page 427, Line 15
Census 18604 Jul 1860, Hopkinsville, Christian Co, KY, US26 Age: 66
MemoRoll 362, Page 679, Line 32
Misc. Notes
JAMES SHIPP PHELPS, long one of the prominent tobacco warehousemen in Louisville and president of the J. S. Phelps House, at the southeast corner of Main and Eleventh streets, is a native Kentuckian, born at Hopkinsville, March 8, 1828, and was the third child and third son of John H. and Caroline (Shipp) Phelps. His father was born July, 1790, and came from Virginia with his brother when a young man. Some years before he had taken his wife from the well-known Shipp family near Hopkinsville. The Phelps stock is probably English, though it is not know when it made its advent into this country. James, the subject, lost his mother while less than two years old, and his father married again in October, 1830, this time taking to wife a sister of Gov. James T. Morehead. She proved an excellent mother to the little family and brought them up carefully. James had two elder brothers, Hiram Abiff, an attorney at Hopkinsville, and Laban Shipp, deceased at twenty-six years of age. The elder Phelps died in 1842. His widow married Augustine Webber, of Hopkinsville, in February, 1846, and survived him about eighteen months, dying in 1875 at the residence of her stepson in this city. Young Phelps was educated mainly by Mr. James D. Rumsey, of Hopkinsville, and in a school of a venerable Baptist minister near that place. He was in this school from the age of fourteen until he was ready to enter into active life. At the request of his father, who had in his lifetime been circuit court clerk of Christian County under the old system of appointment for a long series of years and died at his post, James entered the office of his successor while a very young man, as a writer and manager of the office, in the absence of his superior, who was in failing health. This was an important position for a youth, and fulfilled his father's expectation of the place as a capital means of education for him. So well did he improve his opportunities of legal study in the office that within a year after leaving it he was enabled to receive from the Circuit Judge a license to practice law. He opened an office with his brother (though not as a partner) in Hopkinsville; but at the end of another year he wearied at the slow and drudging character of the profession, and determined to embark in the mercantile business. He entered into partnership with Mr. Joseph K. Grant, of the same place. It was in 1853 when the two young men started in the dry goods business. The times were prosperous, and Christian was then the richest county in the State outside of Jefferson and Fayette. A great many slaves were held in the county, and the negro trade was especially lucrative. The partners made money every year, selling to the amount of $115,000 the last year they were together. In 1856, however, Mr. Phelps retired, selling his interest to Mr. Grant. In the summer of 1862 he came to Louisville and built the well known Louisville warehouse the same season at the northwest corner of Main and Tenth streets. Mr. Phelps embarked in the tobacco business as a warehouseman, and the head of Phelps, Caldwell & Co. This warehouse was sold about 1867 to Ray & Co., and the superb building now occupied by Messrs. Phelps & Co., and known as the Planters Tobacco Warehouse, at the corner of Main and Eleventh streets, was erected by Mr. Phelps and John C. Durrett. The present stock company bearing the same name, was formed in 1881, and embraces Mr. Phelps and his four sons, John H., James S. Jr., Laban and Hiram O., and capital stock $150,000. Zach Phelps, another son of Mr. Phelps, is a lawyer, and a member of the firm of O'Neal, Jackson & Phelps. Mr. Phelps was an old line Whig before the war, and a sympathizer with the Union cause when the great struggle came, and during its continuance. Many years he was much attached to Odd Fellowship, and served for several years as deputy grand master of the State. He is a member of the First Baptist Church of Louisville, in the faith of his parents and of a past generation. He was married in Hopkinsville, July 25, 1849, to Miss Mary Jane, second daughter of Zachariah and Mary Jane Glass.
Spouses
1Dr Augustine M. Webber 3,98,99, GGG Grandfather, W160, 1227, M
FatherPhillip Webber , 1724, M (1752-1821)
MotherAnna Thomson , 2329, F (1752-1822)
Marriage18 Feb 1846, Christian Co, KY, US46
Marr MemoSec II ch 19
2John H. Phelps , P412, 2332, M
Marriage1830
Last Modified 24 Mar 2000Created 3 Mar 2018 using Reunion for Macintosh
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