John Dennis Phelan


John Dennis Phelan was an American editor, politician and jurist.

Early life

Phelan was born on March 23, 1809 in New Brunswick, New Jersey. He was the son of John Phelan, an Irish immigrant, and Priscilla Oakes Phelan, of New England stock, who moved to Richmond and, later, Huntsville, Alabama in 1818. His father was cashier of the Bank of New Brunswick during the War of 1812. His brother was James Phelan, Sr., also a jurist and journalist.
He graduated at the University of Nashville in 1828 and studied law in Virginia with the Hon. Benjamin Watkins Leigh.

Career

After being admitted to the bar in Virginia, he returned to Alabama in 1830. He became editor of the Huntsville Democrat. From 1833 to 1835, he served in the Alabama Legislature as a Democrat representing Madison County, until he became the Attorney General of Alabama in 1836. After he was succeeded at Attorney General by Lincoln Clark in 1838, he returned to the Legislature where he was elected Speaker of the Alabama House of Representatives in 1839, serving in that role util 1840.
From 1841 to 1851, he was a judge of the circuit court, until his elevation to the Alabama Supreme Court in 1851, holding that office for two years until 1853, and then again in 1863-65 when "he was removed by the 'Reconstruction' carpet-bag ruler of Alabama." In the interval when he was not a judge in the Alabama Supreme Court, he was clerk to that body, and also later in 1865-68. He published two poems about Civil War, “Good Old Cause” and “Ye Men of Alabama.” He became professor of law in the University of the South in 1869, holding the chair till his death.

Personal life

On April 16, 1835, he was married to Mary Anne Harris in Limestone County, Alabama. Her parents were Mary Anne Harris and Gen. Thomas Kent Harris, a native of Virginia who moved to Tennessee and served as a representative of that state in the U.S. Congress from 1813 to 1815. Together, they were the parents of:
After several months of ill health, Phelan died in Birmingham, Alabama on September 9, 1879.

Descendants

His grandson was Phelan Beale, who formed the law practice of "Bouvier and Beale" with Jacqueline Onassis's grandfather, "Major" John Vernou Bouvier, Jr. Beale was married to Edith Ewing Bouvier, sister of John Vernou Bouvier III and aunt to Jackie Kennedy.