Murder of John Hays
Creator:
Paul Nelson
Bibliography
Brueggemann, Gary. Minnesota’s Oldest Murder Mystery: the Case of Edward Phalen, St. Paul’s Unsaintly Pioneer. Eden Prairie, MN: Beaver’s Pond Press, 2013.
Williams, J. Fletcher. A History of the City of Saint Paul to 1875. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1983.
Chronology
ca. 1800
John Hays is born in Waterford, Ireland.
1811
Edward Phelan is born in Derry, Ireland.
1831
Phelan lands in New York City. Four years later, he enlists in the U.S. Army and is posted at Fort Snelling, where he meets Sergeant John Hays.
1837
The Treaty of Mendota opens the area between the St. Croix and Mississippi Rivers to legal white immigration.
June 8, 1838
Phelan completes his term of enlistment in the Army. Soon after, he buys claims to two parcels of land in what is now downtown St. Paul.
April 25, 1839
Hays leaves the Army and takes up residence with Phelan.
September 5, 1839
A witness makes the last known sighting of a living John Hays.
September 9, 1839
Phelan and Benjamin Gervais commence a search for Hays in Dakota country, across the river from Hays’s claim. They go as far as Kaposia but find no trace.
September 15, 1839
Fort Snelling commander Major Lawrence Taliaferro records in his journal that he suspects Phelan of the murder.
September 27, 1839
Hays’s body is found near Carver’s Cave.
Late September or early October, 1839
Mendota justice of the peace Henry Sibley orders Phelan arrested. The case is soon transferred to Joseph R. Brown, a justice of the peace operating out of Grey Cloud Island.
November 1, 1839
Brown holds a hearing, with testimony from at least twelve witnesses. He concludes that Phelan is probably guilty.
November 4, 1839
Phelan is taken 200 miles downriver to Prairie du Chien for a grand jury hearing and, if he is indicted, a trial.
1840
In spring or summer Phelan returns to St. Paul and takes up residence again in his shanty. A few years later, he relocates a short distance northeast, along Phalen Creek.
1848
Phelan is elected a delegate to the Minnesota Territorial Convention.
1850
In the spring, a grand jury indicts Phelan for perjury and he leaves St. Paul for the California gold fields. He is murdered before arriving.
Bibliography
Brueggemann, Gary. Minnesota’s Oldest Murder Mystery: the Case of Edward Phalen, St. Paul’s Unsaintly Pioneer. Eden Prairie, MN: Beaver’s Pond Press, 2013.
Williams, J. Fletcher. A History of the City of Saint Paul to 1875. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1983.