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    Minnesota's Oldest Murder Mystery: The Case of Edward Phalen: St. Paul's Unsaintly Pioneer

    by Gary Brueggemann


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    • ISBN-13: 9781592985357
    • Publisher: Beaver's Pond Press, Incorporated
    • Publication date: 11/28/2012
    • Pages: 306
    • Sales rank: 422,805
    • Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)

    Table of Contents

    Introduction vii

    Prologue xv

    Chapter 1 Edward Phelan's Shadowy Past 1

    Chapter 2 Phelan Becomes the First Settler of St. Paul's Downtown District 9

    Chapter 3 A September to Remember: A Historic Birth and Mysterious Death 19

    Chapter 4 A Gruesome Discovery 35

    Chapter 5 Phelan's Arrest and the Hearing on All Saints Day 41

    Chapter 6 Phelan's Mysterious Trial and an Analysis of Arguments for His Defense 79

    Chapter 7 Who Killed John Hays? Following the Evidence to a Logical Conclusion 121

    Chapter 8 The Case Against Phelan Does Not Favor Premeditated Murder 169

    Chapter 9 A Fictional Account of the Murder and Cover-Up Based on the Historical Record 179

    Chapter 10 Phelan Gains His Freedom and Some Distinction (But Loses Valuable Land, All His Former Neighbors and Ultimately His Life) 265

    Acknowledgments 291

    About the Author 293

    Endnotes 295

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    On September 27, 1839, the battered body of a middle-aged Irishman was found by some Dakota Indian boys. The corpse washed up along the Mississippi River shore, about seven miles downstream from Fort Snelling near the ancient Indian landmark the non-Indians called Carver's Cave. It was the body of Sgt. John Hays, a popular former soldier, who, prior to his disappearance twenty-one days earlier, had been sharing a log shanty a few miles upriver from the cave with his friend and business partner, Edward Phelan (or Phalen). Before the year was over, Phelan was arrested and charged with the murder of his friend. This is the first book to focus on this historic murder and the first thorough biography of Phelan, a notorious pioneer intimately involved in the making of St. Paul and founding of Minnesota. Was he guilty? All investigative reports and records of Phelan's trial were mysteriously lost and no newspapers covered the story. However, in 1994, St. Paul historian Gary Brueggemann made an amazing discovery in the Minnesota Historical Society archives: hidden in the papers of Joseph R. Brown was Brown's original Justice of the Peace casebook which included his handwritten transcription of the Hay's murder hearing. Using this record, other primary sources, and drawing from decades of studying Minnesota and St. Paul history, the author theorizes a logical solution to Minnesota's oldest unsolved murder.

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