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Charles Johnson Phenis

Male 1851 - Yes, date unknown


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Charles Johnson Phenis was born on 14 Feb 1851 in Indiana (son of Solomon Austin Phenis and Sarah "Sallie" Coats); and died.

    Notes:

    c.1926 address: Charley Phenis, Cleveland, Oklahoma. Deceased by 1956.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Solomon Austin Phenis was born on 10 Dec 1817 in Ohio; died on 1 Jul 1903 in Guthrie, Logan County, Oklahoma; was buried in Camp Russell Cemetery, Guthrie, Logan County, Oklahoma.

    Notes:

    Ken Harvey writes that:

    "Solomon Phenis was born on 10th Dec 1810 according to Mead McWethy. This contradicts other records. Phenis is a German name and the original immigrant ancestor was thought to have been a Hessian soldier employed by the British during the American Revolution. He is therefore thought to have come from the then German state of Hesse.

    One Phenis brother is said to have died in in the war, another said to have returned to Hesse, and the the third one married a local girl.

    The family is known to have moved from Indiana to Kansas. On the basis of submitted I.G.I. birth data the family appear to have moved from Kokomo, Howard, Indiana to the Madison-Emporia area of Kansas between 1851 and 1858. Strangely the as yet unexamined census data appears to suggest that the family moved after 1860.

    [Note: A Solomon Phenis, born ca 1811 in Indiana, was living in Union County, Indiana in 1870--the two families may have been conflated]

    Solomon Phenis's watch, made in 1879 or earlier, is in the possession of Franklin Meade McWethy's children (1996)."

    From FindAGrave:

    Kansas Collection Books: William G. Cutler's History of the State of Kansas, Greenwood Co., Part 10:

    SOLOMON PHENIS, farmer, Section 13, P. O. Madison, is one of the oldest settlers of this region. Born in Preble County, Ohio, in 1817. His parents removed to Indiana in 1823, and in 1855 he, with five of his neighbors from Hamilton County, that State, started for Kansas, making the journey by ox-team in thirty-four days; and locating upon the banks of a small stream, which has ever since been known as "Phenis Creek," upon the north line of what was then Madison County, bur subsequently became part of Lyon.

    The party was joined during the same year by a brother of Mr. Phenis (Judge J. R. Phenis) and several of his former neighbors, thus forming quite a settlement. Lawrence was then their nearest post office and the mail was delivered weekly by carriers from that city, the settlers here paying him at the rate of a dollar per month for each family. This continued until the post office was established at Emporia.

    In 1860, Mr. Phenis was thrown from his horse and his thigh bone broken, which, being imperfectly set, owing to no medical man being at hand, has rendered him a cripple for life, and in spite of of his earnest desire to do so, prevented his entering the army. In 1863, he removed to this county, locating on a farm on Section 25, Town 22, Range 12, this township, where he remained until October, 1880, when he sold it and removed to his present one, which is nearer town, and upon which he has built a very fine house, the interior of which is very conveniently arranged and thoroughly furnished throughout, costing $1,500. Nearly half of his present farm is under cultivation, his corn yield being fifty-five bushels per acre.

    In 1839, Mr. Phenis married Miss Sarah Coats, who bore him thirteen children, the eldest of whom, Cyrus, born May 23, 1841, enlisted May 13, 1862, in Company B, Ninth Kansas Cavalry, and served three years, being discharged May 18, 1865, and who, while upon his return home was taken ill, and died at Emporia upon the anniversary of his birth, May 23, 1865. The remaining nine children now left to Mr. Phenis are Esley, born August 28, 1842; John Newton, born June 11, 1847; Isaac, January 23, 1848; Charles, February 14, 1850; William Riley April 14, 1852; Evangeline, April 2, 1854; Nina, January 23, 1858;Hannah, February 28, 1861; and Ellsworth, April 21, 1862. All save the youngest are married, and all reside in the State and have made the subject of this sketch a grandfather no less than twenty-two times. Mrs. Phenis died October 11, 1876, and on January 18, 1877, he married his present consort, Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, nee Harrison, who is also one of the earlier settlers of the State. Mr. P. has never cared to accept any office, and, although twice elected County Commissioner, refused to serve; upon the last occasion, although compelled to qualify in order to satisfy the desires of his friends, he resigned the next day. His brother, I. R. Phenis, is Probate Judge of the county.

    He is shown on FindAGrave as a son of Solomon W. Phenis of Wilkes County, GA and Elizabeth Hammond. of Oglethorpe, GA.


    (Research):

    Census Listings:

    1870 Census
    Kansas, Greenwood County, Madison Township, PO Madison
    Enumerated 7 Jun 1870
    Page 6
    43-43
    Phenis, Solomon 52 M W Farmer 4800 1750 Ohio
    Phenis, Sallie 46 F W Keeping House Ind
    Phenis, Ersula A 25 F W Ind
    Phenis, Charles J 20 m W Works on Farm Ind
    Phenis, William R 18 M W Works on Farm Ind
    Phenis, Evangeline L 15 F W Ind
    Phenis, Nina E 12 f W Kansas
    Phenis, Hannah C 9 F W Kansas
    Phenis, Solomon E 8 M W Kansas
    Coats, Charlotte 74 F W South Carolina

    Solomon married Sarah "Sallie" Coats about 1839. Sarah was born on 6 Mar 1823 in Marion County, Indiana; died on 11 Oct 1876 in Lyon County, Kansas; was buried in Haworth Cemetery, Emporia, Lyon County, Kansas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Sarah "Sallie" Coats was born on 6 Mar 1823 in Marion County, Indiana; died on 11 Oct 1876 in Lyon County, Kansas; was buried in Haworth Cemetery, Emporia, Lyon County, Kansas.

    Notes:

    From FindAGrave:

    Obituary
    Courtesy of Greenwood County Historical Society
    Died of congestive chills, while on a visit to her son in Lyon County, after a few hours' illness Wednesday, October 11, 1876, Sally wife of Solomon Phenis of Madison, Greenwood County, Kansas, in the 54th year of her age.

    The subject of this memoir was born March 6, 1823, in Marion county, Indiana. (Daughter of William & Charlotte Coats.) She was married to her now bereaved husband in 1839. They immigrated to Kansas in March 1855, and settled on Phenis creek, and moved from there to their present home on the Verdigris River in 1861.

    Coming to Kansas in its earliest settlement, she necessarily met with all the privations of pioneer life, which she always bore with not only the greatest fortitude but was ever ready to extend a helping hand and sympathy to all who were less fortunate than she, as many a greatful heart will testify by a thrill of sadness upon hearing of her death. She acted well her part in all the relations of life, as wife, mother and neighbor. Though humble in life she was widely known by a large circle of friends and acquaintances; who extend their sympathies to the sadly bereaved family in this their hour of their sore affliction.

    For consolation we would point the afflicted to the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world; and may they and we take warning by this dispensation, and ever be ready to meet the messenger when he comes.


    Ken Harvey writes that she was "The family name Coats is believed to be associated with the "Coats-Clark" thread manufacturers.

    William Penn, the founder of Pennsylvania, is supposed to have given to a forefather of Sallie Coats a tract of land including the Philadelphia waterfront. The fortunate ancestors were supposed to have been Bartholomew Coppack (original grantee) whose daughter Mary married Marmaduke Coate. Bartholomew also had sons. The idea is that the lease on this valuable land expired and that it should have reverted to the heirs.

    Swindlers tell "heirs" in such cases that enormous corporations and banks are illegally conspiring to hold on to their property. A properly financed claim, they say, would return the "estate" to them. To launch a claim, the "heirs" must raise funds for attorney's fees and establish their lineages.

    In this case Ethel A. Phenis was asked for $6 which in 1926 was quite a lot of money. There is no certainty that she paid. In such cases hungry and genealogically unsophisticated people often grafted the ancestry of somebody else onto their own family tree to prove their connection.

    In her submission Ethel A. Phenis gave Sarah's total number of children as eight. They were listed as Newton, Isaac, Charlie, Rilley, Esley, Minna, Eva and Hannah. Her son gives the number as nine It is however very likely in my opinion that Cyrus, Esley, Newton, Eve and Ellsworth were not Sarah's children.

    It was claimed by Ethel A. Phenis that Sallie's parents were William Coate and Lottie Wright but as there was a financial objective, see above, this data is possible more hopeful than factual and certainly needs confirmation.

    Ethel was in contact, in 1923, with another presumed claiment who considered herself a cousin of Ethel. She was M.A. Coppock of Emporia, Kansas. At least she addressed her letter to "Dear Cousin" - possibly an assumption based on their mutual goal.

    Mead McWethy would have known of the information that his mother had intended giving to the Ohio based Coppock-Coate Claimant Association in 1926. This particular Association was possibly a fraudulent exploitation of an arguably legitimate claim. It is unlikely that Ethel ever sent the $6 required as the original application is in the possession of Penny Ethlen Payne (1996) and Lunora McWethy (1996) thinks that her mother was unable to afford it at the time.

    Mead McWethy states very clearly that there is very little reliable information available regarding Sallie Coats' parentage. He noted that all of Solomon and Sallie Phenis's children were deceased by 1956 and he seems to have had little patience with the claim, unlike his mother."



    Children:
    1. Ursula Phenis was born on 28 Aug 1843 in Indiana; and died.
    2. Isaac Huston Phenis was born on 23 Jan 1848 in Indiana; and died.
    3. 1. Charles Johnson Phenis was born on 14 Feb 1851 in Indiana; and died.
    4. William Riley Phenis was born on 14 Apr 1852 in Indiana; died on 26 May 1909 in Stillwater, Payne County, Oklahoma; was buried in Ripley Oak Park Cemetery, Ripley, Payne County, Oklahoma.
    5. Evangeline L. Phenis was born about 1855 in Indiana; and died.
    6. Nina E. Phenis was born on 23 Jan 1858 in Kansas; and died.
    7. Hannah C. Phenis was born on 26 Feb 1861 in Kansas; and died.
    8. Solomon Ellsworth Phenis was born about 1862 in Kansas; and died.