Charles Henry Sheldon was the second Governor of South Dakota.
Background
Charles Henry Sheldon was born in Johnson, Vermont, the third of four children of Gresham and Mary (Brown) Sheldon. After the death of his father in 1844, Sheldon worked as a farm laborer from the ages of twelve to eighteen. And then, he worked at a store.
Career
He joined the abolitionist movement. On November 23, 1861, Sheldon joined Company East of the 7th Vermont Infantry Regiment and then entered active service in 1862 as a sergeant at Rutland, Vermont. On July 13, 1865, he became a captain and was then mustered out at Brownsville, Texas.
Sheldon"s last year in the military was spent on the western frontier.
After leaving the Army, Sheldon entered the mercantile business in Pope County, Illinois. Sheldon"s first wife, Mary Walters Sheldon, died in 1874.
They had two children. Sheldon settled on government land and became a farmer.
Sheldon entered politics in 1886, when he represented the twelfth legislative district in the Territorial Legislature.
He represented Day, Roberts, Grant, and Codington Counties. And, this continued until 1887. In 1890, Sheldon was chairman of the Day County delegation at the state Republican convention in Mitchell, South Dakota.
At the state Republican convention in 1892, Sheldon was nominated for Governor.
In the general election, he beat both A. L. Van Osdel (the Independent candidate) and Peter Couchman (the Democratic Candidate). He held the office for two terms from 1893 to 1897.
In 1897, Sheldon retired to his farm near Pierpont. He went on a speaking tour for the Republicans during the 1898 election campaign but fell ill as a result of a cold.
He was buried at the Pierpont Cemetery.