Background
Mellette was the son of Charles Mellette and was born in Henry County, Indiana.
politician Governor of South Dakota
Mellette was the son of Charles Mellette and was born in Henry County, Indiana.
He was educated at Marion Academy in Marion, Indiana. In 1862, Mellette entered Indiana University as a sophomore and graduated in 1863. In 1866, Mellette graduated from the School of Law at the Indiana University and went to Muncie, Indiana, where he began practicing law with Thomas J. Brady.
He is the namesake of Mellette, South Dakota. On October 6, 1864, he enlisted in Company H of the 9th Indiana Volunteers, serving as a conscripted soldier until mustering out on September 28, 1865. He served in the army as a substitute for his older invalid brother and experienced many humiliations as a result.
Mellette was elected as district attorney for Delaware County, Indiana.
In 1870, Mellette purchased the Muncie Times, a newspaper which became influential and prosperous under his tutelage. During that same year, Mellette was elected the county superintendent of schools.
Mellette"s family eventually settled in Springfield, Dakota Territory, for two years. And, Mellette served as register of the United States Land Office in Springfield until the land office was moved to Watertown, Dakota Territory, in 1880.
In October 1885, the Republicans nominated Mellette for governor of Dakota Territory.
In November 1885, Mellette ran unopposed for the office of governor. And, voters selected Huron as the temporary capitol of Dakota Territory. In 1889, voters approved the new constitution for South Dakota and elected Arthur C. Mellette as South Dakota"s first Governor.
On November 2, 1889, President Benjamin Harrison signed the proclamation to make South Dakota the fortieth state.
Mellette County, South Dakota is named in his honor. The Civil War Diary of Arthur Calvin Mellette was edited in 1975 by Gerald West. Wolff, retired historian from the University of South Dakota through auspices of the South Dakota Historical Association.
The family made what was meant to be a temporary move from Watertown to Pittsburg, Kansas in 1895. Mellette died May 25, 1896 while in Pittsburg.
His body was sent back to Watertown and interred in Mount Hope Cemetery.