b. 1805-05-18
               
               d. 1880-11-08
               
               
                  
                  Governor Fayette McMullen (also spelt McMullin) was born on 
18 May 1805 in Estellville, Scott County. McMullen's remembrance rests on his governorship for
                     
Washington Territory -- appointed by 
President Buchanan -- from 
1857 to 1859. In McMullen's young life he was educated at private schools and spent some time as
                     a coach driver and a teamster -- working in the family owned business. He moved into politics as a member of the State Senate from 
1839-1849, then as an elected Democrat to the thirty-first and to the three succeeding congresses
                     from 
4 March 1849 to 3 March 1857.
 
                  
                  During this time, McMullen also served as a chairman on the Committee on Expenditures
                     in the Department of the Navy and Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings. As
                     well as, a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 
1852 and 
1856. It was not until the year of 
1857 that he was appointed to the governorship. His time as governor was limited to two
                     years, but nonetheless he did propose a call to attention for military roads and the
                     construction of a railroad through 
Washington Territory to the Pacific. During his time as governor, two major events occured in the Pacific
                     Northwest: the discovery of gold in the 
Fraser River Valley of 
British Columbia and the defeat of 
Colonel Steptoe by the Indigenous group in Spokane.
 
                  
                  It has been suggested that, due to the emergence of the issue of “legislative divorce”
                     in the Washington Territorial Legislature, which granted divorce without the aid of
                     the court, McMullen accepted his appointment as governor in order to get a divorce. This theory has some weight because immediately after his divorce and remarriage,
                     McMullen left 
Washington Territory for Virginia. McMullen continued in politics after the end of his governorship. He was an advocate
                     of state's rights and at the onset of the Civil War he was elected to the Congress
                     of the Confederate States of America. Not much else is known of McMullen's life after this except for his death by a train
                     on 
8 November 1880 in Wytheville, VA.