Melville R. Hopewell Explained

Melville R. Hopewell
Order:12th Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
Term Start:January 3, 1907
Term End:May 2, 1911
Governor:George L. Sheldon
Ashton C. Shallenberger
Predecessor:Edmund G. McGilton
Birth Date:March 27, 1845
Birth Place:Monroe County, Indiana
Death Place:Nebraska
Spouse:Hattie E. Nelson

Melville Reeves Hopewell (March 27, 1845 – May 2, 1911) was a Nebraska lawyer and Republican politician who served as the state's 12th lieutenant governor from 1907 to 1911.

Hopewell was born in Monroe County, Indiana, in 1845, and moved to Collin County, Texas, with his parents in 1851. After his mother died in 1854, the family returned to Indiana, where his father remarried, and then moved to Kansas, followed by Gentry County, Missouri. Hopewell served in the Missouri Mounted Militia from 1863 to 1864. He graduated from Indiana Asbury University in 1869, was admitted to the bar in Indiana, then moved to Tekamah, Nebraska, in 1870. He founded the first bank in Burt County, Nebraska, in 1873. In 1887, Nebraska Governor Thayer appointed Hopewell as a district judge, which he served as until 1896, at which point he resumed his practice of law.[1]

In 1906, Hopewell was elected as lieutenant governor. He served from January 1907 until he died in office on May 2, 1911.[2] [3]

Notes and References

  1. Morton, J. Sterling et al. Illustrated History of Nebraska, Vol. 2, p. 394-96 (1906)
  2. http://www.godeke.org/Psi_Phi/Ancestors_MelvilleHopewell.htm Psi Phi Founders - Melville Reeves Hopewell
  3. (23 August 1906). Republicans of Nebraska, Warsaw Daily Times