David Shelton was born in
North Carolina in 1812 and moved to Missouri before crossing the
Oregon Trail in 1847. In 1852 he came to Olympia, but took his
family the next year to the head of Hammersley' s Inlet, "Big
Skookum Bay." It was there that he took out a Donation Land
Claim and chose to settle. A description of the area is given in
the book, Told by the Pioneers: "When David Shelton landed on
his later town site, it was covered by brush and timber as thick
as hair on a cat's tail." The city of Shelton takes its name
from its founder, David Shelton. When the city incorporated in
1890, he became the first mayor.
David Shelton was a member of the First Territorial Legislature.
In 1854 when the legislature created a new county, he named it "Sawamish"
after a local tribe. Sawamish it was until 1864 when the name
was changed to Mason County. In 1888 when the county seat was
moved to Shelton, David Shelton donated the land for the court
house. He also donated the land for several churches and was an
official of the local school district. The Indians called him,
"Uncle Dabby." He gave them flour and they in turn provided him
with salmon.
When he died in 1897, many prominent people followed his remains
from Shelton to the Masonic Cemetery. The Washington Standard
lamented his passing. His obituary noted that, "David Shelton
was a true representative of the hardy class of intelligent
citizens who blazed the pathway of civilization in the far West.
He was a man of marked intelligence, indomitable will-power, and
in his prime possessed the physical strength necessary to endure
the hardships and privations of frontier life. His public acts
have left their impress upon the early history of the State and
his private life has been an epic of the marvelous achievements
of the days when Western civilization was just finding a
foothold on the western slope of the continent."
Shelton's wife, Frances,
preceded him in death by almost 10 years. She was born in
Kentucky. They married in 1837 in Missouri and together they had
11 children. By the time she died in 1887, only 6 of the
children survived. Lying nearby is son
Frank, who
died of typhoid fever at the age of 22 in 1875.
Frances Shelton was the first white woman to settle northwest of
Olympia. She believed in Spiritualism as so many did in those
days. Her obituary noted that, "... she trusted that when she
departed this life, it was to enter upon a higher and more
glorious one." It also stated that, "She was a dutiful and
loving wife and mother, and a good neighbor."