William Wellington Corlett (April 10, 1842 – July 22, 1890) was a Delegate from the Territory of Wyoming.
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Corlett was born April 10, 1842 in Concord, Ohio and attended the district schools eventually graduating from the Willoughby (Ohio) Collegiate Institute in 1861.
With the outbreak of the Civil War, he enlisted in the Union Army in 1862 and served in the 28th Ohio Infantry and the 87th Ohio Infantry (a three-month regiment). He was captured with the regiment at the Battle of Harpers Ferry on September 15, 1862.
He was paroled and returned to Ohio, where he taught school in Kirkland and Painesville. Corlet reentered the army with the Twenty-fifth Ohio Battery. He was later placed on detached service with the Third Iowa Battery. He returned to Ohio in 1865 and mustered out of the army.
He attended law school at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and graduated from Union Law College, Cleveland, Ohio, in July 1866.
He was admitted to the bar the same year and became a professor in elementary law at the State University and Law College as well as lecturer at several commercial colleges in Cleveland.
He settled in Cheyenne, Wyoming, August 20, 1867, and engaged in the practice of law before becoming an unsuccessful Republican candidate for Delegate to the Forty-first Congress in 1869.
He was Postmaster of Cheyenne in 1870, a as member of the Territorial senate in 1871 and prosecuting attorney of Laramie County 1872-1876.
Corlett was elected as a Republican a Delegate to the Forty-fifth Congress (March 4, 1877-March 3, 1879) but was not a candidate for renomination in 1878.
He resumed the practice of law and in 1879 declined the appointment as chief justice of Wyoming Territory but served as member of the legislative council 1880-1882.
He died in Cheyenne, Wyoming, July 22, 1890 and was interred in Lakeview Cemetery.
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