Reuben G. Doud Explained

Office:20th and 22nd Mayor of Racine, Wisconsin
Term Start:April 1875
Term End:April 1876
Predecessor:Robert Hall Baker
Successor:John G. Meachem
Term Start1:April 1872
Term End1:April 1874
Predecessor1:Massena B. Erskine
Successor1:Robert Hall Baker
State2:Wisconsin
State Assembly2:Wisconsin
District2:Waupaca
Term Start2:January 11, 1865
Term End2:January 10, 1866
Predecessor2:Albert K. Osborn
Successor2:Albert K. Osborn
Birth Date:20 January 1830
Birth Place:McGraw, New York
Death Place:Winnebago, Wisconsin
Restingplace:Mound Cemetery, Racine
Party:Republican
Children:Mary Elizabeth

Reuben G. Doud (January 20, 1830  - October 2, 1878) was an American businessman and politician. He was the 20th and 22nd Mayor of Racine, Wisconsin.

Biography

Born in McGraw, New York, in Cortland County, to Reuben and Betsey McGraw Doud. In 1849, Doud moved to Wisconsin, first arriving in Racine, then traveling to Delavan, and finally settling near Green Bay. He entered the transportation business as a cabin boy on Fox River steamboats.[1] [2]

In 1856, he traveled to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and purchased a steamboat, which he navigated down the Ohio River, up the Mississippi, to the Wisconsin River, and was the first boat to pass through the completed locks on the Fox River after the improvements had been completed that year. He made the same trip again in 1857, after building another steamboat in Pittsburgh, the Appleton Belle, which he then sold in Oshkosh. He then began building steamboats in Wisconsin, building and operating the Fountain City and Bay City, which traveled a route between Berlin, Oshkosh, Fond du Lac and Green Bay.[1]

In 1861, he sold his interests on this existing transportation route and relocated to Gills Landing, Wisconsin, and became involved in the warehousing business there, and constructed a tannery. He continued to operate the steamboat Berlin City, on a route between Green Bay and New London, and, in 1863 and 1864, manufactured two new boats, the Northwestern and Tigress.[1]

In 1866, he moved to Racine, Wisconsin, and began a partnership with Martin E. Tremble to enter the lumber industry. Tremble and Doud owned significant forested lands and operated a mill on the Big Suamico River, near Green Bay. He built two schooners, the Reuben Doud and M. E. Tremble, and purchased a third, Rainbow.[1]

In 1877, while preparing a European trip with his family, Doud was hospitalized. He died at the Northern Hospital for the Insane in Winnebago, Wisconsin, September 30, 1877.[3] [1]

Public office

In 1864, while living in Gills Landing, Doud was elected as a Republican to represent Waupaca County in the Wisconsin State Assembly for the 1865 session.[1]

After moving to Racine, he was elected Mayor of the city in 1872, 1873, and 1875.[1] [4]

Personal and family life

On September 15, 1864, Doud married Katharine Reynolds of Cortland, New York. They had one daughter, Mary Elizabeth.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: United States Biographical Dictionary and Portrait Gallery of Eminent and Self-Made Men, Wisconsin Volume . American Biographical Publishing Company . 1877 . 240-243. June 1, 2019.
  2. News: Death of Reuben Doud . Green Bay Advocate . . October 4, 1877 . June 1, 2019.
  3. Collections on the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. 8 . 1879 . State Historical Society of Wisconsin. 463 . June 1, 2019.
  4. News: Reuben Doud . The Inter Ocean. October 3, 1877. 6. Newspapers.com. June 5, 2015 .