Rip Reukema | |
State: | Wisconsin |
State Senate: | Wisconsin |
District: | 6th |
Term Start: | January 5, 1903 |
Term End: | January 2, 1905 |
Predecessor: | William Devos |
Successor: | Jacob Rummel |
State1: | Wisconsin |
State Assembly1: | Wisconsin |
District1: | Milwaukee 5th |
Term Start1: | January 2, 1893 |
Term End1: | January 7, 1895 |
Predecessor1: | Conrad Krez |
Successor1: | Albert Woller |
Party: | Republican |
Birth Date: | 23 April 1857 |
Birth Place: | Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Death Place: | Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Restingplace: | Union Cemetery, Milwaukee |
Spouse: | Catalyntje Cornelia Vanden Broeke |
Ripke "Rip" Reukema (April 23, 1857September 17, 1917) was an American lawyer and Republican politician from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was a member of the Wisconsin State Senate (1903) and State Assembly (1893). He was of Dutch descent.
Rip Reukema was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to immigrants from the Netherlands. He was educated in the Milwaukee Public Schools and went on to study law in the offices of Nathan Pereles and E. P. Smith.[1] He would become a lawyer, being admitted to practice in open court upon examination March 7, 1881.[2] Reukema died on September 17, 1917, in Milwaukee.[3]
Reukema was elected to the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1892, serving in the 1893 session. A decade later, he won a 1902 special election to serve in the State Senate for the 1903 session, completing the term of William Devos, who had resigned to become collector of customs at the port of Milwaukee. He was a Republican. He was elected twice as Justice of the Peace. He served as director of the Milwaukee school board from 1897 to 1899, and member of the school board commission from 1901 to 1902. He was also the treasurer of the Milwaukee Bar Association, and director of the Citizens' Loan and Trust Company.[2]