Charles Herrick


Charles Herrick was an American farmer and banker who represented Racine County in the Wisconsin State Senate during the 1874 session. He was elected as a Liberal Republican.

Background

Herrick was born in Westford, Massachusetts on September 22, 1814. He received both common school and academic education. He left his home town in 1836, and spent some time logging on the Muskegon and White Rivers of Michigan. In 1841, he moved to the Wisconsin Territory, settling first in Racine, where he went into the produce business and sold cattle. On December 14, 1846, he married Ann Ball, a native of Virgil, New York; the couple would have three sons. In 1849, he went into the business of manufacturing fanning mills, a business he continued until 1854.
He was a Trustee in 1845 of the then-Village of Racine, then in 1850 was an alderman of the City of Racine. When the city created a school board, he was among those elected to it. When, in 1855, a Racine Gas-light and Coke Company was organized, he was among those elected to its initial board of directors.
In 1857 he moved to the neighboring town of Mount Pleasant. He was a supervisor of the town in 1870 and 1872.

State Senate

Herrick was elected in an 1873 special election to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of incumbent Robert Hall Baker, a Republican, who was running for Lieutenant Governor. Herrick won 2,423 votes, to 1,519 votes for former state senator and State Representative Philo Belden, the regular Republican candidate.
In 1874, Baker ran for his old seat, and beat Herrick by 2,706 votes to Herrick's 2,130 as the candidate of the Liberal Reform Party, a short-lived coalition of Democrats, Reform and Liberal Republicans, and Grangers formed in 1873 which secured the election of a Governor of Wisconsin and elected a number of state legislators.

Death

He died of heart failure at his home in Racine on November 14, 1886.

Electoral history