51st Wisconsin Legislature


The Fifty-First Wisconsin Legislature convened from to in regular session. During this term, legislative business was largely held in the north wing of the Wisconsin State Capitol, which was the only part of the capitol to remain intact after the 1904 fire.
This was the first legislative session after the redistricting of the Senate and Assembly according to an act of the previous session.
Senators representing even-numbered districts were newly elected for this session and were serving the first two years of a four-year term. Assembly members were elected to a two-year term. Assembly members and even-numbered senators were elected in the general election of November 5, 1912. Senators representing odd-numbered districts were serving the third and fourth year of a four-year term, having been elected in the general election of November 8, 1910.
The governor of Wisconsin during this entire term was Republican Francis E. McGovern, of Milwaukee County, serving his second two-year term, having won re-election in the 1912 Wisconsin gubernatorial election.

Major events

Major legislation

  • February 18, 1913: Joint Resolution ratifying an amendment to the constitution of the United States relating to popular election of United States Senators, 1913 Joint Resolution 5. This was Wisconsin's ratification of the seventeenth amendment to the United States Constitution.
  • May 7, 1913: An Act to authorize the industrial commission to investigate the subject of old-age pensions, . Initial steps toward establishing a state pension system.
  • May 14, 1913: An Act... relating to the law of the road for automobiles, and providing a penalty, . Established in law that automobiles and other vehicles should move to their right when encountering oncoming traffic.
  • May 27, 1913: An Act... relating to pecuniary assistance to prisoners and their families, . Enabled prisoners to receive payment for participating in state work release programs.
  • May 28, 1913: An Act... relating to infectious diseases, . Established that persons suffering from tuberculosis but not abiding by public health directives could be involuntarily committed to a hospital to prevent spread of the disease.
  • May 29, 1913: An Act... to appropriate a certain sum of money to the normal school fund to build a normal school at Eau Claire, . Establishing the school that would become University of Wisconsin–Eau Claire.
  • June 14, 1913: An Act... relating to the employments of minors and females, . Specified a wide range of dangerous job duties for which it would be illegal to employ minors.

Sessions

1st Regular session: January 8, 1913August 9, 1913

Leaders

Senate leadership

Assembly leadership

Members

Members of the Senate

Members of the Senate for the Fifty-First Wisconsin Legislature:

Members of the Assembly

Members of the Assembly for the Fifty-First Wisconsin Legislature:

Changes from the 50th Legislature

New districts for the 51st Legislature were defined in 1911 Wisconsin Act 661, passed into law in the 50th Wisconsin Legislature.

Senate redistricting

Summary of changes

  • 11 districts were left unchanged
  • Dodge County went from having its own district to sharing with Washington County.
  • Milwaukee County went from having 5 districts to 6.
  • Rock County went from having its own district to sharing again with Walworth County.
  • Only two single-county districts remain.

Assembly redistricting

Summary of changes

  • Bayfield County became its own district after previously having been in a shared district with Sawyer and Washburn counties.
  • Eau Claire County went from having 2 districts to 1.
  • Langlade County became its own district after previously having been in a shared district with Florence and Forest counties.
  • Marinette County went from having 2 districts to 1.
  • Milwaukee County went from having 16 districts to 19.
  • Polk County became its own district after previously having been in a shared district with Burnett County.
  • Price and Taylor counties both became independent districts after previously having been in a shared district.
  • Rock County went from having 3 districts to 2.
  • Sauk County went from having 2 districts to 1.
  • Waupaca County went from having 2 districts to 1.