Wisconsin's 2nd Senate district
The 2nd Senate district of Wisconsin is one of 33 districts in the Wisconsin Senate .[ 1] Located in northeast Wisconsin, the district comprises all of Menominee County along with th southern half of Oconto County , the eastern half of Shawano County , and much of eastern Outagamie County and northwest Brown County . It includes the cities of Oconto , Oconto Falls , Clintonville , and Shawano , and the villages of Bonduel , Howard , Little Chute , Seymour , and Suamico , along with parts of the cities of Green Bay , Appleton , and Kaukauna . The district also contains the entirety of the Oneida and Menominee Indian reservations.[ 2]
Current elected officials
Eric Wimberger is the senator representing the 2nd district. He was first elected in 2020 in the 30th Senate district , but ran for election in the 2nd district after the 2024 redistricting.[ 3]
Each Wisconsin State Senate district is composed of three Wisconsin State Assembly districts. The 2nd Senate district comprises the 4th, 5th, and 6th Assembly districts. The current representatives of those districts are:[ 4]
The district is located within Wisconsin's 8th congressional district , which is represented by U.S. Representative Tony Wied .[ 5]
Past senators
Note: the boundaries of districts have changed over history. Previous politicians of a specific numbered district have represented a completely different geographic area, due to redistricting .
The district has previously been represented by:[ 6]
Senator
Party
Notes
Session
Years
District Definition
District created
1848
Columbia , Marquette , Portage , and Sauk counties
Henry Merrill
Whig
1st
2nd
1849
George DeGraw Moore
Whig
3rd
1850
4th
1851
James S. Alban
Whig
5th
1852
6th
1853
Brown , Door , Outagamie , Oconto , Waupaca , Marathon , and Portage counties
Joseph F. Loy
Dem.
7th
1854
8th
1855
Perry H. Smith
Dem.
9th
1856
10th
1857
Brown , Door , Kewaunee , Oconto , Outagamie , and Shawano counties
Morgan Lewis Martin
Dem.
11th
1858
12th
1859
Edward Decker
Dem.
13th
1860
14th
1861
Edward Hicks
Dem.
15th
1862
Brown and Kewaunee counties
16th
1863
Frederick S. Ellis
Dem.
17th
1864
18th
1865
Matthew J. Meade
Dem.
19th
1866
20th
1867
1866–1871 1871–1875 Brown , Door , and Kewaunee counties
William J. Abrams
Dem.
21st
1868
22nd
1869
Lyman Walker
Dem.
23rd
1870
24th
1871
Myron P. Lindsley
Dem.
25th
1872
26th
1873
John Milton Read
Dem.
27th
1874
28th
1875
Thomas R. Hudd
Dem.
29th
1876
30th
1877
1876–1881 1882–1887 Brown County
31st
1878
32nd
1879
David M. Kelly
Rep.
33rd
1880
34th
1881
Thomas R. Hudd
Dem.
Resigned after election to U.S. House in 1886 special election.
35th
1882
36th
1883–1884
37th
1885–1886
--Vacant--
Charles W. Day
Rep.
38th
1887–1888
Enos Warren Persons
Dem.
39th
1889–1890
Brown and Calumet counties
40th
1891–1892
Robert J. McGeehan
Dem.
41st
1893–1894
1892–1895 1896–1901 1902–1911 1912–1921 1922–1953 Brown and Oconto counties
42nd
1895–1896
Andrew Caldwell Mailer
Rep.
43rd
1897–1898
44th
1899–1900
Henry F. Hagemeister
Rep.
45th
1901–1902
46th
1903–1904
47th
1905–1906
48th
1907–1908
Timothy Burke
Rep.
49th
1909–1910
50th
1911–1912
51st
1913–1914
52nd
1915–1916
53rd
1917–1918
54th
1919–1920
55th
1921–1922
56th
1923–1924
John B. Chase
Rep.
57th
1925–1926
58th
1927–1928
Elmer Hall
Rep.
Previously elected Wisconsin Secretary of State.
59th
1929–1930
60th
1931–1932
E. F. Brunette
Dem.
61st
1933–1934
62nd
1935–1936
Michael F. Kresky Jr.
Prog.
63rd
1937–1938
64th
1939–1940
John W. Byrnes
Rep.
Elected to U.S. House in 1944.
65th
1941–1942
66th
1943–1944
Harold A. Lytie
Dem.
67th
1945–1946
68th
1947–1948
Fred F. Kaftan
Rep.
69th
1949–1950
70th
1951–1952
Leo P. O'Brien
Rep.
71st
1953–1954
72nd
1955–1956
Brown County
73rd
1957–1958
74th
1959–1960
75th
1961–1962
76th
1963–1964
Robert W. Warren
Rep.
77th
1965–1966
Calumet County ,
78th
1967–1968
Myron P. Lotto
Rep.
79th
1969–1970
80th
1971–1972
Tom Petri
Rep.
Resigned after election to U.S. House in 1979 special election.
81st
1973–1974
Calumet County ,
82nd
1975–1976
83rd
1977–1978
84th
1979–1980
Don Hanaway
Rep.
Won 1979 special election. Re-elected 1980, 1984. Elected Attorney General in 1986.
85th
1981–1982
86th
1983–1984
Part of Brown, Calumet, Oconto, Outagamie, Shawano
87th
1985–1986
Part of Brown, Oconto, Outagamie, Shawano
--Vacant--
88th
1987–1988
Robert Cowles
Rep.
Won 1987 special election. Re-elected 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008. Survived 2011 recall election. Re-elected 2012, 2016, 2020.
89th
1989–1990
90th
1991–1992
91st
1993–1994
Part of Brown, Oconto, Outagamie, Shawano
92nd
1995–1996
93rd
1997–1998
94th
1999–2000
95th
2001–2002
96th
2003–2004
Part of Brown, Oconto, Outagamie, Shawano
97th
2005–2006
98th
2007–2008
99th
2009–2010
100th
2011–2012
101st
2013–2014
Part of Brown, Outagamie, Shawano, Waupaca
102nd
2015–2016
103rd
2017–2018
104th
2019–2020
105th
2021–2022
106th
2023–2024
Northwest Brown County Most of Outagamie County Most of Shawano County Part of Wauapaca County
Eric Wimberger
Rep.
Elected 2024.
107th
2025–2026
See also
References
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