Taylor first visited Milwaukee and Green Bay, but decided to settle in Sheboygan. He arrived in Sheboygan by boat, on the same ship that brought Harrison Carroll Hobart—the two men would establish the first legal firms in the city. Taylor partnered with Cyrus Hiller, creating a firm known as Taylor & Hiller.[3]: 204 That fall, he was elected district attorney of Sheboygan County for a one-year term.[4]
In 1852, he was elected from Sheboygan County's 1st district to the Wisconsin State Assembly for the 1853 legislative session. At this time, he was a member of the Whig Party, but would soon after become a member of the newly established Republican Party. In his one term in the Assembly, Taylor served on the committee for education, schools, and university lands, the committee on state affairs, and the committee on finance.[5] Taylor was renominated by the Whig Party for another term in the Assembly,[6] but was defeated by Democrat Adolph Rosenthal.
In 1854, he was elected to the Wisconsin State Senate as a Republican. During the 1855 session of the legislature, Taylor made an inquiry into the meaning of a number of disbursement payments to the then-Governor William A. Barstow. As a result, and possibly as an attempt to deter or embarrass Taylor, the Democratic majority offered to make him a committee of one to investigate the matter.[7] Taylor researched the matter and concluded that Barstow had improperly claimed $600 (approximately $17,000 adjusted for inflation to 2021). The investigation added to a building narrative about corruption in the Barstow administration, and Barstow was ultimately narrowly defeated in the 1855 gubernatorial election. The report also made Taylor a Democratic target for retribution and personal grudges for the rest of his career. He did not seek renomination to another term in the Senate in 1856.
At the 1857 Republican State Convention, his name was placed in nomination for Governor of Wisconsin, amidst the rivalry between Edward D. Holton and Walter D. McIndoe. Ultimately, Alexander Randall was chosen as the consensus alternative.[8] Less than a year later, on the resignation of Judge William R. Gorsline, Governor Randall appointed Taylor as Wisconsin circuit court judge for the 4th circuit.[9] At the time, the 4th circuit comprised Calumet, Fond du Lac, Manitowoc, and Sheboygan counties. The following April, Judge Taylor defeated a challenge from Isaac S. Tallmadge in an election to fill the remainder of Judge Gorsline's term.[10] He was subsequently re-elected without opposition in 1862.[11] In 1868, Judge Taylor ran for a second six-year term but was defeated by Democrat Campbell McLean.[12] Taylor's defeat was considered a major upset, as McLean was a lawyer of little significance who had served a term in the Assembly. Taylor was likely hurt among the German American population by his recent opposition to Sunday laws in Wisconsin.[13]
Undaunted, that fall he entered the race to reclaim his seat in the Wisconsin State Senate. Though he won the election, his seat was immediately contested on the grounds that he could not legally receive votes for a legislative seat while serving as a circuit court judge (his judicial term technically did not expire until December 1868). A formal complaint was introduced by Democratic Senator Edward S. Bragg in the first weeks of the new legislative session.[14] After a brief hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Taylor's victory was certified and he was allowed to resume his duties.[15] By far, Taylor's most significant legislative achievement of this term was his leadership in the passage of two resolutions, which led to the abolition of the grand jury system in Wisconsin.[16]
Revised Statutes
Taylor did not seek re-election in 1870 and instead set to work on a new compilation of the statutes of Wisconsin with annotations relating to relevant judicial case law. Taylor had been appointed to a commission in 1857 which had produced the last compilation of the statutes.[3]: 206 He published his compilation in 1871 in a 2,200-page compendium commonly referred to as Taylor's Statutes. When the state found it necessary to produce an updated version in 1875, the Wisconsin Supreme Court chose Judge Taylor as president of the commission managing the new compilation.[17][18] In the meantime, Judge Taylor relocated from Sheboygan to Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, and formed a new law partnership, first with J. M. Gillet, and then with George Eaton Sutherland.[3]: 206
Supreme Court
In 1878, the Wisconsin Supreme Court was set to expand from three seats to five, due to a constitutional amendment approved in 1877. A pre-determined compromise ensured that both new seats would be uncontested—the Democrats and Republicans would each choose one candidate to stand unopposed.[3]: 206 Judge Taylor was promptly nominated by a conference of Republican state legislators as their candidate.[19] He was elected alongside Democrat Harlow S. Orton without opposition.[20] He was re-elected to a ten-year term in 1885, without serious opposition.[21]
Judge Taylor worked until the day of his death. He died of a sudden heart attack on April 3, 1891, after eating dinner at his home on West Wilson Street in Madison, Wisconsin.[22]
Family and legacy
He married Mary Salome Calender (1828–1898), with whom he had six children.[22]