Background
Philipp was born in Honey Creek, Sauk County, Wisconsin, the son of Luzi Phillip and Sabina (Ludwig) Phillip.
Governor of Wisconsin politician
Philipp was born in Honey Creek, Sauk County, Wisconsin, the son of Luzi Phillip and Sabina (Ludwig) Phillip.
He attended the common schools and worked as a railroad telegraph operator in Baraboo, Wisconsin before becoming the telegrapher and agent for the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad in Lodi, Wisconsin.
Philipp also worked for the Gould transcontinental system and as traffic manager for Schlitz Brewery Company. While he was a manager of a lumber company in Mississippi from 1894 to 1902, he founded the unincorporated community of Philipp in Tallahatchie County, Mississippi. He bought the Union Refrigerator Transit Company in Saint Louis in 1903, and reorganized it as the Union Refrigerator Transit Company of Wisconsin after moving it to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
He held various political positions in Wisconsin.
He served with Robert M. Louisiana Follette, Senior as chairman of the Milwaukee County Convention, before disagreeing with him over railroad oversight. From 1909-1914 he was the Milwaukee Police Commissioner.
After leaving office, he returned to his business pursuits. He operated two model farms and served as regent of Marquette University.
Philipp died on June 15, 1925 (age 64 years, 82 days) in Milwaukee and is interred at Forest Home Cemetery in Milwaukee.
A conservative Republican, he wrote, with the help of Edgar Werlock, Political Reform in Wisconsin: A Historical Review of the Subjects of Primary Election, Taxation and Railway Regulation (1910).