Background
Reeves was born in 1825 in Clapham, Surrey, England.
Reeves was born in 1825 in Clapham, Surrey, England.
He was the father of the author and politician the Honorary William Pember Reeves. He represented the Avon electorate from an 1867 by-election to 1868, when he resigned.
He contested the Selwyn electorate in 1871 against Edward Cephas John Stevens and had a majority of one vote.
He was Resident Minister for the Middle (South) Island in the 3rd Fox Ministry in 1871–1872. The dominant topic for the 1875 election was the abolition of the Provinces.
Reeves favoured the retention of the provincial system of government, whilst Cecil Fitzroy, 20 years his junior, was an abolitionist. On 21 October 1884, Reeves was appointed to the New Zealand Legislative Council.
He served until his death on 4 April 1891.
He was a journalist and newspaper proprietor in Christchurch and Lyttelton, and was the principal proprietor of the Lyttelton Times, though he died virtually bankrupt (he had failed on the Stock Exchange in England before migrating to New Zealand). Reeves underwent an operation at the end of March 1891. Later in the week, complications set in and he died the following day on 4 April 1891 at his homestead "Risingholme".
He is buried at Barbadoes Street Cemetery and it was the largest Christchurch funeral since William Sefton Moorhouse had died 10 years earlier.
Risingholme in the Christchurch suburb of Opawa was registered by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust as a Category II heritage building on 24 June 2005.