Travis was born September 21, 1948. He earned his
bachelor's degree from
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and went on to earn his master's from the
Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison. He also attended
Madison Area Technical College and Bindl Flight School, in
Waunakee, Wisconsin, where he earned a private
pilot's license. After receiving his bachelor's degree, Travis went to work as an administrative assistant for the Wisconsin Senate Democratic Caucus. By 1974, he had risen to become staff director for the caucus. In 1978, incumbent assemblymember
Peter D. Bear announced he would run for
Wisconsin State Senate, creating a vacancy in
Wisconsin's 37th Assembly district. Travis decided to run in the Democratic primary, and prevailed in a field of five candidates that included future Wisconsin Senate Democratic leader
Charles Chvala. Over the next five years, Wisconsin would go through two significant redistrictings. In 1982, after the Legislature and Governor failed to agree on a map reflecting the
1980 United States census, a federal court ordered the implementation of their own map, which was designed to punish incumbent legislators. Travis' district shifted from a mostly urban district on Madison's north side to the new
93rd Assembly district, which was composed of most of northwestern Dane County. He survived a competitive general election and returned to office in 1983, where the new Legislature set about creating a new redistricting plan to override the court-ordered plan. Under the new map, Travis resided in the new
81st Assembly district, which would be his constituency for the remainder of his career. He was re-elected twelve more times in the 81st district. Travis announced in May 2007 that he would not run for a 16th term in the Assembly. ==References==