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#CARD
STATISTICAL INFORMATION
VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
[The figures show the vote for the Democratic and Republican
nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official
statistics. Figures in the last column, for the 1990 election, may
include totals for more candidates than the ones shown.]
Alabama 609,360 602,537 717,814 467,190 1,185,154
Alaska 79,727 97,674 61,152 125,806 189,957
Arizona 340,965 521,850 660,403 478,060
Arkansas 433,122 262,313 493,910 494,735
California 3,646,672 3,541,804 4,061,122 4,837,300
Colorado 529,449 512,994 425,746 569,048 1,022,027
Connecticut 632,695 340,438 688,499 678,454
Delaware 92,378 151,115 112,918 64,554 180,157
Florida 1,877,543 1,552,376 2,016,553 2,051,071
Georgia 623,707 601,241 1,033,439 1,033,439
Hawaii 241,887 86,910 247,941 66,987 188,901 155,978 349,666
Idaho 185,066 196,958 122,295 193,641 315,936
Illinois 2,033,783 1,053,734 2,115,377 1,135,628 3,251,005
Indiana 595,192 936,143 668,778 1,430,525 696,639 806,048 1,502,687
Iowa 299,406 588,880 535,975 446,869 983,933
Kansas 246,664 576,902 207,491 578,605 786,235
Kentucky 503,775 173,330 437,976 478,034 916,010
Louisiana 723,586 646,311 (/1/)
Maine 452,581 104,164 201,053 319,167 520,320
Maryland 675,225 437,411 999,166 617,537
Massachusetts 1,693,344 884,267 1,321,712 992,917 2,424,579
Michigan 2,116,865 1,348,219 1,471,753 1,055,695 2,560,494
Minnesota 856,694 1,176,210 911,999 864,375 1,808,045
Mississippi 436,339 510,380 274,244 274,244
Missouri 699,624 777,612 660,045 1,407,416
Montana 175,809 189,445 217,563 93,836 319,336
Nebraska 378,717 278,250 349,779 243,013 593,828
Nevada 130,955 116,606 175,548 161,336
New Hampshire 79,222 154,090 91,299 189,792 291,393
New Jersey 1,599,905 1,349,937 977,810 918,874 1,938,454
New Mexico 321,983 186,579 110,033 296,712 406,938
New York 1,723,216 2,030,260 3,907,178 1,686,558
North Carolina 780,967 753,881 981,573 1,087,331 2,069,585
North Dakota 143,932 141,812 171,899 112,937
Ohio 1,949,208 1,171,893 2,480,038 1,872,716
Oklahoma 400,230 493,436 735,684 148,814 884,498
Oregon 375,735 656,317 507,743 590,095 1,099,255
Pennsylvania 1,448,219 1,906,537 1,416,764 2,901,715
Rhode Island 180,717 217,273 225,105 138,947 364,062
South Carolina 465,500 262,886 244,112 482,032 750,716
South Dakota 152,657 143,173 116,727 135,682 258,976
Tennessee 1,020,061 541,033 530,898 233,703 783,922
Texas 3,149,806 2,129,228 1,429,986 2,302,357 3,822,157
Utah 115,523 314,608 203,364 430,089
Vermont 122,667 67,798 71,460 163,183
Virginia 1,474,086 593,652 876,782 1,083,690
Washington 677,471 650,931 904,183 944,359
West Virginia 410,983 223,564 276,234 128,071 404,305
Wisconsin 702,963 754,573 1,128,625 1,030,440
Wyoming 89,821 91,143 56,848 100,784 157,632
/1/ Under Louisiana State law, a candidate receiving at least
51 percent of the vote cast in the primary election is elected to the
congressional seat.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COMMISSIONER, AND DELEGATES
IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
[The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican
nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official
statistics. Figures in the last column, for the 1990 election, may
include totals for more candidates than the ones shown.]
AL: AL: AL:
1st 96,469 1st 77,670 115,173 1st 82,185 82,530
2d 57,568 115,302 2d 120,408 2d 83,243 87,649 170,911
3d 115,127 27,769 3d 117,514 3d 101,923 36,317 138,242
4th 132,881 38,588 4th 131,880 4th 129,872 130,212
5th 125,406 33,528 5th 120,142 64,491 5th 113,047 55,326 168,383
6th 139,608 51,924 6th 138,920 68,788 6th 134,412 144,797
7th 108,126 72,777 7th 136,074 63,372 7th 127,490 53,258 180,794
AK: AK: AK:
At large 74,053 101,799 At large 71,881 120,595 At large 91,677 99,003
191,647
AZ: AZ: AZ:
1st 51,163 127,370 1st 71,388 184,639 1st 166,223 167,016
2d 77,239 24,522 2d 99,895 36,309 2d 76,549 39,586 116,179
3d 146,462 3d 72,417 174,453 3d 103,018 134,279 237,297
4th 66,894 121,939 4th 206,248 4th 89,395 141,843 231,238
5th 64,848 119,647 5th 78,115 164,462 5th 75,642 138,975 214,617
AR: AR: AR:
1st 105,782 58,937 1st (/1/) 1st 101,026 56,071 157,097
2d 128,822 41,247 2d 168,889 33,475 2d 103,471 67,800 171,271
3d 36,729 145,127 3d 54,767 161,623 3d 54,332 129,876 184,208
4th 115,339 22,980 4th 129,508 57,658 4th 110,365 42,130 152,495
CA: CA: CA:
1st 138,174 54,436 1st 159,815 72,189 1st 96,468 99,782 230,261
2d 74,602 109,758 2d 91,088 139,010 2d 65,333 133,315 209,401
3d 158,709 50,265 3d 183,470 74,296 3d 132,143 76,148 219,088
4th 128,364 54,596 4th 181,184 4th 115,090 82,738 210,454
5th 122,688 36,039 5th 133,530 33,692 5th 120,633 35,671 156,304
6th 142,946 50,606 6th 176,645 64,174 6th 137,306 64,402 201,708
7th 124,174 62,379 7th 170,006 78,478 7th 121,080 79,031 200,111
8th 121,790 76,850 8th 163,221 76,531 8th 119,645 75,544 195,189
9th 113,490 49,300 9th 152,866 56,656 9th 94,739 67,412 162,151
10th 84,240 31,826 10th 142,500 10th 81,875 48,747 130,637
11th 112,380 39,315 11th 145,484 50,050 11th 105,029 45,818 159,365
12th 69,564 111,252 12th 121,523 136,384 12th 69,270 125,157 205,698
13th 107,696 46,754 13th 143,980 63,959 13th 97,286 59,773 167,646
14th 53,597 146,906 14th 103,899 173,876 14th 120,742 128,309 249,051
15th 93,600 35,793 15th 118,710 47,957 15th 97,147 49,634 146,781
16th 128,151 31,386 16th 177,452 48,375 16th 134,236 39,885 181,002
17th 58,682 88,787 17th 51,730 129,568 17th 82,611 68,848 151,459
18th 101,480 40,907 18th 125,715 54,034 18th 98,804 98,804
19th 45,619 122,578 19th 112,033 116,026 19th 76,991 94,599 173,245
20th 49,027 129,989 20th 62,037 162,779 20th 65,101 112,962 188,925
21st 54,497 132,090 21st 75,739 181,413 21st 68,921 118,326 202,611
22d 44,036 141,096 22d 61,555 164,699 22d 61,630 108,634 180,929
23d 121,468 58,746 23d 147,858 77,184 23d 103,141 57,118 167,093
24th 103,914 24th 112,038 36,835 24th 71,562 26,607 103,875
25th 62,692 17,558 25th 85,378 25th 48,120 17,021 68,717
26th 98,091 52,662 26th 126,930 53,518 26th 78,031 44,492 127,791
27th 110,403 59,410 27th 148,814 65,307 27th 90,857 58,140 156,098
28th 92,635 25,858 28th 109,801 28,645 28th 69,482 21,245 95,600
29th 78,132 13,432 29th 88,169 14,543 29th 51,350 12,054 64,672
30th 59,369 33,705 30th 72,253 43,833 30th 45,456 28,914 78,083
31st 77,126 30,322 31st 100,919 36,017 31st 56,394 27,593 83,987
32d 90,739 39,003 32d 114,666 50,710 32d 68,268 42,692 110,960
33d 44,312 118,541 33d 57,586 151,704 33d 49,981 101,336 159,157
34th 66,404 43,659 34th 92,087 50,954 34th 55,646 36,024 91,670
35th 38,322 127,235 35th 71,186 181,203 35th 66,100 121,602 200,722
36th 78,118 58,660 36th 103,493 81,413 36th 72,409 64,961 137,370
37th 69,808 122,416 37th 89,666 174,284 37th 103,961 115,469 232,082
38th 50,625 66,032 38th 52,399 87,690 38th 43,693 60,561 104,254
39th 42,377 131,603 39th 52,162 169,360 39th 53,670 113,849 174,228
40th 75,664 119,829 40th 80,782 181,269 40th 68,087 142,299 210,386
41st 59,816 133,566 41st 88,192 187,380 41st 93,586 105,723 214,737
42d 47,586 140,364 42d 78,778 153,280 42d 67,189 109,353 184,286
43d 45,078 137,341 43d 72,499 202,478 43d 151,206 222,138
44th 70,557 36,359 44th 90,796 55,511 44th 48,712 50,377 108,711
45th 32,800 118,900 45th 54,012 166,451 45th 123,591 169,659
CO: CO: CO:
1st 106,113 49,095 1st 133,922 57,587 1st 82,176 46,802 128,978
2d 91,223 86,032 2d 147,437 87,578 2d 105,248 68,226 173,474
3d 95,353 88,508 3d 169,284 47,625 3d 124,487 49,961 177,307
4th 50,672 117,089 4th 57,552 156,202 4th 75,901 89,285 165,186
5th 52,488 121,153 5th 60,116 181,612 5th 57,776 127,740 192,277
6th 53,834 104,359 6th 77,158 136,487 6th 57,961 105,312 163,273
CT: CT: CT:
1st 128,930 44,122 1st 176,463 51,985 1st 126,566 50,690 177,256
2d 109,229 52,869 2d 143,326 81,965 2d 105,085 70,922 176,015
3d 114,276 49,806 3d 147,394 74,275 3d 90,772 83,440 174,212
4th 66,999 77,212 4th 55,751 147,843 4th 32,352 105,682 138,068
5th 63,371 98,664 5th 58,612 163,729 5th 85,803 93,912 181,608
6th 62,133 111,304 6th 78,814 157,020 6th 48,628 141,105 189,733
DE: DE: DE:
At large 106,351 53,767 At large 158,338 76,179 At large
116,274D58,037 177,435
FL: FL: FL:
1st 97,532 55,459 1st 142,449 70,534 1st 88,416 80,851 169,267
2d 110,141 2d 134,269 2d 103,032 77,939 180,971
3d (/1/) 3d (/1/) 3d 84,280 31,727 116,007
4th (/1/) 4th 124,817 125,608 4th 95,320 120,895216,228
5th (/1/) 5th (/1/) 5th 63,253 94,453 157,706
6th 143,598 61,069 6th 118,756 136,415 6th 95,421 138,588 234,029
7th (/1/) 7th (/1/) 7th 99,464 47,765 147,229
8th (/1/) 8th 62,539 169,165 8th (/1/)
9th 68,578 166,540 9th 223,925 9th 102,503 142,163 244,666
10th 49,571 122,395 10th 56,536 156,563 10th (/1/)
11th 149,109 55,952 11th 168,390 108,373 11th 120,991 111,970 232,961
12th 150,244 12th (/1/) 12th (/1/)
13th 62,709 187,846 13th 93,700 231,170 13th (/1/)
14th 171,976 61,189 14th 173,292 142,635 14th 156,055 80,249 236,304
15th (/1/) 15th 67,746 132,090 15th 104,295 106,669
16th 121,219 52,809 16th 153,032 67,461 16th (/1/)
17th (/1/) 17th (/1/) 17th 79,569 22,029
101,599
18th 80,062 28,814 18th (/1/) 18th 36,978 56,36493,343
19th 99,215 44,463 19th 135,355 51,628 19th 87,696 53,796 141,492
GA: GA: GA:
1st 69,440 1st 94,531 46,552 1st 80,515 32,532 113,047
2d 72,482 2d 85,029 52,807 2d 77,910 28,781 106,691
3d 75,850 3d 97,663 3d 72,961 42,561 115,522
4th 75,892 86,366 4th 148,394 97,745 4th 96,526 87,569 184,095
5th 93,229 30,562 5th 135,194 37,693 5th 86,037 27,781 113,818
6th 51,352 75,583 6th 76,824 110,169 6th 77,794 78,768 156,562
7th 88,636 44,891 7th 135,056 73,425 7th 95,817 63,588 159,405
8th 82,254 12,952 8th 102,696 8th 81,344 36,980 118,324
9th 84,303 9th 121,800 71,905 9th 96,197 76,121 172,318
10th 79,548 38,714 10th 118,156 66,521 10th 89,683 64,184 153,867
/1/ Unopposed.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COMMISSIONER, AND DELEGATES
IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
[The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican
nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official
statistics. Figures in the last column, for the 1990 election, may
include totals for more candidates than the ones shown.]
HI: HI: HI:
1st 63,061 99,683 1st 76,394 96,848 1st 97,622 62,982 162,711
2d 123,830 35,371 2d 144,802 2d 118,155 54,625 178,288
ID: ID: ID:
1st 59,723 120,553 1st 70,328 135,221 1st 85,054 75,406 160,460
2d 103,035 86,528 2d 127,956 68,226 2d 98,008 56,044 154,052
IL: IL: IL:
1st 122,376 4,572 1st 164,125 6,753 1st 100,890 6,708 107,598
2d 99,268 19,149 2d 138,256 28,831 2d 80,245 22,350 102,595
3d 102,949 52,618 3d 132,111 80,181 3d 110,512 45,299 155,811
4th 57,773 61,583 4th 91,282 90,243 4th 77,290 53,258 130,548
5th 82,466 34,738 5th 93,567 59,128 5th 73,805 34,440 111,246
6th 32,064 98,196 6th 54,804 153,425 6th 48,155 96,410 144,565
7th 90,761 21,055 7th 135,331 7th 80,021 20,099 100,120
8th 82,873 22,383 8th 107,728 34,659 8th 70,151 88,680
9th 92,738 36,715 9th 135,583 67,604 9th 96,557 39,031 135,588
10th 28,990 87,530 10th 60,187 158,519 10th 47,286 104,070 153,599
11th 106,970 44,341 11th 131,753 72,489 11th 82,703 68,850 154,245
12th 25,536 89,044 12th 54,769 165,913 12th 113,081 137,531
13th 38,874 107,227 13th 74,424 174,992 13th 60,305 116,048 176,353
14th 70,293 77,288 14th 57,482 161,146 14th 55,592 112,383 167,975
15th 115,284 15th 55,260 140,171 15th 119,812 119,822
16th 46,087 92,982 16th 72,431 128,365 16th 83,061 69,105 152,166
17th 85,442 68,101 17th 132,130 71,560 17th 102,062 51,380 153,442
18th 56,331 94,308 18th 94,763 114,458 18th 105,693 107,370
19th 111,105 56,186 19th 132,889 73,981 19th 113,958 55,680 171,888
20th 126,556 59,291 20th 153,341 69,303 20th 130,114 66,433 196,547
21st 65,722 64,779 21st 105,836 95,385 21st 95,208 48,949 144,157
22d 97,585 85,733 22d 139,392 75,462 22d 138,425 165,321
IN: IN: IN:
1st 86,983 30,395 1st 138,251 41,076 1st 68,920 35,450 104,370
2d 102,456 62,013 2d 116,915 102,846 2d 93,495 63,980 157,475
3d 75,932 75,979 3d 97,934 116,309 3d 80,740 77,911 158,651
4th 43,105 99,865 4th 80,915 132,843 4th 99,347 64,415 163,762
5th 80,772 75,507 5th 116,240 90,163 5th 81,373 71,750 153,123
6th 53,431 118,363 6th 71,447 192,064 6th 67,024 116,470 183,494
7th 49,675 104,965 7th 80,738 130,578 7th 65,248 88,598 153,846
8th 106,662 93,586 8th 141,355 87,321 8th 97,465 80,645 178,110
9th 120,586 46,398 9th 147,193 60,946 9th 107,526 48,325 155,851
10th 68,817 49,064 10th 105,846 68,978 10th 69,362 35,049 104,411
IA: IA: IA:
1st 43,985 86,834 1st 71,280 112,746 1st 90,042 90,193
2d 55,903 88,708 2d 86,438 113,543 2d 81,008 82,650 166,106
3d 83,504 69,386 3d 129,204 74,682 3d 100,947 101,780
4th 107,271 49,641 4th 157,065 62,056 4th 127,812 130,590
5th 58,552 85,025 5th 66,599 117,761 5th 47,022 99,978 147,012
6th 78,807 81,861 6th 69,614 125,859 6th 44,063 112,333 156,459
KS: KS: KS:
1st 43,359 141,297 1st 168,700 1st 61,396 102,974 164,388
2d 110,737 46,029 2d 135,694 49,498 2d 99,093 58,643 157,745
3d 109,266 3d 53,959 150,223 3d 58,923 88,725 147,726
4th 111,164 61,178 4th 122,777 69,165 4th 112,015 46,283 158,316
5th 47,540 116,800 5th 54,327 127,722 5th 62,244 90,555 152,823
KY: KY: KY:
1st 64,315 1st 117,288 1st 85,323 98,202
2d 57,644 2d 92,184 59,907 2d 77,057 39,624 116,681
3d 81,943 29,348 3d 131,981 57,387 3d 84,750 55,188 139,938
4th 53,906 67,626 4th 50,575 145,609 4th 44,979 101,680 146,659
5th 56,760 5th 104,467 5th 64,660 64,660
6th 26,315 75,906 6th 45,339 128,898 6th 76,859 76,859
7th 90,619 23,209 7th 96,946 68,165 7th 61,330 59,377 120,707
LA: LA: LA:
1st (/2/) 1st (/2/) 1st (/2/) (/2/)
2d (/2/) 2d (/2/) 2d 105,853 105,853
3d (/2/) 3d (/2/) 3d (/2/) (/2/)
4th (/2/) 4th (/2/) 4th (/2/) (/2/)
5th (/2/) 5th (/2/) 5th (/2/) (/2/)
6th (/2/) 6th (/2/) 6th (/2/) (/2/)
7th 191,498 7th (/2/) 7th (/2/) (/2/)
8th 96,864 102,276 8th 88,564 116,241 8th (/2/) (/2/)
/1/ Unopposed.
/2/ Under Louisiana State law, a candidate receiving at
least 51 percent of the vote cast in the primary election is elected
to the congressional seat.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COMMISSIONER, AND DELEGATES
IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
[The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican
nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official
statistics. Figures in the last column, for the 1990 election, may
include totals for more candidates than the ones shown.]
ME: ME: ME:
1st 121,848 100,260 1st 190,989 111,125 1st 167,623 110,836 278,872
2d 43,614 148,770 2d 85,346 167,226 2d 116,798 121,704 238,522
MD: MD: MD:
1st 88,113 43,764 1st 96,128 94,588 1st 67,518 88,920 156,438
2d 68,200 96,745 2d 63,114 157,956 2d 39,785 115,398 155,183
3d 100,161 26,452 3d 133,779 49,733 3d 82,545 35,841 118,386
4th 65,071 64,643 4th 128,624 59,688 4th 85,601 59,846 145,447
5th 82,098 18,102 5th 128,437 34,909 5th 84,747 20,314 105,061
6th 102,975 39,600 6th 166,753 54,528 6th 106,502 56,479 162,981
7th 79,226 12,170 7th 117,650 7th 59,628 10,529 70,160
8th 82,825 92,917 8th 102,478 172,619 8th 39,343 130,059 176,887
MA: MA: MA:
1st 32,396 113,653 1st 38,907 186,356 1st 43,611 150,748 204,892
2d 91,033 47,022 2d 156,262 2d 134,152 197,321
3d 120,222 3d 191,005 3d 150,992 230,432
4th 134,387 4th 169,729 71,661 4th 143,473 75,454 229,894
5th 113,690 5th 181,860 5th 110,232 101,017 221,140
6th 131,051 6th 177,643 77,186 6th 149,284 80,177 244,937
7th 124,183 7th 188,647 7th 155,380 236,580
8th 104,651 40,259 8th 165,745 40,316 8th 125,479 39,310 186,407
9th 110,026 9th 160,799 9th 124,534 200,997
10th 121,578 49,451 10th 187,178 93,564 10th 137,805 120,217 265,838
11th 114,926 11th 169,692 40,277 11th 145,480 206,141
MI: MI: MI:
1st 94,307 10,407 1st 127,800 10,979 1st 76,556 7,298 85,756
2d 55,204 79,567 2d 98,290 120,070 2d 49,678 95,962 149,766
3d 78,720 51,678 3d 112,605 83,769 3d 82,376 60,007 142,390
4th 41,624 70,331 4th 54,428 132,270 4th 55,449 75,850 131,302
5th 40,608 100,577 5th 62,868 166,569 5th 41,170 126,308 167,498
6th 74,927 57,283 6th 120,581 81,079 6th 97,547 97,791
7th 101,225 24,848 7th 150,832 47,071 7th 90,307 41,759 132,068
8th 97,406 36,695 8th 139,904 54,195 8th 98,903 45,259 144,165
9th 49,702 89,991 9th 64,843 149,748 9th 73,604 89,078 162,694
10th 74,941 78,475 10th 55,398 152,646 10th 50,923 99,952 153,716
11th 53,180 91,575 11th 86,526 129,085 11th 59,759 94,555 154,316
12th 87,643 44,442 12th 108,158 91,780 12th 98,232 51,119 151,825
13th 76,435 12,395 13th 99,751 13,196 13th 54,345 11,203 67,824
14th 92,328 33,831 14th 111,612 64,750 14th 78,506 40,499 123,421
15th 77,950 25,078 15th 104,596 56,963 15th 68,742 41,092 112,335
16th 101,659 28,971 16th 132,775 16th 88,962 42,629 133,614
17th 105,031 30,879 17th 135,493 55,197 17th 92,205 40,100 132,314
18th 39,144 110,099 18th 57,643 195,579 18th 64,185 126,629 190,834
MN: MN: MN:
1st 125,115 47,750 1st 161,118 67,709 1st 156,749 43,856 200,663
2d 94,048 100,249 2d 96,016 131,639 2d 77,935 126,367 204,404
3d 54,261 127,434 3d 99,770 215,322 3d 96,395 195,833 292,852
4th 112,662 41,926 4th 181,227 67,073 4th 143,353 77,639 221,316
5th 105,410 37,583 5th 174,416 60,646 5th 144,682 53,720 198,886
6th 110,598 57,460 6th 169,486 89,209 6th 164,816 90,138 255,219
7th 93,903 94,024 7th 101,011 121,396 7th 107,126 92,876 200,186
8th 135,718 51,315 8th 165,656 56,630 8th 151,145 56,068 207,312
MS: MS: MS:
1st 59,870 30,267 1st 137,445 38,381 1st 43,668 23,650 67,318
2d 73,119 68,292 2d 112,401 59,827 2d 59,393 11,224 70,617
3d 80,575 3d 164,651 20,759 3d 49,162 49,162
4th 85,819 34,190 4th 110,184 88,433 4th 57,137 13,754 70,891
5th 16,143 75,288 5th 82,034 100,185 5th 89,926 20,588 110,514
MO: MO: MO:
1st 91,044 46,599 1st 140,751 53,109 1st 62,550 40,160 102,710
2d 93,538 101,010 2d 91,645 186,450 2d 94,308 94,260 188,568
3d 116,403 52,382 3d 150,205 86,763 3d 88,950 67,659 156,609
4th 129,471 4th 166,480 65,393 4th 105,527 65,095 170,622
5th 101,030 39,340 5th 149,166 60,453 5th 71,890 43,897 115,787
6th 73,155 95,865 6th 93,128 135,883 6th 73,093 78,956 152,049
7th 56,291 114,210 7th 111,244 127,939 7th 76,725 83,609 160,334
8th 71,532 79,142 8th 84,801 117,601 8th 60,751 81,452 142,203
9th 95,939 70,972 9th 160,872 76,008 9th 94,156 69,514 163,670
MT: MT: MT:
1st 98,501 61,230 1st 115,278 74,405 1st 100,409 63,837 164,246
2d 73,583 84,548 2d 78,069 97,465 2d 56,739 96,449 153,188
NE: NE: NE:
1st 67,137 121,772 1st 72,167 146,231 1st 70,587 129,654 200,381
2d 70,372 99,569 2d 112,174 109,193 2d 111,903 80,845 193,421
3d 59,182 136,985 3d 45,183 170,302 3d 94,234 98,607 192,944
NV: NV: NV:
1st 61,830 50,342 1st 101,764 53,588 1st 84,650 47,377 137,852
2d 59,433 83,479 2d 75,163 105,981 2d 59,581 103,508 175,209
NH: NH: NH:
1st 54,787 70,739 1st 86,623 131,824 1st 66,176 81,684 148,368
2d 29,688 85,479 2d 89,677 119,742 2d 74,866 67,225 142,263
NJ: NJ: NJ:
1st 93,497 29,173 1st 141,988 60,037 1st \2\ 72,415 57,299 133,794
2d 83,821 35,167 2d 134,505 67,759 2d 97,698 110,818
\1\ 116,988 106,489
3d 73,743 51,882 3d 117,024 107,479 3d 77,866 73,696 158,643
4th 49,290 78,699 4th 79,006 155,283 4th 54,961 99,920 159,299
5th 40,449 85,949 5th 54,828 175,562 5th 35,010 118,101 156,109
6th 67,460 28,286 6th 120,125 74,824 6th 63,745 58,147 126,022
7th 24,462 92,254 7th 52,189 153,350 7th 31,099 100,066 134,072
8th 57,820 34,269 8th 96,036 8th 55,797 72,540
9th 89,634 40,226 9th 142,012 68,363 9th 82,535 69,658 154,766
10th 46,666 10th 84,681 13,848 10th 42,106 8,954 51,703
11th 35,280 75,037 11th 64,773 154,654 11th 47,414 92,681 143,686
12th 41,967 72,966 12th 71,596 165,918 12th 52,256 107,851 168,390
13th 43,920 82,866 13th 73,561 167,470 13th 67,587 99,688 171,406
14th 63,057 23,822 14th 104,001 47,293 14th 56,455 24,870 85,276
NM: NM: NM:
1st 37,138 90,476 1st 84,138 89,985 1st 41,306 97,375 138,681
2d 45,924 77,787 2d 100,324 2d 80,677 80,677
3d 95,760 38,552 3d 124,938 45,954 3d 104,225 35,751 139,976
NY: NY: NY:
1st 64,217 53,502 1st 103,511 87,812 1st 72,937 46,380 143,180
2d 66,443 29,937 2d 104,765 55,773 2d 56,722 31,808 110,005
3d 83,985 51,664 3d 128,336 80,398 3d 70,118 45,699 145,444
4th 41,117 80,578 4th 57,435 135,173 4th 41,308 63,838 140,304
5th 41,456 83,511 5th 68,930 122,058 5th 51,738 59,568 141,927
6th 58,317 22,980 6th 90,196 6th 42,499 13,224 83,558
7th 62,836 14,459 7th 89,105 7th 48,159 83,438
8th 66,605 8th 96,045 8th 53,552 14,384 101,494
9th 50,738 18,040 9th 72,851 9th 35,177 13,330 74,625
10th 71,997 10th 102,727 24,313 10th 58,673 9,199 91,828
11th 36,199 4,053 11th 70,973 7,418 11th 34,711 61,401
12th 37,695 2,752 12th 69,063 4,652 12th 39,103 58,115
13th 57,704 10,941 13th 77,988 23,926 13th 45,412 7,954 76,911
14th 27,950 53,861 14th 56,088 81,211 14th 32,738 44,271 116,017
15th 38,436 54,949 15th 64,425 100,701 15th 30,519 48,505 107,522
16th 52,521 4,962 16th 95,227 8,820 16th 50,421 3,440 76,109
17th 86,653 13,725 17th 148,089 26,443 17th 73,450 15,219 115,940
18th 39,833 2,479 18th 73,168 5,764 18th 36,652 1,189 56,826
19th 54,274 29,909 19th 74,613 37,454 19th 43,928 17,135 95,545
20th 66,359 69,495 20th 102,235 84,951 20th 82,203 35,575 144,627
21st 28,339 89,334 21st 47,294 134,173 21st 34,128 79,928 153,706
22d 36,852 94,244 22d 54,312 144,227 22d 37,034 95,495 160,267
23d 140,759 23d 145,040 83,308 23d 102,492 65,760 195,130
24th 49,225 103,867 24th 62,177 144,271 24th 56,671 92,512 190,607
25th 33,864 104,216 25th 130,122 25th 91,348 168,393
26th 86,857 26th 43,585 120,973 26th 82,866 156,701
27th 81,133 77,175 27th 88,476 116,918 27th 50,043 83,442 162,604
28th 103,908 41,430 28th 141,976 141,976 28th 97,815 53,077 172,046
29th 34,194 99,704 29th 51,243 132,608 29th 34,835 89,105 159,615
30th 86,777 74,635 30th 128,364 89,126 30th 97,280 49,017 173,809
31st 66,956 80,904 31st 98,958 103,802 31st 65,428 70,898 169,341
32d 94,798 32d 129,359 43,747 32d 65,652 39,053 136,938
33d 104,028 16,533 33d 134,398 33d 81,609 18,181 125,833
34th 56,898 80,100 34th 119,552 34th 37,421 77,128 141,782
NC: NC: NC:
1st 91,122 39,912 1st 118,027 63,013 1st 105,832 57,526 163,358
2d 95,320 32,515 2d 128,832 2d 130,979 44,263 175,242
3d 71,460 39,408 3d 95,323 3d 83,930 57,605 141,535
4th 92,216 73,469 4th 131,896 95,482 4th 139,396 100,661 240,057
5th 86,410 73,261 5th 110,516 99,540 5th 113,814 78,747 192,561
6th 72,250 72,329 6th 70,008 116,534 6th 62,913 125,392 188,305
7th 70,471 39,289 7th 102,392 49,855 7th 94,946 49,681 144,627
8th 80,959 58,941 8th 99,214 93,463 8th 98,700 80,852 179,552
9th 76,240 80,352 9th 71,802 139,014 9th 80,802 131,936 212,738
10th 62,035 83,902 10th 71,865 112,554 10th 65,710 106,400 172,110
11th 91,575 89,069 11th 108,436 106,907 11th 99,318 101,991 201,309
ND: ND: ND:
At large 216,258 66,989 At large 212,583 84,475 At large 152,530
81,443 233,979
OH: OH: OH:
1st 90,477 56,100 1st 117,682 90,738 1st 83,932 80,362 164,294
2d 43,448 105,061 2d 58,637 153,162 2d 57,345 103,817 161,162
3d 98,311 35,167 3d 141,953 42,664 3d 116,797 116,797
4th 26,320 115,751 4th 160,099 4th 64,467 103,897 168,364
5th 54,864 102,016 5th 80,472 123,838 5th 41,693 113,615 165,920
6th 42,155 106,354 6th 52,635 152,235 6th 47,415 117,220 164,635
7th 119,238 7th 50,423 142,597 7th 59,349 97,123 156,472
8th 46,195 98,475 8th 49,084 154,164 8th 63,584 99,955 163,539
9th 105,646 30,643 9th 157,557 36,183 9th 117,681 33,791 151,472
10th 44,847 106,870 10th 56,893 143,673 10th 61,656 106,009 167,665
11th 104,740 35,944 11th 124,600 78,028 11th 111,923 58,372 170,305
12th 42,727 117,905 12th 50,782 204,892 12th 50,784 130,495 181,279
13th 88,612 52,452 13th 137,074 59,287 13th 93,431 60,925 164,862
14th 83,257 71,713 14th 148,951 50,356 14th 97,875 66,460 164,335
15th 55,750 97,745 15th 51,172 154,694 15th 68,510 99,251 167,919
16th 36,639 118,206 16th 43,356 158,824 16th 70,516 101,097 171,613
17th 112,855 43,334 17th 162,526 47,929 17th 133,207 38,199 171,406
18th 126,526 18th 151,306 43,628 18th 120,782 41,823 162,605
19th 97,814 80,743 19th 168,065 70,359 19th 132,951 72,315 205,266
20th 110,976 12,794 20th 146,715 30,944 20th 109,390 39,749 149,139
21st 99,878 22,594 21st 148,388 24,804 21st 103,338 25,906 129,249
OK: OK: OK:
1st 61,663 78,919 1st 93,101 103,458 1st 59,521 75,618 135,139
2d 114,543 41,795 2d 136,009 73,659 2d 90,820 57,331 148,151
3d 114,008 31,913 3d (/3/) 3d 107,641 26,261 133,902
4th 94,984 29,697 4th (/3/) 4th 100,879 36,232 137,111
5th 45,256 108,774 5th 53,668 139,182 5th 50,086 114,608 164,694
6th (/3/) 6th 122,887 45,239 6th 110,100 27,540 137,640
OR: OR: OR:
1st 141,585 87,874 1st 179,915 78,626 1st 150,292 72,382 238,259
2d 75,124 113,566 2d 74,700 125,366 2d 60,131 127,998 188,185
3d 180,067 29,321 3d 190,684 3d 169,731 40,216 210,193
4th 105,697 89,795 4th 108,483 42,220 4th 162,494 189,352
5th 82,290 125,906 5th 110,782 111,489 5th 124,610 101,650 226,550
PA: PA: PA:
1st 88,224 29,811 1st 128,076 39,749 1st 73,423 19,018 92,441
2d 128,399 2d 184,322 12,365 2d 94,584 8,118 102,702
3d 107,804 66,693 3d 135,590 78,909 3d 89,908 59,901 149,809
4th 86,133 55,165 4th 124,041 52,402 4th 74,114 58,469 132,583
5th 45,648 87,593 5th 42,758 153,453 5th 50,597 75,097 131,489
6th 98,142 43,858 6th 114,119 65,278 6th 74,394 56,093 130,487
7th 69,557 110,118 7th 73,745 155,387 7th 56,292 105,868 162,160
8th 85,731 70,047 8th 128,153 93,648 8th 85,015 65,100 150,115
9th 120,890 9th 158,702 9th 106,632 106,632
10th 40,248 118,603 10th 51,179 140,096 10th 113,490 113,490
11th 112,405 46,785 11th 120,706 11th 88,219 88,219
12th 97,135 46,937 12th 133,081 12th 80,686 50,007 130,693
13th 71,381 100,701 13th 76,424 152,191 13th 58,967 89,577 148,544
14th 104,726 14th 135,181 36,719 14th 77,636 30,497 108,133
15th 56,972 74,829 15th 79,127 106,951 15th 50,233 77,178 127,411
16th 34,399 100,784 16th 48,169 136,944 16th 43,849 85,596 129,445
17th 36,157 101,027 17th 166,289 17th 110,317 110,317
18th 104,164 61,164 18th 136,924 80,975 18th 80,880 85,697 166,577
19th 37,223 100,055 19th 42,819 145,381 19th 96,336 96,336
20th 136,638 20th 137,472 20th 82,080 43,054 125,134
21st 26,324 111,148 21st 38,288 141,832 21st 92,732 92,732
22d 131,650 22d 123,428 47,039 22d 78,375 45,509 123,884
23d 63,875 79,595 23d 63,476 105,575 23d 53,465 78,189 131,654
/1/ Unopposed.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COMMISSIONER, AND DELEGATES
IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
[The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican
nominees, except as otherwise indicated. Compiled from official
statistics. Figures in the last column, for the 1990 election, may
include totals for more candidates than the ones shown.]
RI: RI: RI:
1st 85,077 62,397 1st 84,141 105,506 1st 73,131 89,963 163,094
2d 44,586 113,603 2d 56,129 145,218 2d 108,818 74,953 183,771
SC: SC: SC:
1st 55,262 59,969 1st 57,691 101,572 1st 42,555 80,839 123,503
2d 63,592 73,455 2d 83,978 94,960 2d 90,054 101,529
3d 79,109 36,495 3d 89,071 75,571 3d 72,561 52,419 125,050
4th 67,012 61,648 4th 90,234 82,793 4th 81,927 51,338 133,535
5th 95,859 5th 107,959 46,622 5th 91,775 91,898
6th 92,398 29,922 6th 120,719 37,958 6th 94,121 94,524
SD: SD: SD:
At large 171,462 118,261 At large 223,759 88,157 At large
173,81483,484 257,298
TN: TN: TN:
1st 36,278 80,289 1st 29,469 119,526 1st 47,796 47,860
\1\ 70,576 92,929
2d 30,088 96,396 2d 77,540 99,631 2d 62,797 77,944
3d 75,034 64,084 3d 108,264 80,372 3d 49,662 36,855 93,665
4th 86,997 4th 94,129 4th 52,101 22,890 77,276
5th 85,126 58,701 5th 155,068 5th 55,607 76,760
6th 102,180 30,823 6th 123,652 38,033 6th 60,538 26,424 90,768
7th 35,966 93,902 7th 35,237 142,025 7th 40,516 66,141 106,676
8th 101,699 24,792 8th 94,571 56,893 8th 62,241 62,266
9th 83,006 9th 126,280 9th 48,629 25,730 83,657
TX: TX: TX:
1st 84,445 1st 122,566 74,357 1st 89,241 56,954 146,195
2d 78,529 55,986 2d 145,614 2d 76,974 61,555 138,529
3d 143,381 3d 50,627 227,882 3d 153,857 154,474
4th 97,540 38,578 4th 139,379 67,337 4th 108,300 108,694
5th 57,410 39,945 5th 95,376 59,877 5th 65,228 41,307 109,474
6th 68,270 86,190 6th 78,786 164,692 6th 62,344 125,049 188,130
7th 17,635 129,673 7th 48,824 185,203 7th 114,254 114,254
8th 30,617 66,280 8th 90,503 8th 60,603 60,603
9th 73,285 45,834 9th 137,270 9th 79,786 58,399 138,185
10th 135,863 52,000 10th 232,213 10th 152,784 73,766 235,496
11th 84,201 11th 134,207 11th 73,810 64,269 138,079
12th 84,831 38,620 12th 135,459 12th 98,026 39,438 137,464
13th 45,907 84,980 13th 98,345 89,105 13th 81,815 63,045 144,860
14th 67,852 74,471 14th 111,395 96,042 14th 89,251 75,098 164,349
15th 70,777 15th 93,672 15th 72,461 72,461
16th 50,590 26,421 16th 104,514 16th 62,455 65,309
17th 97,791 17th 149,064 17th 104,100 104,100
18th 63,335 18th 94,408 18th 54,477 54,720
19th 42,129 68,695 19th 53,932 113,068 19th 83,795 83,795
20th 55,363 20th 94,527 36,801 20th 56,318 56,318
21st 63,779 100,346 21st 203,989 21st 48,585 144,570 193,155
22d 30,079 76,459 22d 58,471 125,733 22d 37,721 93,425 131,146
23d 68,131 23d 116,423 60,559 23d 71,052 40,856 111,908
24th 69,368 33,819 24th 135,794 24th 86,297 86,297
25th 67,435 25th 113,499 44,043 25th 67,427 67,427
26th 47,651 101,735 26th 86,490 194,944 26th 62,158 147,856 210,014
27th 64,165 27th 105,085 27th 62,822 62,822
UT: UT: UT:
1st 77,180 82,151 1st 87,976 130,893 1st 69,491 82,746 158,666
2d 76,921 60,967 2d 112,129 80,212 2d 85,167 58,869 147,871
3d 42,582 86,599 3d 60,018 129,951 3d 79,163 49,452 135,676
VT: VT: VT:
At large 168,403 At large 45,330 98,937 At large 6,315 82,938 209,856
VA: VA: VA:
1st 63,364 80,713 1st 49,614 135,937 1st 69,194 72,000 141,293
2d 54,491 46,137 2d 106,666 62,564 2d 55,179 73,618
3d 32,961 74,525 3d 187,354 3d 36,253 77,125 118,154
4th 64,699 4th 134,786 4th 71,051 90,731
5th 73,085 5th 97,242 78,396 5th 66,532 66,905
6th 88,230 38,051 6th 118,369 66,935 6th 92,968 112,377
7th 58,927 7th 136,988 7th 58,684 81,688 140,620
8th 44,965 72,670 8th 93,561 154,761 8th 88,475 76,367 171,121
9th 59,864 9th 113,309 65,410 9th 67,215 69,230
10th 63,292 95,724 10th 88,284 188,550 10th 57,249 103,761 168,825
WA: WA: WA:
1st 92,697 97,969 1st 122,646 152,265 1st 92,447 100,339 192,786
2d 124,840 48,077 2d 175,191 2d 92,837 75,669 183,671
3d 114,775 41,275 3d 109,412 108,794 3d 95,645 82,269 177,914
4th 41,709 107,593 4th 48,850 142,938 4th 44,241 106,545 150,786
5th 121,732 41,179 5th 160,654 49,657 5th 110,234 49,965 160,199
6th 90,063 36,410 6th 125,904 60,346 6th 79,079 49,786 128,865
7th 124,317 46,831 7th 173,809 53,902 7th 106,761 35,511 147,642
8th 57,545 107,824 8th 71,920 174,942 8th 75,031 96,323 171,354
WV: WV: WV:
1st 90,715 1st 119,256 40,732 1st 72,849 35,657 108,506
2d 76,355 33,554 2d 118,356 2d 63,174 50,708 113,882
3d 73,669 39,820 3d 120,192 41,478 3d 75,327 75,327
4th 58,217 23,490 4th 78,812 49,753 4th 39,948 36,946 76,894
WI: WI: WI:
1st 106,288 34,495 1st 158,552 49,620 1st 93,961 94,539
2d 106,919 85,156 2d 151,501 107,457 2d 85,156 96,938 182,118
3d 58,445 104,393 3d 72,935 157,513 3d 60,409 94,509 154,935
4th 120,354 4th 177,283 4th 96,981 43,001 140,221
5th 109,506 5th 140,518 78,307 5th 77,557 31,255 114,115
6th 124,328 6th 57,552 165,923 6th 111,036 111,556
7th 106,700 63,408 7th 142,197 86,077 7th 100,069 60,961 161,041
8th 57,265 118,162 8th 72,708 167,275 8th 83,199 95,902 179,142
9th 38,636 138,766 9th 62,003 185,093 9th 117,967 118,321
WY: WY: WY:
At large 48,780 111,007 At large 56,527 118,350 At large 70,977 87,078
158,055
\1\ For the unexpired term ending Jan. 3, 1989.
\2\ Also elected by special election to fill the vacancy in the
seat for the remainder of the 101st Congress.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COMMISSIONER, AND DELEGATES
IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
Puerto Rico:
Resident Commissioner (4-year term) 864,396
Delegate at Large 101,604 17,643 121,817 22,936 98,442 41,999 159,627
#ENDCARD
#CARD
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES, RESIDENT COMMISSIONER, AND DELEGATES
IN 1986, 1988, AND 1990
Delegate at Large 12,147 22,207 13,426 16,185 16,437 21,390 38,803
Delegate at Large 21,767 23,074 14,573 17,205 17,453
Delegate at Large 5,073 4,610 4,427 6,049 2,567 11,031
#ENDCARD
#CARD
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS
[See notes at end of table]
1st 1 Mar. 4, 1789 1A\2\ Sept. 29, 1789 210 John Langdon, 1A\3\ of
New Hampshire Frederick A.C. Muhlenberg, of Pennsylvania.
2 Jan. 4, 1790 Aug. 12, 1790 221
3 Dec. 6, 1790 Mar. 3, 1791 88
2d 1 Oct. 24, 1791 May 8, 1792 197 Richard Henry Lee, of
VirginiaJonathan Trumbull, of Connecticut.
2 Nov. 5, 1792 Mar. 2, 1793 119 John Langdon, of New Hampshire.
3d 1 Dec. 2, 1793 June 9, 1794 190 P Ralph Izard, of South
Carolina Frederick A.C. Muhlenberg, of Pennsylvania.
2 Nov. 3, 1794 Mar. 3, 1795 121 Henry Tazewell, of Virginia.
4th 1 Dec. 7, 1795 June 1, 1796 177 P Samuel Livermore, of
New Hampshire Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey.
2 Dec. 5, 1796 Mar. 3, 1797 89 William Bingham, of Pennsylvania.
5th 1 May 15, 1797 July 10, 1797 57 William Bradford, of Rhode
Island Do.
2 Nov. 13, 1797 July 16, 1798 246 Jacob Read, of South CarolinaP
Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts George Dent, of Maryland. 1A\4\
3 Dec. 3, 1798 Mar. 3, 1799 91 John Laurence, of New York.PlJames
Ross, of Pennsylvania.
6th 1 Dec. 2, 1799 May 14, 1800 164 Samuel Livermore, of New
HampshireP Uriah Tracy, of Connecticut Theodore Sedgwick, of
Massachusetts.
2 Nov. 17, 1800 Mar. 3, 1801 107 Dec. 23 Dec. 30, 1800 Dec. 23
Dec. 30, 1800 John E. Howard, of Maryland.P James Hillhouse, of
Connecticut.
7th 1 Dec. 7, 1801 May 3, 1802 148 Abraham Baldwin, of Georgia
Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina.
2 Dec. 6, 1802 Mar. 3, 1803 88 Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont.
8th 1 Oct. 17, 1803 Mar. 27, 1804 163 John Brown, of KentuckyP Jesse
Franklin, of North Carolina Do.
2 Nov. 5, 1804 Mar. 3, 1805 119 Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee.
9th 1 Dec. 2, 1805 Apr. 21, 1806 141 Samuel Smith, of Maryland Do.
2 Dec. 1, 1806 Mar. 3, 1807 93
10th 1 Oct. 26, 1807 Apr. 25, 1808 182 Joseph B. Varnum, of
Massachusetts.
2 Nov. 7, 1808 Mar. 3, 1809 117 Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont.P
John Milledge, of Georgia.
11th 1 May 22, 1809 June 28, 1809 38 Andrew Gregg, of PennsylvaniaD
Do.
2 Nov. 27, 1809 May 1, 1810 156 John Gaillard, of South Carolina.
3 Dec. 3, 1810 Mar. 3, 1811 91 John Pope, of Kentucky.
12th 1 Nov. 4, 1811 July 6, 1812 245 William H. Crawford, of Georgia
Henry Clay, of Kentucky.
2 Nov. 2, 1812 Mar. 3, 1813 122
13th 1 May 24, 1813 Aug. 2, 1813 71 Do.
2 Dec. 6, 1813 Apr. 18, 1814 134 Joseph B. Varnum, of
Massachusetts.
3 Sept. 19, 1814 Mar. 3, 1815 166 John Gaillard, of South Carolina
Langdon Cheves, 1A\5\ of South Carolina.
14th 1 Dec. 4, 1815 Apr. 30, 1816 148 Henry Clay, of
Kentucky.
2 Dec. 2, 1816 Mar. 3, 1817 92
15th 1 Dec. 1, 1817 Apr. 20, 1818 141 Dec. 24 Dec. 29, 1817 Dec. 24
Dec. 29, 1817 Do.
2 Nov. 16, 1818 Mar. 3, 1819 108 James Barbour, of Virginia.
16th 1 Dec. 6, 1819 May 15, 1820 162 John Gaillard, of South
Carolina Do.
2 Nov. 13, 1820 Mar. 3, 1821 111 John W. Taylor, 1A\6\ of
New York.
17th 1 Dec. 3, 1821 May 8, 1822 157 Philip P. Barbour, of
Virginia.
2 Dec. 2, 1822 Mar. 3, 1823 92
18th 1 Dec. 1, 1823 May 27, 1824 178 Henry Clay, of
Kentucky.
2 Dec. 6, 1824 Mar. 3, 1825 88
19th 1 Dec. 5, 1825 May 22, 1826 169 Nathaniel Macon, of North
Carolina John W. Taylor, of New York.
2 Dec. 4, 1826 Mar. 3, 1827 90
20th 1 Dec. 3, 1827 May 26, 1828 175 Samuel Smith, of Maryland
Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia.
2 Dec. 1, 1828 Mar. 3, 1829 93 Dec. 24 Dec. 29, 1828 Dec. 24
Dec. 29, 1828
21st 1 Dec. 7, 1829 May 31, 1830 176 Do.
2 Dec. 6, 1830 Mar. 3, 1831 88 Littleton Waller Tazewell, of
Virginia.
22d 1 Dec. 5, 1831 July 16, 1832 225 Do.
2 Dec. 3, 1832 Mar. 2, 1833 91 Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee.
23d 1 Dec. 2, 1833 June 30, 1834 211 George Poindexter, of
Mississippi Do.
2 Dec. 1, 1834 Mar. 3, 1835 93 John Tyler, of Virginia John Bell,
\7\ of Tennessee.
24th 1 Dec. 7, 1835 July 4, 1836 211 William R. King, of Alabama
James K. Polk, of Tennessee.
2 Dec. 5, 1836 Mar. 3, 1837 89
25th 1 Sept. 4, 1837 Oct. 16, 1837 43 Do.
2 Dec. 4, 1837 July 9, 1838 218
3 Dec. 3, 1838 Mar. 3, 1839 91
26th 1 Dec. 2, 1839 July 21, 1840 233 Robert M.T. Hunter,
of Virginia.
2 Dec. 7, 1840 Mar. 3, 1841 87
27th 1 May 31, 1841 Sept. 13, 1841 106 Samuel L. Southard, of New
Jersey John White, of Kentucky.
2 Dec. 6, 1841 Aug. 31, 1842 269 Willie P. Mangum, of North
Carolina.
3 Dec. 5, 1842 Mar. 3, 1843 89
28th 1 Dec. 4, 1843 June 17, 1844 196 John W. Jones, of
Virginia.
2 Dec. 2, 1844 Mar. 3, 1845 92
29th 1 Dec. 1, 1845 Aug. 10, 1846 253 David R. Atchison, of Missouri
John W. Davis, of Indiana.
2 Dec. 7, 1846 Mar. 3, 1847 87
30th 1 Dec. 6, 1847 Aug. 14, 1848 254 Robert C. Winthrop,
of Massachusetts.
2 Dec. 4, 1848 Mar. 3, 1849 90
31st 1 Dec. 3, 1849 Sept. 30, 1850 302 William R. King, of
Alabama D Howell Cobb, of Georgia.
2 Dec. 2, 1850 Mar. 3, 1851 92
32d 1 Dec. 1, 1851 Aug. 31, 1852 275 Linn Boyd, of
Kentucky.
2 Dec. 6, 1852 Mar. 3, 1853 88 David R. Atchison, of Missouri.
33d 1 Dec. 5, 1853 Aug. 7, 1854 246 Do.
2 Dec. 4, 1854 Mar. 3, 1855 90 Jesse D. Bright, of
Indiana .P Lewis Cass, of Michigan.
34th 1 Dec. 3, 1855 Aug. 18, 1856 260 Jesse D. Bright, of
Indiana Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts.
2 Aug. 21, 1856 Aug. 30, 1856 10
3 Dec. 1, 1856 Mar. 3, 1857 93 James M. Mason, of
Virginia.P Thomas J. Rusk, of Texas.
35th 1 Dec. 7, 1857 June 14, 1858 189 Dec. 23, 1857 Jan. 4, 1858
Dec. 23, 1857 Jan. 4, 1858 Benjamin Fitzpatrick, of Alabama James L.
Orr, of South Carolina.
2 Dec. 6, 1858 Mar. 3, 1859 88 Dec. 23, 1858 Jan. 4, 1859 Dec. 23,
1858 Jan. 4, 1859
36th 1 Dec. 5, 1859 June 25, 1860 202 P Jesse D. Bright, of
Indiana William Pennington, of New Jersey.
2 Dec. 3, 1860 Mar. 3, 1861 93 Solomon Foot, of Vermont.
37th 1 July 4, 1861 Aug. 6, 1861 34 Galusha A. Grow, of
Pennsylvania.
2 Dec. 2, 1861 July 17, 1862 228
3 Dec. 1, 1862 Mar. 3, 1863 93 Dec. 23, 1862 Jan. 5, 1863 Dec. 23,
1862 Jan. 5, 1863
38th 1 Dec. 7, 1863 July 4, 1864 209 Dec. 23, 1863 Jan. 5, 1864 Dec.
23, 1863 Jan. 5, 1864 Solomon Foot, of Vermont Schuyler Colfax, of
Indiana.
Daniel Clark, of New Hampshire.
2 Dec. 5, 1864 Mar. 3, 1865 89 Dec. 22, 1864 Jan. 5, 1865 Dec. 22,
1864 Jan. 5, 1865
39th 1 Dec. 4, 1865 July 28, 1866 237 Dec. 6 Dec. 11, 1865 Dec. 6
Dec. 11, 1865 Lafayette S. Foster, of Connecticut Do.
Dec. 21, 1865 Jan. 5, 1866 Dec. 21, 1865 Jan. 5, 1866
Benjamin F. Wade, of Ohio
2 Dec. 3, 1866 Mar. 3, 1867 91 Dec. 20, 1866 Jan. 3, 1867 Dec. 20,
1866 Jan. 3, 1867
40th 1 Mar. 4, 1867 Dec. 1, 1867 273 Mar. 30 July 3, 1867P July 20
Nov. 21, 1867 Mar. 30 July 3, 1867P July 20 Nov. 21, 1867
Do.
2 Dec. 2, 1867 Nov. 10, 1868 345 Dec. 20, 1867 Jan. 6, 1868P July
27 Sept. 21, 1868P Sept. 21 Oct. 16, 1868P Oct. 16 Nov. 10,
1868Dec. 20, 1867 Jan. 6, 1868P July 27 Sept. 21, 1868P Sept. 21
Oct. 16, 1868P Oct. 16 Nov. 10, 1868
3 Dec. 7, 1868 Mar. 3, 1869 87 Dec. 21, 1868 Jan. 5, 1869 Dec. 21,
1868 Jan. 5, 1869 Theodore M. Pomeroy, 1A\8\ of New York.
41st 1 Mar. 4, 1869 Apr. 10, 1869 38 Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode
Island James G. Blaine, of Maine.
2 Dec. 6, 1869 July 15, 1870 222 Dec. 22, 1869 Jan. 10, 1870 Dec.
22, 1869 Jan. 10, 1870
3 Dec. 5, 1870 Mar. 3, 1871 89 Dec. 23, 1870 Jan. 4, 1871 Dec. 22,
1870 Jan. 4, 1871
42d 1 Mar. 4, 1871 Apr. 20, 1871 48 Do.
2 Dec. 4, 1871 June 10, 1872 190 Dec. 21, 1871 Jan. 8, 1872 Dec.
21, 1871 Jan. 8, 1872
3 Dec. 2, 1872 Mar. 3, 1873 92 Dec. 20, 1872 Jan. 6, 1873 Dec. 20,
1872 Jan. 6, 1873
43d 1 Dec. 1, 1873 June 23, 1874 204 Dec. 19, 1873 Jan. 5, 1874 Dec.
19, 1873 Jan. 5, 1874 Matthew H. Carpenter, of Wisconsin Do.
2 Dec. 7, 1874 Mar. 3, 1875 87 Dec. 23, 1874 Jan. 5, 1875 Dec. 23,
1874 Jan. 5, 1875 P Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island.
44th 1 Dec. 6, 1875 Aug. 15, 1876 254 Dec. 20, 1875 Jan. 5, 1876
Dec. 21, 1875 Jan. 5, 1876 Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan Michael C.
Kerr, 1A\9\ of Indiana.PSamuel S. Cox, 1A\10\ of New York, pro
tempore .P Milton Sayler, 1A\11\ of Ohio, pro tempore.
2 Dec. 4, 1876 Mar. 3, 1877 90 Samuel J. Randall, of
Pennsylvania.
45th 1 Oct. 15, 1877 Dec. 3, 1877 50 Do.
2 Dec. 3, 1877 June 20, 1878 200 Dec. 15, 1877 Jan. 10, 1878 Dec.
15, 1877 Jan. 10, 1878
3 Dec. 2, 1878 Mar. 3, 1879 92 Dec. 20, 1878 Jan. 7, 1879 Dec. 20,
1878 Jan. 7, 1879
46th 1 Mar. 18, 1879 July 1, 1879 106 Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio Do.
2 Dec. 1, 1879 June 16, 1880 199 Dec. 19, 1879 Jan. 6, 1880 Dec.
19, 1879 Jan. 6, 1880
3 Dec. 6, 1880 Mar. 3, 1881 88 Dec. 23, 1880 Jan. 5, 1881 Dec. 23,
1880 Jan. 5, 1881
47th 1 Dec. 5, 1881 Aug. 8, 1882 247 Dec. 22, 1881 Jan. 5, 1882 Dec.
22, 1881 Jan. 5, 1882 Thomas F. Bayard, of DelawareP David Davis, of
Illinois J. Warren Keifer, of Ohio.
2 Dec. 4, 1882 Mar. 3, 1883 90 George F. Edmunds, of Vermont.
48th 1 Dec. 3, 1883 July 7, 1884 218 Dec. 24, 1883 Jan. 7, 1884 Dec.
24, 1883 Jan. 7, 1884 John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky.
2 Dec. 1, 1884 Mar. 3, 1885 93 Dec. 24, 1884 Jan. 5, 1885 Dec. 24,
1884 Jan. 5, 1885
49th 1 Dec. 7, 1885 Aug. 5, 1886 242 Dec. 21, 1885 Jan. 5, 1886 Dec.
21, 1885 Jan. 5, 1886 John Sherman, of Ohio Do.
2 Dec. 6, 1886 Mar. 3, 1887 88 Dec. 22, 1886 Jan. 4, 1887 Dec. 22,
1886 Jan. 4, 1887 John J. Ingalls, of Kansas.
50th 1 Dec. 5, 1887 Oct. 20, 1888 321 Dec. 22, 1887 Jan. 4, 1888
Dec. 22, 1887 Jan. 4, 1888 Do.
2 Dec. 3, 1888 Mar. 3, 1889 91 Dec. 21, 1888 Jan. 2, 1889 Dec. 21,
1888 Jan. 2, 1889
51st 1 Dec. 2, 1889 Oct. 1, 1890 304 Dec. 21, 1889 Jan. 6, 1890 Dec.
21, 1889 Jan. 6, 1890 Thomas B. Reed, of Maine.
2 Dec. 1, 1890 Mar. 3, 1891 93 Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska.
52d 1 Dec. 7, 1891 Aug. 5, 1892 251 Charles F. Crisp, of
Georgia.
2 Dec. 5, 1892 Mar. 3, 1893 89 Dec. 22, 1892 Jan. 4, 1893 Dec. 22,
1892 Jan. 4, 1893 Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee.
53d 1 Aug. 7, 1893 Nov. 3, 1893 89 Do.
2 Dec. 4, 1893 Aug. 28, 1894 268 Dec. 21, 1893 Jan. 3, 1894
3 Dec. 3, 1894 Mar. 3, 1895 97 Dec. 23, 1894 Jan. 3, 1895 Matt
W. Ransom, of North Carolina.P Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee.
54th 1 Dec. 2, 1895 June 11, 1896 193 William P. Frye, of Maine
Thomas B. Reed, of Maine.
2 Dec. 7, 1896 Mar. 3, 1897 87 Dec. 22, 1896 Jan. 5, 1897 Dec. 22,
1896 Jan. 5, 1897
55th 1 Mar. 15, 1897 July 24, 1897 131 Do.
2 Dec. 6, 1897 July 8, 1898 215 Dec. 18, 1897 Jan. 5, 1898 Dec.
18, 1897 Jan. 5, 1898
3 Dec. 5, 1898 Mar. 3, 1899 89 Dec. 21, 1898 Jan. 4, 1899 Dec. 21,
1898 Jan. 4, 1899
56th 1 Dec. 4, 1899 June 7, 1900 186 Dec. 20, 1899 Jan. 3, 1900 Dec.
20, 1899 Jan. 3, 1900 David B. Henderson, of Iowa.
2 Dec. 3, 1900 Mar. 3, 1901 91 Dec. 20, 1900 Jan. 3, 1901 Dec. 21,
1900 Jan. 3, 1901
57th 1 Dec. 2, 1901 July 1, 1902 212 Dec. 19, 1901 Jan. 6, 1902 Dec.
19, 1901 Jan. 6, 1902 Do.
2 Dec. 1, 1902 Mar. 3, 1903 93 Dec. 20, 1902 Jan. 5, 1903 Dec. 20,
1902 Jan. 5, 1903
58th 1 Nov. 9, 1903 Dec. 7, 1903 29 Joseph G. Cannon, of
Illinois.
2 Dec. 7, 1903 Apr. 28, 1904 144 Dec. 19, 1903 Jan. 4, 1904 Dec.
19, 1903 Jan. 4, 1904
3 Dec. 5, 1904 Mar. 3, 1905 89 Dec. 21, 1904 Jan. 4, 1905 Dec. 21,
1904 Jan. 4, 1905
59th 1 Dec. 4, 1905 June 30, 1906 209 Dec. 21, 1905 Jan. 4, 1906
Dec. 21, 1905 Jan. 4, 1906 Do.
2 Dec. 3, 1906 Mar. 3, 1907 91 Dec. 20, 1906 Jan. 3, 1907 Dec. 20,
1906 Jan. 3, 1907
60th 1 Dec. 2, 1907 May 30, 1908 181 Dec. 21, 1907 Jan. 6, 1908 Dec.
21, 1907 Jan. 6, 1908 Do.
2 Dec. 7, 1908 Mar. 3, 1909 87 Dec. 19, 1908 Jan. 4, 1909 Dec. 19,
1908 Jan. 4, 1909
61st 1 Mar. 15, 1909 Aug. 5, 1909 144 Do.
2 Dec. 6, 1909 June 25, 1910 202 Dec. 21, 1909 Jan. 4, 1910 Dec.
21, 1909 Jan. 4, 1910
3 Dec. 5, 1910 Mar. 3, 1911 89 Dec. 21, 1910 Jan. 5, 1911 Dec. 21,
1910 Jan. 5, 1911
62d 1 Apr. 4, 1911 Aug. 22, 1911 141 . 1A\12\ Champ Clark,
of Missouri.
2 Dec. 4, 1911 Aug. 26, 1912 267 Dec. 21, 1911 Jan. 3, 1912 Dec.
21, 1911 Jan. 3, 1912 Bacon, 1A\13\ Brandegee, 1A\14\ Curtis,
1A\15\ Gallinger, 1A\16\ Lodge. 1A\17\
3 Dec. 2, 1912 Mar. 3, 1913 92 Dec. 19, 1912 Jan. 2, 1913 Dec. 19,
1912 Jan. 2, 1913 Bacon, 1A\18\ Gallinger. 1A\19\
#ENDCARD
#CARD
63d 1 Apr. 7, 1913 Dec. 1, 1913 239 James P. Clarke, of Arkansas
Do.
2 Dec. 1, 1913 Oct. 24, 1914 328 Dec. 23, 1913 Jan. 12, 1914 Dec.
23, 1913 Jan. 12, 1914
3 Dec. 7, 1914 Mar. 3, 1915 87 Dec. 23 Dec. 28, 1914 Dec. 23
Dec. 28, 1914
64th 1 Dec. 6, 1915 Sept. 8, 1916 278 Dec. 17, 1915 Jan. 4, 1916
Dec. 17, 1915 Jan. 4, 1916 . 1A\20\ Do.
2 Dec. 4, 1916 Mar. 3, 1917 90 Dec. 22, 1916 Jan. 2, 1917 Dec. 22,
1916 Jan. 2, 1917 Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware.
65th 1 Apr. 2, 1917 Oct. 6, 1917 188 Do.
2 Dec. 3, 1917 Nov. 21, 1918 354 Dec. 18, 1917 Jan. 3, 1918 Dec.
18, 1917 Jan. 3, 1918
3 Dec. 2, 1918 Mar. 3, 1919 92
66th 1 May 19, 1919 Nov. 19, 1919 185 July 1 July 8, 1919 July 1
July 8, 1919 Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa Frederick H. Gillett, of
Massachusetts.
2 Dec. 1, 1919 June 5, 1920 188 Dec. 20, 1919 Jan. 5, 1920 Dec.
20, 1919 Jan. 5, 1922
3 Dec. 6, 1920 Mar. 3, 1921 88
67th 1 Apr. 11, 1921 Nov. 23, 1921 227 Do.
2 Dec. 5, 1921 Sept. 22, 1922 292 Dec. 22, 1921 Jan. 3, 1922 Dec.
22, 1921 Jan. 3, 1922
3 Nov. 20, 1922 Dec. 4, 1922 15
4 Dec. 4, 1922 Mar. 3, 1923 90
68th 1 Dec. 3, 1923 June 7, 1924 188 Dec. 20, 1923 Jan. 3, 1924 Dec.
20, 1923 Jan. 3, 1924 Do.
2 Dec. 1, 1924 Mar. 3, 1925 93 Dec. 20 Dec. 29, 1924 Dec. 20
Dec. 29, 1924
69th 1 Dec. 7, 1925 July 3, 1926 209 Dec. 22, 1925 Jan. 4, 1926 Dec.
22, 1925 Jan. 4, 1926 George H. Moses, of New Hampshire Nicholas
Longworth, of Ohio.
2 Dec. 6, 1926 Mar. 4, 1927 88 Dec. 22, 1926 Jan. 3, 1927 Dec. 22,
1926 Jan. 3, 1927
70th 1 Dec. 5, 1927 May 29, 1928 177 Dec. 21, 1927 Jan. 4, 1928 Dec.
21, 1927 Jan. 4, 1928 George H. Moses, of New Hampshire Nicholas
Longworth, of Ohio.
2 Dec. 3, 1928 Mar. 3, 1929 91 Dec. 22, 1928 Jan. 3, 1929 Dec. 22,
1928 Jan. 3, 1929
71st 1 Apr. 15, 1929 Nov. 22, 1929 222 June 19 Aug. 19, 1929 June 19
Sept. 23, 1929 Do.
2 Dec. 2, 1929 July 3, 1930 214 Dec. 21, 1929 Jan. 6, 1930 Dec.
21, 1929 Jan. 6, 1930
3 Dec. 1, 1930 Mar. 3, 1931 93 Dec. 20, 1930 Jan. 5, 1931 Dec. 20,
1930 Jan. 5, 1931
72d 1 Dec. 7, 1931 July 16, 1932 223 Dec. 22, 1931 Jan. 4, 1932 Dec.
22, 1931 Jan. 4, 1932 John N. Garner, of Texas.
2 Dec. 5, 1932 Mar. 3, 1933 89
73d 1 Mar. 9, 1933 June 15, 1933 99 Key Pittman, of Nevada Henry T.
Rainey, 1A\21\ of Illinois.
2 Jan. 3, 1934 June 18, 1934 167
74th 1 Jan. 3, 1935 Aug. 26, 1935 236 Joseph W. Byrns,
1A\22\ of Tennessee.
2 Jan. 3, 1936 June 20, 1936 170 June 8 June 15, 1936 June 8
June 15, 1936 William B. Bankhead, 1A\23\ of Alabama.
75th 1 Jan. 5, 1937 Aug. 21, 1937 229 Do.
2 Nov. 15, 1937 Dec. 21, 1937 37
3 Jan. 3, 1938 June 16, 1938 165
76th 1 Jan. 3, 1939 Aug. 5, 1939 215 Do. 1A\24\
2 Sept. 21, 1939 Nov. 3, 1939 44
3 Jan. 3, 1940 Jan. 3, 1941 366 July 11 July 22, 1940 July 11
July 22, 1940 . 1A\25\P William H. King, 1A\27\ of Utah Sam
Rayburn, 1A\26\ of Texas.
77th 1 Jan. 3, 1941 Jan. 2, 1942 365 Pat Harrison, 1A\28\ of
Mississippi; Carter Glass, 1A\29\ of Virginia Do.
2 Jan. 5, 1942 Dec. 16, 1942 346 Carter Glass, of Virginia.
78th 1 Jan. 6, 1943 Dec. 21, 1943 350 July 8 Sept. 14, 1943 July 8
Sept. 14, 1943 Do.
2 Jan. 10, 1944 Dec. 19, 1944 345 Apr. 1 Apr. 12, 1944P June 23
Aug. 1, 1944P Sept. 21 Nov. 14, 1944 Apr. 1 Apr. 12, 1944P June
23 Aug. 1, 1944P Sept. 21 Nov. 14, 1944
79th 1 Jan. 3, 1945 Dec. 21, 1945 353 Aug. 1 Sept. 5, 1945 July 21
Sept. 5, 1945 Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee Do.
2 Jan. 14, 1946 Aug. 2, 1946 201 Apr. 18 Apr. 30, 1946
80th 1 Jan. 3, 1947 Dec. 19, 1947 351 July 27 Nov. 17, 1947 July 27
Nov. 17, 1947 Authur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan Joseph W. Martin,
Jr., of Massachusetts.
2 Jan. 6, 1948 Dec. 31, 1948 361 June 20 July 26, 1948P Aug. 7
Dec. 31, 1948 June 20 July 26, 1948P Aug. 7 Dec. 31, 1948
81st 1 Jan. 3, 1949 Oct. 19, 1949 290 Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee
Sam Rayburn, of Texas.
2 Jan. 3, 1950 Jan. 2, 1951 365 Sept. 23 Nov. 27 1950 Apr. 6
Apr. 18, 1950P Sept. 23 Nov. 27, 1950
82d 1 Jan. 3, 1951 Oct. 20, 1951 291 Mar. 22 Apr. 2, 1951P Aug. 23
Sept. 12, 1951 Do.
2 Jan. 8, 1952 July 7, 1952 182 Apr. 10 Apr. 22, 1952
83d 1 Jan. 3, 1953 Aug. 3, 1953 213 Apr. 2 Apr. 13, 1953 Styles
Bridges, of New Hampshire Joseph W. Martin, Jr., of Massachusetts.
2 Jan. 6, 1954 Dec. 2, 1954 331 Aug. 20 Nov. 8, 1954P Nov. 18
Nov. 29, 1954 Apr. 15 Apr. 22, 1954P Adjourned sine die Aug. 20,
1954
84th 1 Jan. 5, 1955 Aug. 2, 1955 210 Apr. 4 Apr. 13, 1955 Apr. 4
Apr. 13, 1955 Walter F. George, of Georgia Sam Rayburn, of Texas.
2 Jan. 3, 1956 July 27, 1956 207 Mar. 29 Apr. 9, 1956 Mar. 29
Apr. 9, 1956
85th 1 Jan. 3, 1957 Aug. 30, 1957 239 Apr. 18 Apr. 29, 1957 Apr. 18
Apr. 29, 1957 Carl Hayden, of Arizona Do.
2 Jan. 7, 1958 Aug. 24, 1958 230 Apr. 3 Apr. 14, 1958 Apr. 3
Apr. 14, 1958
86th 1 Jan. 7, 1959 Sept. 15, 1959 252 Mar. 26 Apr. 7, 1959 Mar. 26
Apr. 7, 1959 Do.
2 Jan. 6, 1960 Sept. 1, 1960 240 Apr. 14 Apr. 18, 1960P May 27
May 31, 1960P July 3 Aug. 8, 1960 Apr. 14 Apr. 18, 1960P May 27
May 31, 1960P July 3 Aug. 15, 1960
87th 1 Jan. 3, 1961 Sept. 27, 1961 268 Mar. 30 Apr. 10, 1961
Do. 1A\30\
2 Jan. 10, 1962 Oct. 13, 1962 277 Apr. 19 Apr. 30, 1962
John W. McCormack, 1A\31\ of Massachusetts.
88th 1 Jan. 9, 1963 Dec. 30, 1963 356 Apr. 11 Apr. 22, 1963
Do.
2 Jan. 7, 1964 Oct. 3, 1964 270 July 10 July 20, 1964P Aug. 21
Aug. 31, 1964 Mar. 26 Apr. 6, 1964P July 2 July 20, 1964P Aug.
21 Aug. 31, 1964
89th 1 Jan. 4, 1965 Oct. 23, 1965 293 Do.
2 Jan. 10, 1966 Oct. 22, 1966 286 Apr. 7 Apr. 13, 1966P June 30
July 11, 1966 Apr. 7 Apr. 18, 1966P June 30 July 11, 1966
90th 1 Jan. 10, 1967 Dec. 15, 1967 340 Mar. 23 Apr. 3, 1967P June 29
July 10, 1967P Aug. 31 Sept. 11, 1967P Nov. 22 Nov. 27, 1967
Mar. 23 Apr. 3, 1967P June 29 July 10, 1967P Aug. 31 Sept. 11,
1967PlNov. 22 Nov. 27, 1967 Do.
2 Jan. 15, 1968 Oct. 14, 1968 274 Apr. 11 Apr. 17, 1968P May 29
June 3, 1968P June 3 July 8, 1968P Aug. 2 Sept. 4, 1968 Apr. 11
Apr. 22, 1968P May 29 June 3, 1968P June 3 July 8, 1968P Aug. 2
Sept. 4, 1968
91st 1 Jan. 3, 1969 Dec. 23, 1969 355 Feb. 7 Feb. 17, 1969P Apr. 3
Apr. 14, 1969P July 2 July 7, 1969P Aug. 13 Sept. 3, 1969P Nov.
26 Dec. 1, 1969 Feb. 7 Feb. 17, 1969P Apr. 3 Apr. 14, 1969P May
28 June 2, 1969P July 2 July 7, 1969P Aug. 13 Sept. 3, 1969P
Nov. 6 Nov. 12, 1969P Nov. 26 Dec. 1, 1969 Richard B. Russell, of
Georgia Do.
2 Jan. 19, 1970 Jan. 2, 1971 349 Feb. 10 Feb. 16, 1970P Mar. 26
Mar. 31, 1970P Sept. 2 Sept. 8, 1970P Oct. 14 Nov. 16, 1970P
Nov. 25 Nov. 30, 1970P Dec. 22 Dec. 28, 1970 Feb. 10 Feb. 16,
1970P Mar. 26 Mar. 31, 1970P May 27 June 1, 1970P July 1 July 6,
1970P Aug. 14 Sept. 9, 1970P Oct. 14 Nov. 16, 1970P Nov. 25 Nov.
30, 1970PlDec. 22 Dec. 29, 1970
92d 1 Jan. 21, 1971 Dec. 17, 1971 331 Feb. 11 Feb. 17, 1971P Apr. 7
Apr. 14, 1971P May 26 June 1, 1971P June 30 July 6, 1971P Aug. 6
Sept. 8, 1971P Oct. 21 Oct. 26, 1971P Nov. 24 Nov. 29, 1971 Feb.
10 Feb. 17, 1971P Apr. 7 Apr. 19, 1971P May 27 June 1, 1971P
July 1 July 6, 1971P Aug. 6 Sept. 8, 1971P Oct. 7 Oct. 12, 1971P
Oct. 21 Oct. 26, 1971P Nov. 19 Nov. 29, 1971 . 1A\32\P
Allen J. Ellender, 1A\33\ of Louisiana Carl B. Albert, of Oklahoma.
2 Jan. 18, 1972 Oct. 18, 1972 275 Feb. 9 Feb. 14, 1972P Mar. 30
Apr. 4, 1972P May 25 May 30, 1972P June 30 July 17, 1972P Aug.
18 Sept. 5, 1972 Feb. 9 Feb. 16, 1972P Mar. 29 Apr. 10, 1972P
May 24 May 30, 1972P June 30 July 17, 1972P Aug. 18 Sept. 5,
1972 . 1A\34\P James O. Eastland, 1A\35\ of Mississippi
93d 1 Jan. 3, 1973 Dec. 22, 1973 354 Feb. 8 Feb. 15, 1973P Apr. 18
Apr. 30, 1973P May 23 May 29, 1973P June 30 July 9, 1973P Aug. 3
Sept. 5, 1973P Oct. 18 Oct. 23, 1973P Nov. 21 Nov. 26, 1973 Feb.
8 Feb. 19, 1973P Apr. 19 Apr. 30, 1973P May 24 May 29, 1973P
June 30 July 10, 1973P Aug. 3 Sept. 5, 1973P Oct. 4 Oct. 9,
1973P Oct. 18 Oct. 23, 1973P Nov. 15 Nov. 26, 1973 James O.
Eastland, of Mississippi Carl B. Albert, of Oklahoma.
2 Jan. 21, 1974 Dec. 20, 1974 334 Feb. 8 Feb. 18, 1974P Mar. 13
Mar. 19, 1974P Apr. 11 Apr. 22, 1974P May 23 May 28, 1974P Aug.
22 Sept. 4, 1974P Oct. 17 Nov. 18, 1974P Nov. 26 Dec. 2, 1974
Feb. 7 Feb. 13, 1974P Apr. 11 Apr. 22, 1974P May 23 May 28,
1974P Aug. 22 Sept. 11, 1974P Oct. 17 Nov. 18, 1974P Nov. 26
Dec. 3, 1974
94th 1 Jan. 14, 1975 Dec. 19, 1975 340 Mar. 26 Apr. 7, 1975P May 22
June 2, 1975P June 27 July 7, 1975P Aug. 1 Sept. 3, 1975P Oct. 9
Oct. 20, 1975P Oct. 23 Oct. 28, 1975P Nov. 20 Dec. 1, 1975 Mar.
26 Apr. 7, 1975P May 22 June 2, 1975P June 26 July 8, 1975P Aug.
1 Sept. 3, 1975P Oct. 9 Oct. 20, 1975P Oct. 23 Oct. 28, 1975P
Nov. 20 Dec. 1, 1975 Do.
2 Jan. 19, 1976 Oct. 1, 1976 257 Feb. 6 Feb. 16, 1976P Apr. 14
Apr. 26, 1976P May 28 June 2, 1976P July 2 July 19, 1976P Aug.
10 Aug. 23, 1976P Sept. 1 Sept. 7, 1976 Feb. 11 Feb. 16, 1976P
Apr. 14 Apr. 26, 1976P May 27 June 1, 1976P July 2 July 19,
1976P Aug. 10 Aug. 23, 1976P Sept. 2 Sept. 8, 1976
95th 1 Jan. 4, 1977 Dec. 15, 1977 346 Feb. 11 Feb. 21, 1977P Apr. 7
Apr. 18, 1977P May 27 June 6, 1977P July 1 July 11, 1977P Aug. 6
Sept. 7, 1977 Feb. 9 Feb. 16, 1977P Apr. 6 Apr. 18, 1977P May 26
June 1, 1977P June 30 July 11, 1977P Aug. 5 Sept. 7, 1977P Oct.
6 Oct. 11, 1977 Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr., of Massachusetts.
2 Jan. 19, 1978 Oct. 15, 1978 270 Feb. 10 Feb. 20, 1978P Mar. 23
Apr. 3, 1978P May 26 June 5, 1978P June 29 July 10, 1978P Aug.
25 Sept. 6, 1978 Feb. 9 Feb. 14, 1978P Mar. 22 Apr. 3, 1978P May
25 May 31, 1978P June 29 July 10, 1978P Aug. 17 Sept. 6, 1978
96th 1 Jan. 15, 1979 Jan. 3, 1980 354 Feb. 9 Feb. 19, 1979P Apr. 10
Apr. 23, 1979P May 24 June 4, 1979P June 27 July 9, 1979P Aug. 3
Sept. 5, 1979P Nov. 20 Nov. 26, 1979P Adjourned sine die, Dec. 20,
1979 Feb. 8 Feb. 13, 1979P Apr. 10 Apr. 23, 1979P May 24 May 30,
1979P June 29 July 9, 1979P Aug. 2 Sept. 5, 1979P Nov. 20 Nov.
26, 1979P Adjourned sine die, Jan. 3, 1980 Warren G. Magnuson, of
Washington Do.
2 Jan. 3, 1980 Dec. 16, 1980 349 Apr. 3 Apr. 15, 1980P May 22
May 28, 1980P July 2 July 21, 1980P Aug. 6 Aug. 18, 1980P Aug.
27 Sept. 3, 1980P Oct. 1 Nov. 12, 1980P Nov. 25 Dec. 1, 1980
Feb. 13 Feb. 19, 1980P Apr. 2 Apr. 15, 1980P May 22 May 28,
1980P July 2 July 21, 1980P Aug. 1 Aug. 18, 1980P Aug. 28 Sept.
3, 1980P Oct. 2 Nov. 12, 1980P Nov. 21 Dec. 1, 1980
97th 1 Jan. 5, 1981 Dec. 16, 1981 347 Feb. 6 Feb. 16, 1981P Apr. 10
Apr. 27, 1981P June 25 July 8, 1981P Aug. 3 Sept. 9, 1981P Oct.
7 Oct. 14, 1981P Nov. 24 Nov. 30, 1981 Feb. 6 Feb. 17, 1981P
Apr. 10 Apr. 27, 1981P June 26 July 8, 1981P Aug. 4 Sept. 9,
1981P Oct. 7 Oct. 13, 1981P Nov. 23 Nov. 30, 1981 Strom Thurmond,
of South Caro lina Do.
2 Jan. 25, 1982 Dec. 23, 1982 333 Feb. 11 Feb. 22, 1982P Apr. 1
Apr. 13, 1982P May 27 June 8, 1982P July 1 July 12, 1982P Aug.
20 Sept. 8, 1982P Oct. 1 Nov. 29, 1982 Feb. 10 Feb. 22, 1982P
Apr. 6 Apr. 20, 1982P May 27 June 2, 1982P July 1 July 12, 1982P
Aug. 20 Sept. 8, 1982P Oct. 1 Nov. 29, 1982
98th 1 Jan. 3, 1983 Nov. 18, 1983 320 Jan. 3 Jan. 25, 1983P Feb. 3
Feb. 14, 1983P Mar. 24 Apr. 5, 1983P May 26 June 6, 1983P June
29 July 11, 1983P Aug. 4 Sept. 12, 1983P Oct. 7 Oct. 17, 1983
Jan. 6 Jan. 25, 1983P Feb. 17 Feb. 22, 1983P Mar. 24 Apr. 5,
1983P May 26 June 1, 1983P June 30 July 11, 1983P Aug. 4 Sept.
12, 1983P Oct. 6 Oct. 17, 1983 Do.
2 Jan. 23, 1984 Oct. 12, 1984 264 Feb. 9 Feb. 20, 1984P Apr. 12
Apr. 24, 1984P May 24 May 31, 1984P June 29 July 23, 1984P Aug.
10 Sept. 5, 1984 Feb. 9 Feb. 21, 1984P Apr. 12 Apr. 24, 1984P
May 24 May 30, 1984P June 29 July 23, 1984P Aug. 10 Sept. 5,
1984
99th 1 Jan. 3, 1985 Dec. 20, 1985 352 Jan. 7 Jan. 21, 1985P Feb. 7
Feb. 18, 1985P Apr. 4 Apr. 15, 1985P May 9 May 14, 1985P May 24
June 3, 1985P June 27 July 8, 1985P Aug. 1 Sept. 9, 1985P Nov.
23 Dec. 2, 1985 Jan. 3 Jan. 21, 1985P Feb. 7 Feb. 19, 1985P Mar.
7 Mar. 19, 1985P Apr. 4 Apr. 15, 1985P May 23 June 3, 1985P June
27 July 8, 1985P Aug. 1 Sept. 4, 1985P Nov. 21 Dec. 2, 1985
Do.
2 Jan. 21, 1986 Oct. 18, 1986 278 Feb. 7 Feb. 17, 1986P Mar. 27
Apr. 8, 1986P May 21 June 2, 1986P June 26 July 7, 1986P Aug. 15
Sept. 8, 1986 Feb. 6 Feb. 18, 1986P Mar. 25 Apr. 8, 1986P May 22
June 3, 1986P June 26 July 14, 1986P Aug. 16 Sept. 8, 1986
+++++++ Continued on the next Card +++++
#ENDCARD
#CARD ++
+++++++ Continued from the previous Card +++++
100th 1 Jan. 6, 1987 Dec. 22, 1987 351 Jan. 6 Jan. 12, 1987P Feb. 5
Feb. 16, 1987P Apr. 10 Apr. 21, 1987P May 21 May 27, 1987P July
1 July 7, 1987P Aug. 7 Sept. 9, 1987P Nov. 20 Nov. 30, 1987 Jan.
8 Jan. 20, 1987P Feb. 11 Feb. 18, 1987P Apr. 9 Apr. 21, 1987P
May 21 May 27, 1987P July 1 July 7, 1987P July 15 July 20, 1987P
Aug. 7 Sept. 9, 1987P Nov. 10 Nov. 16, 1987P Nov. 20 Nov. 30,
1987 John C. Stennis, of Mississippi James C. Wright, Jr., of Texas.
2 Jan. 25, 1988 Oct. 22, 1988 272 Feb. 4 Feb. 15, 1988P Mar. 4
Mar. 14, 1988P Mar. 31 Apr. 11, 1988P Apr. 29 May 9, 1988P May 27
June 6, 1988P June 29 July 6, 1988P July 14 July 25, 1988P Aug.
11 Sept. 7, 1988 Feb. 9 Feb. 16, 1988P Mar. 31 Apr. 11, 1988P
May 26 June 1, 1988P June 30 July 7, 1988P July 14 July 26,
1988P Aug. 11 Sept. 7,1988
101st 1 Jan. 3, 1989 Nov. 22, 1989 324 Jan. 4 Jan. 20, 1989P Jan. 20
Jan. 25, 1989P Feb. 9 Feb. 21, 1989P Mar. 17 Apr. 4, 1989P Apr.
19 May 1, 1989P May 18 May 31, 1989P June 23 July 11, 1989P Aug.
4 Sept. 6, 1989 Jan. 4 Jan. 19, 1989P Feb. 9 Feb. 21, 1989P Mar.
23 Apr. 3, 1989P Apr. 18 Apr. 25, 1989P May 25 May 31, 1989P
June 29 July 10, 1989P Aug. 5 Sept. 6, 1989 Robert C. Byrd, of
West Virginia Do.PThomas S. Foley, 1A\36\ of Washington.
2 Jan. 23, 1990 Oct. 28, 1990 260 Feb. 8 Feb. 20, 1990P Mar. 9
Mar. 20, 1990P Apr. 5 Apr. 18, 1990P May 24 June 5, 1990P June
28 July 10, 1990P Aug. 4 Sept. 10, 1990 Feb. 7 Feb. 20, 1990P
Apr. 4 Apr. 18, 1990P May 25 June 5, 1990P June 28 July 10,
1990P Aug. 4 Sept. 5, 1990
102d 1 Jan. 3, 1991 Feb. 6 Feb. 19, 1991P Mar. 22 Apr. 9, 1991
Feb. 7 Feb. 19, 1991P Mar. 22 Apr. 9, 1991 Do.
\1\ For many years the appointment or election of a President pro
tempore was held by the Senate to be for the occasion only, so that
more than one appear in several sessions and in others none was
chosen. Since Mar. 12, 1890, they have served until ``the Senate
otherwise ordered.''
\2\ The Constitution (Art. I, sec. 4) provided that ``The Congress
shall assemble at least once in every year * * * on the first Monday
in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.''
Pursuant to a resolution of the Continental Congress, the first
session of the First Congress convened Mar. 4, 1789. Up to and
including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting
of Congress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress met
regularly on the first Monday in December until 1934, when the
twentieth amendment to the Constitution became effective, changing the
meeting of Congress to Jan. 3. The first and second sessions of the
First Congress were held in New York City; subsequently, including the
first session of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting
place; since then Congress has convened in Washington, D.C.
\3\ Elected to count the vote for President and Vice President,
which was done Apr. 6, 1789, a quorum of the Senate then appearing for
the first time. John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr. 21, 1789,
and took his seat as President of the Senate.
\4\ Elected Speaker pro tempore for Apr. 20, 1798, and again for
May 28, 1798.
\5\ Elected Speaker Jan. 19, 1814, vice Henry Clay, of Kentucky,
who resigned Jan. 19, 1814.
\6\ Elected Speaker Nov. 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, of Kentucky,
who resigned Oct. 28, 1820.
\7\ Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of
Virginia, who resigned.
\8\ Elected Speaker Mar. 3, 1869, and served 1 day.
\9\ Died Aug. 19, 1876.
\10\ Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 17, May 12, June 19.
\11\ Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4.
\12\ Resigned as President pro tempore Apr. 27, 1911.
\13\ Elected to serve Jan. 11 17, Mar. 11 12, Apr. 8, May 10,
May 30 to June 1 and 3, June 13 to July 5, Aug. 1 10, and Aug. 27
to Dec. 15, 1912.
\14\ Elected to serve May 25, 1912.
\15\ Elected to serve Dec. 4 12, 1911.
\16\ Elected to serve Feb. 12 14, Apr. 26 27, May 7, July 6
31, Aug. 12 26, 1912.
\17\ Elected to serve Mar. 25 26, 1912.
\18\ Elected to serve Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912, Jan. 5 18, and
Feb. 2 15, 1913.
\19\ Elected to serve Dec. 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1913, Jan. 19 to
Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913.
\20\ Died Oct. 1, 1916.
\21\ Died Aug. 19, 1934.
\22\ Died June 4, 1936.
\23\ Elected June 4, 1936.
\24\ Died Sept. 15, 1940.
\25\ Died Nov. 10, 1940.
\26\ Elected Sept. 16, 1940.
\27\ Elected Nov. 19, 1940.
\28\ Elected Jan. 6, 1941; died June 22, 1941.
\29\ Elected July 10, 1941.
\30\ Died November 16, 1961.
\31\ Elected Jan. 10, 1962.
\32\ Died Jan. 21, 1971.
\33\ Elected Jan. 22, 1971.
\34\ Died July 27, 1972.
\35\ Elected July 28, 1972.
\36\ Elected Speaker June 6, 1989, vice James C. Wright, Jr., of
Texas, who resigned.
A
#ENDCARD
#CARD
SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE
From 1789 to 1933 presidential and congressional terms began on March
4, although the Congress generally did not meet until the first Monday
in December. When a new president was to take office, his predecessor
would call the Senate into special session to confirm the nominations
for the Cabinet and other significant posts. Special sessions also
were convened to consider the ratification of treaties. Incumbent
presidents also called special sessions from time to time to allow
Senators to consider vacancies and other executive business. Special
sessions are called by presidential proclamation.
#ENDCARD
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[Except as noted below, all special sessions were convened to consider
executive nominations.]
2d 1791 Friday, March 4 Friday, March 4.
3d 1793 Monday, March 4 1A 1A\1\ Monday, March 4.
4th 1795 Monday, June 8 Friday, June 26.
5th 1797 Saturday, March 4 Saturday, March 4.
5th 1798 Tuesday, July 17 Thursday, July 19.
7th 1801 Wednesday, March 4 Thursday, March 5.
11th 1809 Saturday, March 4 Tuesday, March 7.
15th 1817 Monday, March 4 Wednesday, March 6.
19th 1825 Friday, March 4 Wednesday, March 9.
21st 1829 Wednesday, March 4 Tuesday, March 17.
25th 1837 Saturday, March 4 Friday, March 10.
27th 1841 Thursday, March 4 Monday, March 15.
29th 1845 Tuesday, March 4 Thursday, March 20.
31st 1849 Monday, March 5 Friday, March 23.
32d 1851 Tuesday, March 4 Thursday, March 13.
33d 1853 Friday, March 4 Monday, April 11.
35th 1857 Wednesday, March 4 Saturday, March 14.
35th 1858 Tuesday, June 15 Wednesday, June 16.
36th 1859 Friday, March 4 Thursday, March 10.
36th 1860 Tuesday, June 26 1A 1A\2\ Thursday, June 28.
37th 1861 Monday, March 4 Thursday, March 28.
38th 1863 Wednesday, March 4 Saturday, March 14.
39th 1865 Saturday, March 4 Saturday, March 11.
40th 1867 Monday, April 1 Saturday, April 20.
41st 1869 Monday, April 12 Thursday, April 22.
42d 1871 Wednesday, May 10 1A 1A\3\ Saturday, May 27.
43d 1873 Tuesday, March 4 Wednesday, March 26.
44th 1875 Friday, March 5 Wednesday, March 24.
45th 1877 Monday, March 5 Saturday, March 17.
47th 1881 Friday, March 4 Friday, May 20.
47th 1881 Monday, October 10 Saturday, October 29.
49th 1885 Wednesday, March 4 Thursday, April 2.
51st 1889 Monday, March 4 Tuesday, April 2.
53d 1893 Saturday, March 4 Friday, April 15.
55th 1897 Thursday, March 4 Wednesday, March 10.
57th 1901 Monday, March 4 Saturday, March 9.
58th 1903 Thursday, March 5 Thursday, March 19.
59th 1905 Saturday, March 4 Saturday, March 18.
61st 1909 Thursday, March 4 Saturday, March 6.
63d 1913 Tuesday, March 4 Monday, March 17.
65th 1917 Monday, March 5 Friday, March 16.
67th 1921 Friday, March 4 Tuesday, March 15.
69th 1925 Wednesday, March 4 Wednesday, March 18.
71st 1929 Monday, March 4 Tuesday, March 5.
71st 1930 Monday, July 7 1A 1A\4\ Monday, July 21.
73d 1933 Saturday, March 4 Monday, March 6.
\1\ To consider the Jay Treaty.
\2\ To consider treaties.
\3\ To consider the Washington Treaty.
\4\ To consider the Naval Arms Treaty.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
JOINT SESSIONS, JOINT MEETINGS, AND INAUGURATIONS
#ENDCARD
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1st 102d CONGRESSES, 1789 1991 1A\1\
The parliamentary difference between a joint session and joint
meeting has evolved over time. In recent years the distinctions have
become clearer. A joint session is more formal, and it occurs upon the
adoption of a concurrent resolution; a joint meeting occurs when each
body adopts a unanimous consent agreement to recess to meet with the
other legislative body.
In the earliest years of the Republic, 1789 and 1790, when the
national legislature met in New York City, joint gatherings were held
in the Senate Chamber in Federal Hall. In Philadelphia, when the
legislature met in Congress Hall, such meetings were held in the
Senate Chamber, 1790 1793, and in the Hall of the House of
Representatives, 1794 1799. Once the Congress moved to the Capitol
in Washington, DC in 1800, the Senate Chamber again was used for joint
gatherings through 1805. Since 1809, with few exceptions, joint
sessions and meetings have occurred in the Hall of the House.
Presidential messages on the state of the Union were known as
``annual messages,'' but since the 80th Congress they have been known
as ``State of the Union Addresses.'' After President Adams' annual
message on November 22, 1800, these addresses were read by clerks to
the individual bodies until President Wilson resumed the practice of
delivering them to joint sessions on December 2, 1913.
In some instances more than one joint gathering has occurred on the
same day. For example, on January 6, 1941, Congress met in joint
session to count electoral votes for President and Vice President, and
then met again in joint session to receive President Roosevelt's
annual message.
Congress has hosted inaugurations since the first occasion in 1789.
They always have been formal joint gatherings, and sometimes they also
were joint sessions. Inaugurations were joint sessions when both
houses of Congress were in session, and they processed to the ceremony
as part of the business of the day. In many cases, however, one or
both houses were not in session or were in recess at the time of the
ceremony. In the table below, inaugurations that were not joint
sessions are listed in the second column. Those that were joint
sessions are so identified and described in the third column.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
JOINT SESSIONS, JOINT MEETINGS, AND INAUGURATIONS
#ENDCARD
#CARD
1st 102d CONGRESSES, 1789 1991
[See notes at end of table]
NEW YORK CITY s0
1st CONGRESS
Apr. 6, 1789 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Apr. 30, 1789 Inauguration and church service 1A\2\ President
George Washington; Right Reverend Samuel Provost, Senate-appointed
Chaplain.
Jan. 8, 1790 Annual message President George Washington.
PHILADELPHIA s0
Dec. 8, 1790 Do.
2d CONGRESS
Oct. 25, 1791 Do.
Nov. 6, 1792 Do.
Feb. 13, 1793 Counting electoral votes N.A.
3d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1793 Inauguration Senate Chamber President George Washington.
Dec. 3, 1793 Joint session Annual message Do.
Nov. 19, 1794 Do.
4th CONGRESS
Dec. 8, 1795 Do.
Dec. 7, 1796 Do.
Feb. 8, 1797 Counting electoral votes N.A.
5th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1797 Inauguration Hall of the House President John Adams.
May 16, 1797 Joint session Relations with France Do.
Nov. 23, 1797 Joint session Annual message President John Adams.
Dec. 8, 1798 Do.
6th CONGRESS
Dec. 3, 1799 Do.
Dec. 26, 1799 Funeral procession and oration in memory of
George Washington 1A\3\ Representative Henry Lee.
WASHINGTON, DC s0
Nov. 22, 1800 Annual message President John Adams.
Feb. 11, 1801 Counting electoral votes 1A\4\ N.A.
7th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1801 Inauguration Senate Chamber President Thomas Jefferson.
8th CONGRESS
Feb. 13, 1805 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
9th CONGRESS
Mar. 5, 1805 Inauguration Senate Chamber President Thomas Jefferson.
10th CONGRESS
Feb. 8, 1809 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
11th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1809 Inauguration Hall of the House President James Madison.
12th CONGRESS
Feb. 10, 1813 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
13th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1813 Inauguration Hall of the House President James Madison.
14th CONGRESS
Feb. 12, 1817 Joint session Counting electoral votes 1A\5\ N.A.
15th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1817 Inauguration In front of Brick Capitol President James
Monroe.
16th CONGRESS
Feb. 14, 1821 Joint session Counting electoral votes 1A\6\ N.A.
17th CONGRESS
Mar. 5, 1821 Inauguration Hall of the House President James Monroe.
18th CONGRESS
Dec. 10, 1824 Joint meeting Address Speaker Henry Clay; General
Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette.
Feb. 9, 1825 Joint session Counting electoral votes 1A\7\ N.A.
19th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1825 Inauguration Hall of the House President John Quincy
Adams.
20th CONGRESS
Feb. 11, 1829 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
21st CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1829 Inauguration East Portico 1A\8\ President Andrew Jackson.
22d CONGRESS
Feb. 13, 1833 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
23d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1833 Inauguration Hall of the House 1A\9\ President Andrew
Jackson.
Dec. 31, 1834 Joint session Lafayette eulogy Representative and former
President John Quincy Adams; ceremony attended by President Andrew
Jackson.
24th CONGRESS
Feb. 8, 1837 Counting electoral votes N.A.
25th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1837 Inauguration East Portico President Martin Van Buren.
26th CONGRESS
Feb. 10, 1841 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
27th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1841 Inauguration East Portico President William Henry
Harrison.
28th CONGRESS
Feb. 12, 1845 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
29th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1845 Inauguration East Portico President James Knox Polk.
30th CONGRESS
Feb. 14, 1849 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
31st CONGRESS
Mar. 5, 1849 Inauguration East Portico President Zachary Taylor.
July 10, 1850 Joint session Oath of office to President Millard
Fillmore 1A\10\ N.A.
32d CONGRESS
Feb. 9, 1853 Counting electoral votes N.A.
33d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1853 Inauguration East Portico President Franklin Pierce.
34th CONGRESS
Feb. 11, 1857 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
35th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1857 Inauguration East Portico President James Buchanan.
36th CONGRESS
Feb. 13, 1861 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
37th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1861 Inauguration East Portico President Abraham Lincoln.
Feb. 22, 1862 Joint session Reading of Washington's farewell address
John W. Forney, Secretary of the Senate.
38th CONGRESS
Feb. 8, 1865 Counting electoral votes N.A.
39th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1865 Inauguration East Portico President Abraham Lincoln.
Feb. 12, 1866 Joint session Memorial to Abraham Lincoln George
Bancroft, historian; ceremony attended by President Andrew Johnson.
40th CONGRESS
Feb. 10, 1869 Counting electoral votes N.A.
41st CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1869 Inauguration East Portico President Ulysses S. Grant.
42d CONGRESS
Feb. 12, 1873 Joint session Counting electoral votes 1A\11\ N.A.
43d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1873 Inauguration East Portico President Ulysses S. Grant.
Dec. 18, 1874 Joint meeting Reception of King Kalakaua of Hawaii
Speaker James G. Blaine; David Kalakaua, King of the Hawaiian
Islands.\12\
44th CONGRESS
Feb. 1, 1877P Feb. 10, 1877P Feb. 12, 1877P Feb. 19, 1877P Feb. 20,
1877P Feb. 21, 1877P Feb. 24, 1877P Feb. 26, 1877P Feb. 28, 1877 Mar.
1, 1877P Mar. 2, 1877 Joint session Counting electoral votes 1A\13\
N.A.
45th CONGRESS
Mar. 5, 1877 Inauguration East Portico President Rutherford B. Hayes.
46th CONGRESS
Feb. 9, 1881 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
47th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1881 Inauguration East Portico President James A. Garfield.
Feb. 27, 1882 Joint session Memorial to James A. Garfield James G.
Blaine, former Speaker, Senator, and Secretary of State; ceremony
attended by President Chester A. Arthur.
48th CONGRESS
Feb. 11, 1885 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Feb. 21, 1885 Completion of Washington Monument
Representative John D. Long; 1A\14\ Representative-elect John W.
Daniel; ceremony attended by President Chester A. Arthur.
49th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1885 Inauguration East Portico President Grover Cleveland.
50th CONGRESS
Feb. 13, 1889 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
51st CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1889 Inauguration East Portico President Benjamin Harrison.
Dec. 11, 1889 Joint session Centennial of George Washington's first
inauguration Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice of the United States;
ceremony attended by President Benjamin Harrison.
52d CONGRESS
Feb. 8, 1893 Counting electoral votes N.A.
53d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1893 Inauguration East Portico President Grover Cleveland.
54th CONGRESS
Feb. 10, 1897 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
55th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1897 Inauguration In front of original Senate Wing of Capitol
President William McKinley.
56th CONGRESS
Dec. 12, 1900 Joint meeting Centennial of the Capital City
Representatives James D. Richardson and Sereno E. Payne, and Senator
George F. Hoar; ceremony attended by President William McKinley.
Feb. 13, 1901 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
57th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1901 Inauguration East Portico President William McKinley.
Feb. 27, 1902 Joint session Memorial to William McKinley John Hay,
Secretary of State; ceremony attended by President Theodore Roosevelt
and Prince Henry of Prussia.
58th CONGRESS
Feb. 8, 1905 Counting electoral votes N.A.
59th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1905 Inauguration East Portico President Theodore Roosevelt.
60th CONGRESS
Feb. 10, 1909 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
61st CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1909 Inauguration Senate Chamber 1A\15\ President William
Howard Taft.
62d CONGRESS
Feb. 12, 1913 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Feb. 15, 1913 Memorial for Vice President James S. Sherman
1A\16\ Senators Elihu Root, Thomas S. Martin, Jacob H. Gallinger, John
R. Thornton, Henry Cabot Lodge, John W. Kern, Robert M. LaFollette,
John Sharp Williams, Charles Curtis, Albert B. Cummins, George T.
Oliver, James A. O'Gorman; Speaker Champ Clark; President William
Howard Taft.
63d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1913 Inauguration East Portico President Woodrow Wilson.
Apr. 8, 1913 Joint session Tariff message President Woodrow Wilson.
June 23, 1913 Currency and bank reform message Do.
Aug. 27, 1913 Mexican affairs message Do.
Dec. 2, 1913 Annual message Do.
Jan. 20, 1914 Trusts message Do.
Mar. 5, 1914 Panama Canal tolls Do.
Apr. 20, 1914 Mexico message Do.
Sept. 4, 1914 War tax message Do.
Dec. 8, 1914 Annual message Do.
64th CONGRESS
Dec. 7, 1915 Do.
Aug. 29, 1916 Railroad message (labor-management dispute)
Do.
Dec. 5, 1916 Annual message Do.
Feb. 3, 1917 Severing diplomatic relations with Germany Do.
Feb. 14, 1917 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Feb. 26, 1917 Arming of merchant ships President Woodrow
Wilson.
65th CONGRESS
Mar. 5, 1917 Inauguration East Portico Do.
Apr. 2, 1917 Joint session War with Germany Do.
Dec. 4, 1917 Annual message/War with Austria-Hungary Do.
Feb. 11, 1918 Peace message Do.
May 27, 1918 War finance message Do.
Nov. 11, 1918 Terms of armistice signed by Germany Do.
Dec. 2, 1918 Annual message Do.
Feb. 9, 1919 Memorial to Theodore Roosevelt Senator Henry
Cabot Lodge, Sr.; ceremony attended by former President William Howard
Taft.
66th CONGRESS
Aug. 8, 1919 Cost of living message President Woodrow Wilson.
Sept. 18, 1919 Address President pro tempore Albert B.
Cummins; Speaker Frederick H. Gillett; Representative and former
Speaker Champ Clark; General John J. Pershing.
Feb. 9, 1921 Counting electoral votes N.A.
67th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1921 Inauguration East Portico President Warren G. Harding.
Apr. 12, 1921 Joint session Federal problem message Do.
Dec. 6, 1921 Annual message Do.
Feb. 28, 1922 Maintenance of the merchant marine Do.
Aug. 18, 1922 Coal and railroad message Do.
Nov. 21, 1922 Promotion of the American merchant marine Do.
Dec. 8, 1922 Annual message Do.
Feb. 7, 1923 British debt due to the United States Do.
68th CONGRESS
Dec. 6, 1923 Annual message President Calvin Coolidge.
Feb. 27, 1924 Memorial to Warren G. Harding Charles Evans
Hughes, Secretary of State; ceremony attended by President Calvin
Coolidge.
Dec. 15, 1924 Memorial to Woodrow Wilson Dr. Edwin Anderson
Alderman, President of the University of Virginia; ceremony attended
by President Calvin Coolidge.
Feb. 11, 1925 Counting electoral votes N.A.
69th CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1925 Inauguration East Portico President Calvin Coolidge.
Feb. 22, 1927 Joint session George Washington birthday message Do.
70th CONGRESS
Feb. 13, 1929 Counting electoral votes N.A.
71st CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1929 Inauguration East Portico President Herbert Hoover.
72d CONGRESS
Feb. 22, 1932 Joint session Bicentennial of George Washington's birth
President Herbert Hoover.
Feb. 6, 1933 Joint meeting Memorial to Calvin Coolidge Arthur Prentice
Rugg, Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts;
ceremony attended by President Herbert Hoover.
Feb. 8, 1933 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
73d CONGRESS
Mar. 4, 1933 Inauguration East Portico President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
Jan. 3, 1934 Joint session Annual message Do.
May 20, 1934 100th anniversary, death of Lafayette Andre AE1
de Laboulaye, Ambassador of France; President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt; ceremony attended by Count de Chambrun, great-grandson of
Lafayette.
74th CONGRESS
Jan. 4, 1935 Annual message President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
May 22, 1935 Veto message Do.
Jan. 3, 1936 Annual message Do.
75th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1937 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Do Annual message President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 20, 1937 Inauguration East Portico President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt; Vice President John Nance Garner.\17\
Jan. 3, 1938 Joint session Annual message President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
76th CONGRESS
Jan. 4, 1939 Do.
Mar. 4, 1939 Sesquicentennial of the 1st Congress Do.
June 9, 1939 Joint meeting Reception 1A\18\ George VI and Elizabeth,
King and Queen of the United Kingdom.
Sept. 21, 1939 Joint session Neutrality address President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 3, 1940 Annual message Do.
May 16, 1940 National defense message Do.
77th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1941 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Do Annual message President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Jan. 20, 1941 Inauguration, East Portico President Franklin
Delano Roosevelt; Vice President Henry A. Wallace.
Dec. 8, 1941 War with Japan President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
Dec. 26, 1941 Joint meeting Address 1A\19\ Winston Churchill, Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom.
Jan. 6, 1942 Joint session Annual message President Franklin Delano
+++++++ Continued on the next Card +++++
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#CARD ++
+++++++ Continued from the previous Card +++++
Roosevelt.
Aug. 6, 1942 Joint meeting \20\ Address Wilhelmina, Queen of the
Netherlands.
78th CONGRESS
Jan. 7, 1943 Joint session Annual message President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
May 19, 1943 Joint meeting Address Winston Churchill, Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom.
Nov. 18, 1943 Moscow Conference Cordell Hull, Secretary of
State.
79th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1945 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Do Annual message President Roosevelt was not present. His
message was read before the Joint Session of Congress.
Jan. 20, 1945 Inauguration South Portico, White House \21\ President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt; Vice President Harry S. Truman.
Mar. 1, 1945 Joint session Yalta Conference President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt.
Apr. 16, 1945 Prosecution of the War President Harry S.
Truman.
May 21, 1945 Bestowal of Congressional Medal of Honor on
Tech. Sgt. Jake William Lindsey General George C. Marshall, Chief of
Staff, U.S. Army; President Harry S. Truman.
June 18, 1945 Joint meeting Address General Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary Force.
Oct. 5, 1945 Admiral Chester W. Nimitz,
Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Fleet.
Oct. 23, 1945 Joint session Universal military training message
President Harry S. Truman.
Nov. 13, 1945 Joint meeting Address Clement R. Attlee, Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom.
May 25, 1946 Joint session Railroad strike message President Harry S.
Truman.
July 1, 1946 Memorial to Franklin Delano Roosevelt John
Winant, U.S. Representative on the Economic and Social Council of the
United Nations; ceremony attended by President Harry S. Truman and
Mrs. Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
80th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1947 State of the Union Address President Harry S.
Truman.
Mar. 12, 1947 Greek-Turkish aid policy Do.
May 1, 1947 Joint meeting Address Miguel Aleman, President of Mexico.
Nov. 17, 1947 Joint session Aid to Europe message President Harry S.
Truman.
Jan. 7, 1948 State of the Union Address Do.
Mar. 17, 1948 National security and conditions in Europe Do.
Apr. 19, 1948 50th anniversary, liberation of Cuba President
Harry S. Truman; Guillermo Belt, Ambassador of Cuba.
July 27, 1948 Inflation, housing, and civil rights President
Harry S. Truman.
81st CONGRESS
Jan. 5, 1949 State of the Union Address Do.
Jan. 6, 1949 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1949 Inauguration, East Portico President Harry S.
Truman; Vice President Alben W. Barkley.
May 19, 1949 Joint meeting Address Eurico Gaspar Dutra, President of
Brazil.
Jan. 4, 1950 Joint session State of the Union Address President Harry
S. Truman.
May 31, 1950 Joint meeting Address Dean Acheson, Secretary of State.
82d CONGRESS
Jan. 8, 1951 Joint session State of the Union Address President Harry
S. Truman.
Feb. 1, 1951 Joint meeting 1A\22\ North Atlantic Treaty Organization
General Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Apr. 2, 1951 Address Vincent Auriol, President of France.
Apr. 19, 1951 Return from Pacific Command General Douglas
MacArthur.
June 21, 1951 Address Galo Plaza, President of Ecuador.
Sept. 24, 1951 Alcide de Gasperi, Prime Minister of
Italy.
Jan. 9, 1952 Joint session State of the Union Address President Harry
S. Truman.
Jan. 17, 1952 Joint meeting Address Winston Churchill, Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom.
Apr. 3, 1952 Juliana, Queen of the Netherlands.
May 22, 1952 Korea General Matthew B. Ridgway.
June 10, 1952 Joint session Steel industry dispute President Harry S.
Truman.
83d CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1953 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1953 Inauguration, East Portico President Dwight D.
Eisenhower; Vice President Richard M. Nixon.
Feb. 2, 1953 State of the Union Address President Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
Jan. 7, 1954 Do.
Jan. 29, 1954 Joint meeting Address Celal Bayar, President of Turkey.
May 4, 1954 Vincent Massey, Governor General of
Canada.
May 28, 1954 Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia.
July 28, 1954 Syngman Rhee, President of South
Korea.
84th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1955 Joint session State of the Union Address President Dwight
D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 27, 1955 Joint meeting Address Paul E. Magliore, President of
Haiti.
Feb. 29, 1956 Giovanni Gronchi, President of Italy.
May 17, 1956 Dr. Sukarno, President of Indonesia.
85th CONGRESS
Jan. 5, 1957 Joint session Middle East message President Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
Jan. 7, 1957 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 10, 1957 State of the Union Address President Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
Jan. 21, 1957 Inauguration, East Portico President Dwight D.
Eisenhower; Vice President Richard M. Nixon.
May 9, 1957 Joint meeting Address Ngo Dinh Diem, President of Vietnam.
Jan. 9, 1958 Joint session State of the Union Address President Dwight
D. Eisenhower.
June 5, 1958 Joint meeting Address Theodor Heuss, President of West
Germany.
June 18, 1958 Carlos F. Garcia, President of the
Philippines.
86th CONGRESS
Jan. 9, 1959 Joint session State of the Union Address President Dwight
D. Eisenhower.
Jan. 21, 1959 Joint meeting Address Arturo Frondizi, President of
Argentina.
Feb. 12, 1959 Joint session Sesquicentennial of Abraham Lincoln's
birth Fredric March, actor; Carl Sandburg, poet.
Mar. 11, 1959 Joint meeting Address Jose Maria Lemus, President of El
Salvador.
Mar. 18, 1959 Sean T. O'Kelly, President of Ireland.
May 12, 1959 Baudouin, King of the Belgians.
Jan. 7, 1960 Joint session State of the Union Address President Dwight
D. Eisenhower.
Apr. 6, 1960 Joint meeting Address Alberto Lleras-Camargo, President
of Colombia.
Apr. 25, 1960 Charles de Gaulle, President of
France.
Apr. 28, 1960 Mahendra, King of Nepal.
June 29, 1960 Bhumibol Adulyadej, King of Thailand.
87th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1961 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1961 Inauguration, East Portico President John F.
Kennedy; Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 30, 1961 State of the Union Address President John F.
Kennedy.
May 4, 1961 Joint meeting Address Habib Bourguiba, President of
Tunisia.
July 12, 1961 Mohammad Ayub Khan, President of
Pakistan.
Sept. 21, 1961 Manuel Prado, President of Peru.
Jan. 11, 1962 Joint session State of the Union Address President John
F. Kennedy.
Feb. 26, 1962 Joint meeting Friendship 7: 1st United States orbital
space flight Lt. Col. John H. Glenn, Jr., USMC; Friendship 7
astronaut.
Apr. 4, 1962 Address Joa AE6o Goulart, President of Brazil.
Apr. 12, 1962 Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, Shahanshah
of Iran.
88th CONGRESS
Jan. 14, 1963 Joint session State of the Union Address President John
F. Kennedy.
May 21, 1963 Joint meeting Flight of Faith 7 Spacecraft Maj. Gordon L.
Cooper, Jr., USAF, Faith 7 astronaut.
Nov. 27, 1963 Joint session Assumption of office President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
Jan. 8, 1964 State of the Union Address Do.
Jan. 15, 1964 Joint meeting Address Antonio Segni, President of Italy.
May 28, 1964 Eamon de Valera, President of Ireland.
89th CONGRESS
Jan. 4, 1965 Joint session State of the Union Address President Lyndon
B. Johnson.
Jan. 6, 1965 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1965 Inauguration East Portico President Lyndon B. Johnson;
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey.
Mar. 15, 1965 Joint session Voting rights President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Sept. 14, 1965 Joint meeting Flight of Gemini 5 Spacecraft Lt. Col.
Gordon L. Cooper, Jr., USAF; and Charles Conrad, Jr., USN; Gemini 5
astronauts.
Jan. 12, 1966 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Lyndon B. Johnson.
Sept. 15, 1966 Joint meeting Address Ferdinand E. Marcos, President of
the Philippines.
90th CONGRESS
Jan. 10, 1967 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Lyndon B. Johnson.
Apr. 28, 1967 Joint meeting Vietnam policy General William C.
Westmoreland.
Oct. 27, 1967 Address Gustavo Diaz Ordaz, President of
Mexico.
Jan. 17, 1968 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Lyndon B. Johnson.
91st CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1969 Counting electoral votes 1A\23\ N.A.
Jan. 9, 1969 Joint meeting Apollo 8: 1st flight around the moon Col.
Frank Borman, USAF; Capt. James A. Lowell, Jr., USN; Lt. Col. William
A. Anders, USAF; Apollo 8 astronauts.
Jan. 14, 1969 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Lyndon B. Johnson.
Jan. 20, 1969 Inauguration East Portico President Richard M. Nixon;
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.
Sept. 16, 1969 Joint meeting Apollo 11: 1st lunar landing Neil A.
Armstrong; Col. Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., USAF; and Lt. Col. Michael
Collins, USAF; Apollo 11 astronauts.
Jan. 22, 1970 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Richard M. Nixon.
Feb. 25, 1970 Joint meeting Address Georges Pompidou, President of
France.
June 3, 1970 Joint meeting Address Dr. Rafael Caldera, President of
Venezuela.
Sept. 22, 1970 Report on prisoners of war Col. Frank Borman,
Representative to the President on Prisoners of War.
92d CONGRESS
Jan. 22, 1971 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Richard M. Nixon.
Sept. 9, 1971 Economic policy Do.
Do Joint meeting Apollo 15: lunar mission Col. David R. Scott, USAF;
Col. James B. Irwin, USAF; and Lt. Col. Alfred M. Worden, USAF; Apollo
15 astronauts.
Jan. 20, 1972 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Richard M. Nixon.
June 1, 1972 European trip report Do.
June 15, 1972 Joint meeting Address Luis Echeverria Alvarez, President
of Mexico.
93d CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1973 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1973 Inauguration East Portico President Richard M. Nixon;
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.
Dec. 6, 1973 Joint meeting Oath of office to Vice President Gerald R.
Ford Vice President Gerald R. Ford; ceremony attended by President
Richard M. Nixon.
Jan. 30 1974 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Richard M. Nixon.
Aug. 12, 1974 Assumption of office President Gerald R. Ford.
Oct. 8, 1974 Economy Do.
94th CONGRESS
Jan. 15, 1975 State of the Union Address President Gerald R.
Ford.
Apr. 10, 1975 State of the World message Do.
June 17, 1975 Joint meeting Address Walter Scheel, President of West
Germany.
Nov. 5, 1975 Anwar El Sadat, President of Egypt.
Jan. 19, 1976 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Gerald R. Ford.
Jan. 28, 1976 Joint meeting Address Yitzhak Rabin, Prime Minister of
Israel.
Mar. 17, 1976 Liam Cosgrave, Prime Minister of
Ireland.
May 18, 1976 Valery Giscard d'Estaing, President of
France.
June 2, 1976 Juan Carlos I, King of Spain.
Sept. 23, 1976 Dr. William R. Tolbert, Jr.,
President of Liberia.
95th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1977 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 12, 1977 State of the Union Address President Gerald R.
Ford.
Jan. 20, 1977 Inauguration East Portico President Jimmy Carter; Vice
President Walter F. Mondale.
Feb. 22, 1977 Joint meeting Address Pierre Elliot Trudeau, Prime
Minister of Canada.
Apr. 20, 1977 Joint session Energy President Jimmy Carter.
Jan. 19, 1978 State of the Union Address Do.
Sept. 18, 1978 Middle East Peace agreements Do.
96th CONGRESS
Jan. 23, 1979 State of the Union Address Do.
June 18, 1979 Salt II agreements Do.
Jan. 23, 1980 State of the Union Address Do.
97th CONGRESS
Jan. 6, 1981 Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1981 Inauguration West Front President Ronald Reagan; Vice
President George Bush.
Feb. 18, 1981 Joint session Economic recovery President Ronald Reagan.
Apr. 28, 1981 Economic recovery_inflation Do.
Jan. 26, 1982 State of the Union Address Do.
Jan. 28, 1982 Joint meeting Centennial of birth of Franklin Delano
Roosevelt Dr. Arthur Schlesinger, historian; Senator Jennings
Randolph; Representative Claude Pepper; Averell Harriman, former
Governor of New York; 1A\24\ former Representative James Roosevelt,
son of President Roosevelt.
Apr. 21, 1982 Address Beatrix, Queen of the Netherlands.
98th CONGRESS
Jan. 25, 1983 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Ronald Reagan.
Apr. 27, 1983 Joint session Central America President Ronald Reagan.
Oct. 5, 1983 Joint meeting Address Karl Carstens, President of West
Germany.
Jan. 25, 1984 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Ronald Reagan.
Mar. 15, 1984 Joint meeting Address Dr. Garett FitzGerald, Prime
Minister of Ireland.
Mar. 22, 1984 Franc AE9ois Mitterand, President of
France.
May 8, 1984 Centennial of birth of Harry S. Truman
Representatives Ike Skelton and Alan Wheat; former Senator Stuart
Symington; Margaret Truman Daniel, daughter of President Truman; and
Senator Mark Hatfield.
May 16, 1984 Address Miguel de la Madrid, President of
Mexico.
99th CONGRESS
Jan. 7, 1985 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 21, 1985 Inauguration Rotunda 1A\25\ President Ronald Reagan;
Vice President George Bush.
Feb. 6, 1985 Joint session State of the Union Address President Ronald
Reagan.
Feb. 20, 1985 Joint meeting Address Margaret Thatcher, Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom.
Mar. 6, 1985 Bettino Craxi, Prime Minister of Italy.
+++++++ Continued on the next Card +++++
#ENDCARD
#CARD ++
+++++++ Continued from the previous Card +++++
Mar. 20, 1985 Raul Alfonsin, President of Argentina.
June 13, 1985 Rajiv Gandhi, Prime Minister of India.
Oct. 9, 1985 Lee Kuan Yew, Prime Minister of
Singapore.
Nov. 21, 1985 Joint session Geneva Summit President Ronald Reagan.
Feb. 4, 1986 State of the Union Address Do.
Sept. 11, 1986 Joint meeting Address Jose Sarney, President of Brazil.
Sept. 18, 1986 Corazon C. Aquino, President of the
Philippines.
100th CONGRESS
Jan. 27, 1987 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Ronald Reagan.
Nov. 10, 1987 Joint meeting Address Chaim Herzog, President of Israel.
Jan. 25, 1988 Joint session State of the Union Address President
Ronald Reagan.
Apr. 27, 1988 Joint meeting Address Brian Mulroney, Prime Minister of
Canada.
June 23, 1988 Robert Hawke, Prime Minister of
Australia.
101st CONGRESS
Jan. 4, 1989 Joint session Counting electoral votes N.A.
Jan. 20, 1989 Inauguration West Front President George Bush; Vice
President Dan Quayle.
Feb. 9, 1989 Joint session Building a Better America President George
Bush.
Mar. 2, 1989 Joint meeting Bicentennial of the 1st Congress President
Pro Tempore Robert C. Byrd; Speaker James C. Wright, Jr.;
Representatives Lindy Boggs, Thomas S. Foley, and Robert H. Michel;
Senators George Mitchell and Robert Dole; Howard Nemerov, Poet
Laureate of the United States; David McCullough, historian; Anthony M.
Frank, Postmaster General; former Senator Nicholas Brady, Secretary of
the Treasury.
June 7, 1989 Address Benazir Bhutto, Prime Minister of
Pakistan.
Oct. 4, 1989 Carlos Salinas de Gortari, President of
Mexico.
Oct. 18, 1989 Roh Tae Woo, President of the Republic
of Korea.
Nov. 15, 1989 Lech Walesa, chairman of Solidarnos
AE1c AE1 labor union, Poland.
Jan. 31, 1990 Joint session State of the Union Address President
George Bush.
Feb. 21, 1990 Joint meeting Address Vaclav Ha AE1vel, President of
Czechoslovakia.
Mar. 7, 1990 Giulio Andreotti, Prime Minister of
Italy.
Mar. 27, 1990 Joint meeting Centennial of birth of Dwight D.
Eisenhower Senator Robert Dole; Walter Cronkite, television
journalist; Winston S. Churchill, member of British Parliament and
grandson of Prime Minister Churchill; Clark M. Clifford, former
Secretary of Defense; James D. Robinson III, chairman of Eisenhower
Centennial Foundation; Arnold Palmer, professional golfer; John S.D.
Eisenhower, former Ambassador to Belgium and son of President
Eisenhower; Representatives Beverly Byron, William F. Goodling, and
Pat Roberts.
June 26, 1990 Address Nelson Mandela, Deputy President of the
African National Congress, South Africa.
Sept. 11, 1990 Joint session Invasion of Kuwait by Iraq President
George Bush.
102d CONGRESS
Jan. 29, 1991 State of the Union Address Do.
Mar. 6, 1991 Conclusion of Persian Gulf War Do.
Apr. 16, 1991 Joint meeting Address Violeta B. de Chamorro, President
of Nicaragua.
\1\ Closing date for this table was April 16, 1991.
\2\ The oath of office was administered to George Washington
outside on the gallery in front of the Senate Chamber, after which the
Congress and the President returned to the chamber to hear the
inaugural address. They then proceeded to St. Paul's Chapel for the
``divine service'' performed by the Chaplain of the Congress.
Adjournment of the ceremony did not occur until the Congress returned
to Federal Hall.
\3\ Funeral oration was delivered at the German Lutheran Church in
Philadelphia.
\4\ Because of a tie in the electoral vote between Thomas Jefferson
and Aaron Burr, the House of Representatives had to decide the
election. Thirty-six ballots were required to break the deadlock, with
Jefferson's election as President and Burr's as Vice President on
February 17. The Twelfth Amendment was added to the Constitution to
prevent the 1800 problem from recurring.
\5\ During most of the period while the Capitol was being
reconstructed following the fire of 1814, the Congress met in the
``Brick Capitol,'' constructed on the site of the present Supreme
Court building. This joint session took place in the Representatives'
chamber on the 2d floor of the building.
\6\ The joint session to count electoral votes dissolved because
the House and Senate disagreed on Missouri's status regarding
statehood. The joint session was reconvened the same day and
Missouri's votes were counted.
\7\ Because none of the candidates for President received a
majority of the electoral votes, the responsibility for choosing the
new President devolved upon the House of Representatives. As soon as
the Senators left the chamber, the balloting proceeded, and John
Quincy Adams was elected on the first ballot.
f 1A\8\The ceremony was moved outside to accommodate the
extraordinarily large crowd who had come to Washington to see the
inauguration.
\9\ The ceremony was moved inside because of cold weather.
\10\ Following the death of President Zachary Taylor, Vice
President Fillmore took the presidential oath of office in a special
joint session in the Hall of the House.
\11\ The joint session to count electoral votes was dissolved three
times so that the House and Senate could resolve several electoral
disputes.
\12\ Because of a severe cold and hoarseness, the King could not
deliver his speech, which was read by former Representative Elisha
Hunt Allen, then serving as Chancellor and Chief Justice of the
Hawaiian Islands.
\13\ The contested election between Rutherford B. Hayes and Samuel
J. Tilden created a constitutional crisis. Tilden won the popular vote
by a close margin, but disputes concerning the electoral vote returns
from four states deadlocked the proceedings of the joint session.
Anticipating this development, the Congress had created a special
commission of five Senators, five Representatives, and five Supreme
Court Justices to resolve such disputes. The Commission met in the
Supreme Court Chamber (the present Old Senate Chamber) as each problem
arose. In each case, the Commission accepted the Hayes' electors,
securing his election by one electoral vote. The joint session
convened on 15 occasions, with the last on March 2, just 3 days before
the inauguration.
\14\ The speech was written by former Speaker and Senator Robert C.
Winthrop, who could not attend the ceremony because of ill health.
\15\ The ceremony was moved inside because of a blizzard.
\16\ Held in the Senate Chamber.
\17\This was the first inauguration in which the Vice President took
the oath of office in the same ceremony as the President. Previously,
Vice Presidents took their oaths in the Senate Chamber earlier on the
same day.
\18\ A joint reception for the King and Queen of Great Britain was
held in the Rotunda. The ceremony was authorized by Senate Concurrent
Resolution 17, 76th Congress. Although the concurrent resolution was
structured to establish a joint meeting, the Senate, in fact,
adjourned rather than recessing as called for by the concurrent
resolution.
\19\ Delivered in the Senate Chamber.
\20\ An address to the Senate in the Senate Chamber, to which the
Members of the House of Representatives informally were invited.
\21\ The oaths of office were taken in simple ceremonies at the
White House because the expense and festivity of a Capitol ceremony
were thought inappropriate because of the war. The Joint Committee on
Arrangements of the Congress was in charge, however, and both the
Senate and the House of Representatives were present.
\22\ An informal meeting in the Coolidge Auditorium of the Library
of Congress.
\23\ The joint session to count electoral votes dissolved once so
that the House and Senate could resolve the dispute regarding a ballot
from North Carolina. The joint session was reconvened the same day and
the North Carolina vote was counted.
\24\ Because the Governor had laryngitis, his speech was read by
his wife, Pamela.
\25\ The ceremony was moved inside because of extremely cold
weather.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
COURT OF IMPEACHMENT
10
The Senate has sat as a Court of Impeachment in the cases of the
following accused officials, with the result stated, for the periods
named:
08
WILLIAM BLOUNT, a Senator of the United States from Tennessee; charges
dismissed for want of jurisdiction: Monday, December 17, 1798, to
Monday, January 14, 1799.
JOHN PICKERING, judge of the United States district court for the
district of New Hampshire; removed from office; Thursday, March 3,
1803, to Monday, March 12, 1804.
SAMUEL CHASE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States; acquitted; Friday, November 30, 1804, to March 1, 1805.
JAMES H. PECK, judge of the United States district court for the
district of Missouri; acquitted; Monday, April 26, 1830, to Monday,
January 31, 1831.
WEST H. HUMPHREYS, judge of the United States district court for the
middle, eastern, and western districts of Tennessee; removed from
office; Wednesday, May 7, 1862, to Thursday, June 26, 1862.
ANDREW JOHNSON, President of the United States; acquitted; Tuesday,
February 25, 1868, to Tuesday, May 26, 1868.
WILLIAM W. BELKNAP, Secretary of War; acquitted; Friday, March 3,
1876, to Tuesday, August 1, 1876.
CHARLES SWAYNE, judge of the United States district court for the
northern district of Florida; acquitted; Wednesday, December 14, 1904,
to Monday, February 27, 1905.
ROBERT W. ARCHBALD, associate judge, United States Commerce Court;
removed from office; Saturday, July 13, 1912, to Monday, January 13,
1913.
GEORGE W. ENGLISH, judge of the United States district court for the
eastern district of Illinois; resigned office November 4, 1926; Court
of Impeachment adjourned to December 13, 1926, when, on request of
House managers, impeachment proceedings were dismissed.
HAROLD LOUDERBACK, judge of the United States district court for the
northern district of California; acquitted; Monday, May 15, 1933, to
Wednesday, May 24, 1933.
HALSTED L. RITTER, judge of the United States district court for the
southern district of Florida; removed from office; Monday, April 6,
1936, to Friday, April 17, 1936.
HARRY E. CLAIBORNE, judge of the United States district court of
Nevada; removed from office; Tuesday, October 7, 1986, to Thursday,
October 9, 1986.
ALCEE L. HASTINGS, judge of the United States district court for the
southern district of Florida; removed from office; Wednesday, October
18, 1989, to Friday, October 20, 1989.
WALTER L. NIXON, judge of the U.S. district court for the southern
district of Mississippi; removed from office; Wednesday, November 1,
1989, to Friday, November 3, 1989.
A
#ENDCARD
#CARD
DELEGATES, REPRESENTATIVES, AND SENATORS SERVING IN THE 1st 102d
CONGRESSES 1A \1\
As of the convening of the 102d Congress, 11,230 individuals have
served: 9,434 in the House of Representatives, 1,197 in the Senate,
and 599 in both Houses.
Alabama Mar. 3, 1817 Dec. 14, 1819 (22d) 1 158 23 15 196
Alaska Aug. 24, 1912 Jan. 3, 1959 (49th) 9 4 5 0 9
Arizona Feb. 24, 1863 Feb. 14, 1912 (48th) 11 17 7 2 26
Arkansas Mar. 2, 1819 June 15, 1836 (25th) 3 76 22 8 106
California Sept. 9, 1850 (31st) 278 31 10 319
Colorado Feb. 28, 1861 Aug. 1, 1876 (38th) 3 47 23 7 77
Connecticut Jan. 9, 1788 (5th) 185 28 25 238
Delaware Dec. 7, 1787 (1st) 47 35 13 95
Florida Mar. 30, 1822 Mar. 3, 1845 (27th) 5 76 25 5 106
Georgia Jan. 2, 1788 (4th) 234 35 20 289
Hawaii June 14, 1900 Aug. 21, 1959 (50th) 10 5 2 3 10
Idaho Mar. 3, 1863 July 3, 1890 (43d) 9 21 18 5 44
Illinois Feb. 3, 1809 Dec. 3, 1818 (21st) 3 415 26 18 459
Indiana May 7, 1800 Dec. 11, 1816 (19th) 3 284 26 17 327
Iowa June 12, 1838 Dec. 28, 1846 (29th) 2 164 22 11 197
Kansas May 30, 1854 Jan. 29, 1861 (34th) 2 100 21 7 128
Kentucky June 1, 1792 (15th) 301 36 28 365
Louisiana Mar. 24, 1804 Apr. 30, 1812 (18th) 2 137 33 13 183
Maine Mar. 15, 1820 (23d) 138 17 17 172
Maryland Apr. 28, 1788 (7th) 246 28 27 301
Massachusetts Feb. 6, 1788 (6th) 374 20 28 422
Michigan Jan. 11, 1805 Jan. 26, 1837 (26th) 7 234 23 13 270
Minnesota Mar. 3, 1849 May 11, 1858 (32d) 3 113 23 10 146
Mississippi Apr. 17, 1798 Dec. 10, 1817 (20th) 5 105 27 16 148
Missouri June 4, 1812 Aug. 10, 1821 (24th) 3 281 32 8 321
Montana May 26, 1864 Nov. 8, 1889 (41st) 5 24 13 6 43
Nebraska May 30, 1854 Mar. 1, 1867 (37th) 6 82 26 7 115
Nevada Mar. 2, 1861 Oct. 31, 1864 (36th) 2 23 19 4 46
New Hampshire June 21, 1788 (9th) 116 35 24 175
New Jersey Dec. 18, 1787 (3d) 285 47 13 345
New Mexico Sept. 9, 1850 Jan. 6, 1912 (47th) 13 19 12 3 34
New York July 26, 1788 (11th) 1,375 35 22 1,432
North Carolina Nov. 21, 1789 (12th) 291 32 17 340
North Dakota 1A\2\ Mar. 2, 1861 Nov. 2, 1889 (39th) 11 21 14 5 40
Ohio 1A\3\ Mar. 1, 1803 (17th) 2 602 35 17 654
Oklahoma May 2, 1890 Nov. 16, 1907 (46th) 4 65 11 4 80
Oregon Aug. 14, 1848 Feb. 14, 1859 (33d) 2 50 30 4 84
Pennsylvania Dec. 12, 1787 (2d) 971 31 20 1,022
Rhode Island May 29, 1790 (13th) 60 36 9 105
South Carolina May 23, 1788 (8th) 191 39 14 244
South Dakota 1A\2\ Mar. 2, 1861 Nov. 2, 1889 (40th) 11 24 16 8 48
Tennessee June 1, 1796 (16th) 2 235 35 18 288
Texas Dec. 29, 1845 (28th) 204 19 9 232
Utah Sept. 9, 1850 Jan. 4, 1896 (45th) 7 27 11 3 41
Vermont Mar. 4, 1791 (14th) 80 24 15 119
Virginia June 25, 1788 (10th) 369 24 26 419
Washington Mar. 2, 1853 Nov. 11, 1889 (42d) 10 53 12 9 74
West Virginia June 20, 1863 (35th) 90 22 8 120
Wisconsin Apr. 20, 1836 May 29, 1848 (30th) 6 161 18 7 186
Wyoming July 25, 1868 July 10, 1890 (44th) 4 14 16 2 32
\1\ March 4, 1789 until January 1991.
\2\ North and South Dakota were formed from a single territory on
the same date, and they shared the same delegates before statehood.
\3\ The Territory Northwest of the River Ohio was established as a
district for purposes of temporary government by the Act of July 13,
1787. Virginia ceded the land beyond the Ohio River, and delegates
representing the district first came to the 6th Congress, March 4,
1799.
Note: Information was supplied by the Congressional Research
Service.
Alabama \2\ 1 3 5 7 7 6 8 8 9 9 10 9 9 9 8 7 7 7
Alaska \2\ 1 1 1 1 1
Arizona \2\ 1 1 2 2 3 4 5 6
Arkansas \2\ 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 7 7 6 4 4 4 4
California \2\ 2 2 3 4 6 7 8 11 20 23 30 38 43 45 52
Colorado \2\ 1 1 2 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 6 6
Connecticut 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6
Delaware 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Florida \2\ 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 5 6 8 12 15 19 23
Georgia 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 9 10 11 11 12 10 10 10 10 10 10 11
Hawaii \2\ 1 2 2 2 2
Idaho \2\ 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
Illinois \2\ 1 1 3 7 9 14 19 20 22 25 27 27 26 25 24D24 22 20
Indiana \2\ 1 3 7 10 11 11 13 13 13 13 13 12 11 11 11 11 10 10
Iowa \2\ 2 2 6 9 11 11 11 11 9 8 8 7 6 6 5
Kansas 1 3 7 8 8 8 7 6 6 5 5 5 4
Kentucky 2 6 10 12 13 10 10 9 10 11 11 11 11 9 9 8 7 77 6
Louisiana \2\ 1 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 7
Maine \3\ 7 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2
Maryland 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 8 8 8 8
Massachusetts 8 14 17 \3\ 13 13 12 10 11 10 11 12 13 14 1615 14 14
12 12 11 10
Michigan \2\ 1 3 4 6 9 11 12 12 13 17 17 18 19 19D18 16
Minnesota \2\ 2 2 3 5 7 9 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 8
Mississippi \2\ 1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 8 7 7 6 5 5 55
Missouri 1 2 5 7 9 13 14 15 16 16 13 13 11 10 10 99
Montana \2\ 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1
Nebraska \2\ 1 1 3 6 6 6 5 4 4 3 3 3 3
Nevada \2\ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2
New Hampshire 3 4 5 6 6 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
New Jersey 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 8 10 12 14 14 14 15 1514 13
New Mexico \2\ 1 1 2 2 2 2 3 3
New York 6 10 17 27 34 40 34 33 31 33 34 34 37 43 45 45 43D41 39 34 31
North Carolina 5 10 12 13 13 13 9 8 7 8 9 9 10 10 11 12 12D11 11 11 12
North Dakota \2\ 1 1 2 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1
Ohio \2\ 1 6 14 19 21 21 19 20 21 21 21 22 24 23 23 24 23 21 19
Oklahoma \2\ 5 8 9 8 6 6 6 6 6
Oregon \2\ 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 4 5 5
Pennsylvania 8 13 18 23 26 28 24 25 24 27 28 30 32 36 34 33D30 27 25
23 21
Rhode Island 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2
South Carolina 5 6 8 9 9 9 7 6 4 5 7 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 66
South Dakota \2\ 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 1 1
Tennessee \2\ 1 3 6 9 13 11 10 8 10 10 10 10 10 9 10 99 8 9 9
Texas \2\ 2 2 4 6 11 13 16 18 21 21 22 23 24 27D30
Utah \2\ 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3
Vermont 2 4 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Virginia 10 19 22 23 22 21 15 13 11 9 10 10 10 10 9 9 10 10 10 10 11
Washington \2\ 1 2 3 5 6 6 7 7 7 8 9
West Virginia 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 4 4 3
Wisconsin \2\ 2 3 6 8 9 10 11 11 10 10 10 10 9 9 9
Wyoming \2\ 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Total 65 106 142 186 213 242 232 237 243 293 332 357 391 435 435
435 437 435 435 435 435
\1\ No apportionment was made in 1920.
\2\ The following representation was added after the several census
apportionments indicated when new States were admitted and is included
in the above table:
First. Tennessee, 1.
Second. Ohio, 1.
Third. Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; Mississippi,
1.
Fifth. Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1.
Sixth. California, 2; Florida, 1; Iowa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2.
Seventh. Minnesota, 2; Oregon, 1.
Eighth. Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1.
Ninth. Colorado, 1.
Tenth. Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, 1; South Dakota, 2;
Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1.
Eleventh. Utah, 1.
Twelfth. Oklahoma, 5.
Thirteenth. Arizona, 1; New Mexico, 1.
Seventeenth. Alaska, 1; Hawaii, 1.
\3\ Twenty Representatives were assigned to Massachusetts, but 7 of
them were credited to Maine when that area became a State.
Note: The apportionment from the 1990 census will not become final
until July 15, 1991. Under the terms of a court decree, the Secretary
of Commerce may reassign the apportionment for Congressional districts
from adjusted state population figures.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES
state
Years
Alabama Montgomery Guy Hunt R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ $87,913
Alaska Juneau Walter J. Hickel I G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \2\ 81,648
Arizona Phoenix Fife Symington R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \3\ 75,000
Arkansas Little Rock Bill Clinton D G2 e 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 35,000
California Sacramento Pete Wilson R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \3\
1A120,000
Colorado Denver Roy Romer D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 70,000
Connecticut Hartford Lowell Weicker I G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A78,000
Delaware Dover Michael N. Castle R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \2\ 80,000
Florida Tallahassee Lawton Chiles D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A103,909
Georgia Atlanta Zell Miller D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 88,872
Hawaii Honolulu John D. Waihee III D G2 c 1AG1 4 Dec. 1994 \1\
1A94,780
Idaho Boise Cecil D. Andrus D G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 75,000
Illinois Springfield Jim Edgar R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \2\ 88,850
Indiana Indianapolis Evan Bayh D G2 f 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \2\ 77,199
Iowa Des Moines Terry E. Branstad R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 76,700
Kansas Topeka Joan Finney D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 74,000
Kentucky Frankfort Wallace G. Wilkinson D G2 a 1AG1 4 Dec. 1991\1\
1A74,649
Louisiana Baton Rouge ``Buddy'' Roemer \4\ R G2 c 1AG1 4 Mar. 1992
\1\ 73,440
Maine Augusta John R. McKernan, Jr R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A70,000
Maryland Annapolis William Donald Schaefer D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A85,000
Massachusetts Boston William Weld R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \3\ 75,000
Michigan Lansing John Engler R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 106,690
Minnesota St. Paul Arne Carlson R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 98,914
Mississippi Jackson Ray Malbus D G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1992 \1\ 63,000
Missouri Jefferson City John Ashcroft R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \1\
1A88,540
Montana Helena Stan Stephens R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \1\ 53,006
Nebraska Lincoln Ben Nelson D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 65,000
Nevada Carson City Robert J. Miller D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A90,000
New Hampshire Concord Judd Gregg R G2 b 1AG1 2 Jan. 1993 \1\ 79,541
New Jersey Trenton Jim Florio D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1994 \1\ 85,000
New Mexico Santa Fe Bruce King D G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 63,000
New York Albany Mario M. Cuomo D G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 130,000
North Carolina Raleigh James G. Martin R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \1\
1A123,000
North Dakota Bismarck George A. Sinner D G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \1\
1A65,200
Ohio Columbus George Voinovich R G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 100,000
Oklahoma Oklahoma City David Walters D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A70,000
Oregon Salem Barbara Roberts D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \3\ 80,000
Pennsylvania Harrisburg Robert P. Casey D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995\1\
1A105,000
Rhode Island Providence Bruce G. Sudlun D G2 b 1AG1 2 Jan. 1993\2\
1A69,900
South Carolina Columbia Carroll A. Campbell, Jr R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan.
1995 \1\ 91,607
South Dakota Pierre George S. Mickelson R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995\1\
1A60,816
Tennessee Nashville Ned McWherter D G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 85,000
Texas Austin Ann Richards D G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 91,600
Utah Salt Lake City Norman H. Bangerter R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993\1\
1A72,800
Vermont Montpelier Richard A. Snelling R G2 b 1AG1 2 Jan. 1993 \3\
1A80,730
Virginia Richmond Douglas Wilder D G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1994 \2\ 85,000
Washington Olympia Booth Gardner D G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993 \1\ 99,600
West Virginia Charleston Gaston Caperton D G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993D\2\
1A72,000
Wisconsin Madison Tommy G. Thompson R G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\
1A92,283
Wyoming Cheyenne Mike Sullivan D G2 b 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \2\ 70,000
commonwealth of puerto rico
Puerto Rico San Juan Rafael Herna AE1ndez Colo AE1n P.D.\5\ G2 b 1AG1
4 Jan. 1993 \1\ 35,000
territories
Guam Agana Joseph F. Ada R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1995 \1\ 75,000
Virgin Islands Charlotte Amalie Alexander A. Farrelly D G2 c 1AG1 4
Jan. 1995 \1\ 80,000
American Samoa Pago Pago Peter Tali Coleman R G2 a 1AG1 4 Jan. 1993
\1\ 50,000
Northern Mariana Islands Saipan, Marianas Lorenzo Iglesias DeLeon
Guerrero R G2 c 1AG1 4 Jan. 1994 \1\ 50,000
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands Palau Island Stella Guerra
1A\6\ R
fG2 a 1AG1 1ACannot succeed himself. G2 b 1AG1 1ANo limit. G2 c
1AG1 1ACan serve 2 consecutive terms. G2 d 1AG1 1ACan serve 3
consecutive terms. G2 e 1AG1 1ACan serve 4 consecutive terms. G2
f 1AG1 1ACan serve no more than 8 years in a 12-year period. \1\
1AUse of executive mansion and fund for maintenance and expenses.
\2\ Executive mansion furnished. \3\ No executive mansion;
nominal appropriation for expenses. \4\ Elected as a Democrat, but
changed party affiliation on March 11, 1991. \5\ Popular
Democratic Party. \6\ By Secretarial Order 3119, July 10, 1987,
the position of High Commissioner of the Trust Territories was
abolished and the duties were transferred to the Assistant Secretary
of the Interior for Territorial and International Affairs. The only
remaining part of the original Trust Territory is the island of Palau.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH
THEIR TERMS
George Washington John Adams Apr. 30, 1789 Mar. 3, 1797 1, 2, 3, 4.
John Adams Thomas Jefferson Mar. 4, 1797 Mar. 3, 1801 5, 6.
Thomas Jefferson Aaron Burr Mar. 4, 1801 Mar. 3, 1805 7, 8.
Do George Clinton Mar. 4, 1805 Mar. 3, 1809 9, 10.
James Madison . 1A\1\ Mar. 4, 1809 Mar. 3, 1813 11, 12.
Do Elbridge Gerry 1A\2\ Mar. 4, 1813 Mar. 3, 1817 13, 14.
James Monroe Daniel D. Tompkins Mar. 4, 1817 Mar. 3, 1825 15, 16,
17, 18.
John Quincy Adams John C. Calhoun Mar. 4, 1825 Mar. 3, 1829 19,
20.
Andrew Jackson . 1A\3\ Mar. 4, 1829 Mar. 3, 1833 21, 22.
Do Martin Van Buren Mar. 4, 1833 Mar. 3, 1837 23, 24.
Martin Van Buren Richard M. Johnson Mar. 4, 1837 Mar. 3, 1841 25,
26.
William Henry Harrison 1A\4\ John Tyler Mar. 4, 1841 Apr. 4, 1841
27.
John Tyler Apr. 6, 1841 Mar. 3, 1845 27, 28.
James K. Polk George M. Dallas Mar. 4, 1845 Mar. 3, 1849 29, 30.
Zachary Taylor 1A\4\ Millard Fillmore Mar. 5, 1849 July 9, 1850
31.
Millard Fillmore July 10, 1850 Mar. 3, 1853 31, 32.
Franklin Pierce William R. King 1A\5\ Mar. 4, 1853 Mar. 3, 1857
33, 34.
James Buchanan John C. Breckinridge Mar. 4, 1857 Mar. 3, 1861 35,
36.
Abraham Lincoln Hannibal Hamlin Mar. 4, 1861 Mar. 3, 1865 37, 38.
Do.\4\ Andrew Johnson Mar. 4, 1865 Apr. 15, 1865 39.
Andrew Johnson Apr. 15, 1865 Mar. 3, 1869 39, 40.
Ulysses S. Grant Schuyler Colfax Mar. 4, 1869 Mar. 3, 1873 41, 42.
Do Henry Wilson 1A\6\ Mar. 4, 1873 Mar. 3, 1877 43, 44.
Rutherford B. Hayes William A. Wheeler Mar. 4, 1877 Mar. 3, 1881
45, 46.
James A. Garfield 1A\4\ Chester A. Arthur Mar. 4, 1881 Sept. 19,
188147.
Chester A. Arthur Sept. 20, 1881 Mar. 3, 1885 47, 48.
Grover Cleveland 1A\7\ Thomas A. Hendricks 1A\8\ Mar. 4, 1885 Mar.
3, 1889 49, 50.
Benjamin Harrison Levi P. Morton Mar. 4, 1889 Mar. 3, 1893 51, 52.
Grover Cleveland 1A\7\ Adlai E. Stevenson Mar. 4, 1893 Mar. 3,
1897 53, 54.
William McKinley Garret A. Hobart 1A\9\ Mar. 4, 1897 Mar. 3, 1901
55, 56.
Do.\4\ Theodore Roosevelt Mar. 4, 1901 Sept. 14, 1901 57.
Theodore Roosevelt Sept. 14, 1901 Mar. 3, 1905 57, 58.
Do Charles W. Fairbanks Mar. 4, 1905 Mar. 3, 1909 59, 60.
William H. Taft James S. Sherman 1A\10\ Mar. 4, 1909 Mar. 3, 1913
61, 62.
Woodrow Wilson Thomas R. Marshall Mar. 4, 1913 Mar. 3, 1921 63,
64, 65, 66.
Warren G. Harding 1A\4\ Calvin Coolidge Mar. 4, 1921 Aug. 2, 1923
67.
Calvin Coolidge Aug. 3, 1923 Mar. 3, 1925 68.
Do Charles G. Dawes Mar. 4, 1925 Mar. 3, 1929 69, 70.
Herbert C. Hoover Charles Curtis Mar. 4, 1929 Mar. 3, 1933 71, 72.
Franklin D. Roosevelt John N. Garner Mar. 4, 1933 Jan. 7E 7E 7E 20,
1941 73, 74, 75, 76.
Do Henry A. Wallace Jan. 20, 1941 Jan. 1A 20, 1945 77, 78.
Do.\4\ Harry S. Truman Jan. 20, 1945 Apr. 12, 1945 79.
Harry S. Truman Apr. 12, 1945 Jan. 7E 7E 20, 1949 79, 80.
Do Alben W. Barkley Jan. 20, 1949 Jan. 20, 7E 7E 1953 81, 82.
Dwight D. Eisenhower Richard M. Nixon Jan. 20, 1953 Jan. 7E 7E 20,
1961D83, 84, 85, 86.
John F. Kennedy 1A\4\ Lyndon B. Johnson Jan. 20, 1961 Nov. 22, 1963
87, 88.
Lyndon B. Johnson Nov. 22, 1963 Jan. 20, 7E 7E 1965 88.
Do Hubert H. Humphrey Jan. 20, 1965 Jan. 20, 7E 7E 1969 89, 90.
Richard M. Nixon Spiro T. Agnew 1A\11\ Jan. 20, 1969 Oct. 7E 7E 10,
1973 91, 92, 93.
Do Oct. 10, 1973 Dec. 6, 1973 93.
Do Gerald R. Ford 1A\12\ Dec. 6, 1973 Aug. 9, 1974 93.
Gerald R. Ford 1A\13\ Aug. 7E 1A9, 1974 Dec. 19, 1974 93.
Do Nelson A. Rockefeller 1A\14\ Dec. 19, 1974 Jan. 20, 1977 93,
94, 95.
James Earl (Jimmy) Carter Walter F. Mondale Jan. 20, 1977 Jan. 20,
1981D95, 96.
Ronald Reagan George Bush Jan. 20, 1981 Jan. 20, 1989 97, 98, 99,
100.
George Bush Dan Quayle Jan. 20, 1989 101, 102.
\1\ Died Apr. 20, 1812.
\2\ Died Nov. 23, 1814.
\3\ Resigned Dec. 28, 1832, to become United States Senator.
\4\ Died in office.
\5\ Died Apr. 18, 1853.
\6\ Died Nov. 22, 1875.
\7\ Terms not consecutive.
\8\ Died Nov. 25, 1885.
\9\ Died Nov. 21, 1899.
\10\ Died Oct. 30, 1912.
\11\ Resigned Oct. 10, 1973.
\12\ First Vice President nominated by the President and confirmed
by the Congress pursuant to the 25th amendment to the Constitution of
the United States.
\13\ Succeeded to the Presidency upon the resignation of Richard M.
Nixon on Aug. 9, 1974.
\14\ Nominated to be Vice President by President Gerald R. Ford on
Aug. 20, 1974; confirmed by the Senate on Dec. 10, 1974; confirmed by
the House and took the oath of office on Dec. 19, 1974.
#ENDCARD