47th United States Congress 1881-1883 U.S. Congress
47th United States Congress Members 76 senators 293 representatives 8 non-voting delegates Senate majority Split[ 1] (Republicans controlled the all-too important Senate committees) Senate President Chester A. Arthur (R) (until September 19, 1881) Vacant (from September 19, 1881)House majority Republican (plurality; became majority in middle of first Congressional session)House Speaker J. Warren Keifer (R)Special[ a] : March 4, 1881 – May 20, 1881Special[ b] : October 10, 1881 – October 29, 18811st : December 5, 1881 – August 8, 18822nd : December 4, 1882 – March 3, 1883
The 47th United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, consisting of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives . It met in Washington, D.C. from March 4, 1881, to March 4, 1883, during the six months of James Garfield's presidency , and the first year and a half of Chester Arthur's presidency . The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the 1870 United States census . The House had a Republican majority; the Senate was evenly divided for the first time ever, with no vice president to break ties for most of this term.[ 1]
Party summary
The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress, and includes members from vacancies and newly admitted states, when they were first seated. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.
Senate
Party (Shading indicates party control)
Total
Democratic (D)
Independent (I)
Readjuster (RA)
Republican (R)
Vacant
End ofprevious Congress
42
1
0
32
75
1
Begin
37
1
1
36
75
1
March 5, 1881[ c]
35
74
2
March 7, 1881[ d]
33
72
4
March 8, 1881[ e]
34
73
3
March 12, 1881[ f]
35
74
2
March 14, 1881[ g]
36
75
1
March 18, 1881[ h]
37
1
1[ i]
37
76
0
May 16, 1881[ j]
37
1
1
35
74
2
July 27, 1881[ k]
36
75
1
August 2, 1881[ l]
37
1
1
37
76
0
September 13, 1881[ m]
36
75
1
October 5, 1881[ n]
1[ o]
37
76
0
November 15, 1881[ p]
April 17, 1882[ q]
August 16, 1882[ r]
36
75
1
November 15, 1882[ s]
37
76
0
January 27, 1883[ t]
Final voting share
48.7%
1.3%
1.3%
48.7%
Beginning of thenext Congress
36
0
2
38
76
0
House of Representatives
Party (Shading indicates party control)
Total
Democratic (D)
Independent Democrat (ID)
Independent (I)
Greenback (GB)
Independent Republican (IR)
Republican (R)
Vacant
End ofprevious Congress
146
4
1
11
0
129
291
2
Begin
134
1
1
9
0
146
291
2
March 17, 1881[ u]
145
290
3
March 21, 1881[ v]
144
289
4
April 5, 1881[ w]
145
290
3
April 26, 1881[ x]
133
289
4
June 9, 1881[ y]
134
290
3
July 26, 1881[ z]
144
289
4
July 29, 1881[ aa]
143
288
5
September 12, 1881[ ab]
144
289
4
October 5, 1881[ ac]
143
288
5
November 8, 1881[ ad]
135
145
291
2
December 5, 1881[ ae]
136
146
293
0
April 8, 1882[ af]
135
292
1
April 29, 1882[ ag]
134
147
May 31, 1882[ ah]
133
1
June 1, 1882[ ai]
132
148
June 3, 1882[ aj]
131
10
June 29, 1882[ ak]
147
291
2
July 19, 1882[ al]
130
148
July 20, 1882[ am]
129
290
3
October 12, 1882[ an]
9
289
4
November 4, 1882[ ao]
128
288
5
November 7, 1882[ ap]
129
149
290
3
November 30, 1882[ aq]
148
289
4
December 4, 1882[ ar]
130
290
3
December 15, 1882[ as]
149
291
2
December 16, 1882[ at]
148
290
3
January 2, 1883[ au]
149
291
2
January 15, 1883[ av]
131
292
1
January 17, 1883[ aw]
150
293
0
January 18, 1883 [ ax]
130
292
1
March 2, 1883[ ay]
129
151
March 3, 1883[ az]
130
150
Final voting share
44.5%
0.3%
0.3%
3.1%
0.3%
51.4%
Beginning of the next Congress
196
3
6
2
1
117
325
1
Leadership
Senate
President of the SenateChester A. Arthur (R)
House of Representatives
House seats by party holding plurality in state 80+% to 100% Democratic
80+% to 100% Republican
60+% to 80% Democratic
60+% to 80% Republican
Up to 60% Democratic
Up to 60% Republican
Major events
Major legislation
February 25, 1882: Apportionment of the Tenth Census , ch. 20, 22 Stat. 5
May 6, 1882: Chinese Exclusion Act , 22 Stat. 58
August 2, 1882: Passenger Act of 1882 , 22 Stat. 186
August 2, 1882: Rivers and Harbors Act
January 16, 1883: Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act , ch. 27, 22 Stat. 403
March 3, 1883: Tariff of 1883 (Mongrel Tariff)
Members
This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed by class, and representatives are listed by district.
Skip to House of Representatives , below
Senate
Senators were elected by the state legislatures every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Preceding the names in the list below are Senate class numbers , which indicate the cycle of their election.
▌ 2. John T. Morgan (D)
▌ 3. James L. Pugh (D)
▌ 2. Augustus H. Garland (D)
▌ 3. James D. Walker (D)
▌ 1. John F. Miller (R)
▌ 3. James T. Farley (D)
▌ 2. Henry M. Teller (R), until April 17, 1882
▌ George M. Chilcott (R), April 17, 1882 - January 27, 1883
▌ Horace A. W. Tabor (R), from January 27, 1883
▌ 3. Nathaniel P. Hill (R)
▌ 1. Joseph R. Hawley (R)
▌ 3. Orville H. Platt (R)
▌ 1. Thomas F. Bayard Sr. (D)
▌ 2. Eli Saulsbury (D)
▌ 1. Charles W. Jones (D)
▌ 3. Wilkinson Call (D)
▌ 2. Benjamin H. Hill (D), until August 16, 1882
▌ M. Pope Barrow (D), from November 15, 1882
▌ 3. Joseph E. Brown (D)
▌ 2. David Davis (I)
▌ 3. John A. Logan (R)
▌ 1. Benjamin Harrison (R)
▌ 3. Daniel W. Voorhees (D)
▌ 2. Samuel J. Kirkwood (R), until March 7, 1881
▌ James W. McDill (R), from March 8, 1881
▌ 3. William B. Allison (R)
▌ 2. Preston B. Plumb (R)
▌ 3. John J. Ingalls (R)
▌ 2. James B. Beck (D)
▌ 3. John S. Williams (D)
▌ 2. William Pitt Kellogg (R)
▌ 3. Benjamin F. Jonas (D)
▌ 1. Eugene Hale (R)
▌ 2. James G. Blaine (R), until March 5, 1881
▌ William P. Frye (R), from March 15, 1881
▌ 1. Arthur Pue Gorman (D)
▌ 3. James B. Groome (D)
▌ 1. Henry L. Dawes (R)
▌ 2. George F. Hoar (R)
▌ 1. Omar D. Conger (R)
▌ 2. Thomas W. Ferry (R)
▌ 1. Samuel J. R. McMillan (R)
▌ 2. William Windom (R),until March 7, 1881
▌ Alonzo J. Edgerton (R), March 12, 1881 – October 30, 1881
▌ William Windom (R), from November 15, 1881
▌ 1. James Z. George (D)
▌ 2. Lucius Q. C. Lamar (D)
▌ 1. Francis M. Cockrell (D)
▌ 3. George G. Vest (D)
▌ 1. Charles H. Van Wyck (R)
▌ 2. Alvin Saunders (R)
▌ 1. James G. Fair (D)
▌ 3. John P. Jones (R)
▌ 2. Edward H. Rollins (R)
▌ 3. Henry W. Blair (R)
▌ 1. William J. Sewell (R)
▌ 2. John R. McPherson (D)
▌ 1. Thomas C. Platt (R), until May 16, 1881
▌ Warner Miller (R), from July 27, 1881
▌ 3. Roscoe Conkling (R), until May 16, 1881
▌ Elbridge G. Lapham (R), from July 29, 1881
▌ 2. Matt W. Ransom (D)
▌ 3. Zebulon B. Vance (D)
▌ 1. John Sherman (R)
▌ 3. George H. Pendleton (D)
▌ 2. La Fayette Grover (D)
▌ 3. James H. Slater (D)
▌ 1. John I. Mitchell (R)
▌ 3. J. Donald Cameron (R)
▌ 1. Ambrose E. Burnside (R), until September 13, 1881
▌ Nelson W. Aldrich (R), from October 5, 1881
▌ 2. Henry B. Anthony (R)
▌ 2. Matthew C. Butler (D)
▌ 3. Wade Hampton III (D)
▌ 1. Howell E. Jackson (D)
▌ 2. Isham G. Harris (D)
▌ 1. Samuel B. Maxey (D)
▌ 2. Richard Coke (D)
▌ 1. George F. Edmunds (R)
▌ 3. Justin S. Morrill (R)
▌ 1. William Mahone (RA)
▌ 2. John W. Johnston (D)
▌ 1. Johnson N. Camden (D)
▌ 2. Henry G. Davis (D)
▌ 1. Philetus Sawyer (R)
▌ 3. Angus Cameron (R), from March 14, 1881
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 47th Congress in March 1881. The green stripes in Virginia represent Readjuster William Mahone, while the gray stripes in Illinois represent independent David Davis. 2 Democrats
1 Democrat and 1 Republican
2 Republicans
Territories
President pro tempore Thomas F. Bayard (D)
President pro tempore David Davis (I)
President pro temporeGeorge F. Edmunds (R)
House of Representatives
Members' names are preceded by their district numbers.
▌ 1 . Thomas H. Herndon (D)
▌ 2 . Hilary A. Herbert (D)
▌ 3 . William C. Oates (D)
▌ 4 . Charles M. Shelley (D), until July 20, 1882
▌ Charles M. Shelley (D), from November 7, 1882
▌ 5 . Thomas Williams (D)
▌ 6 . Goldsmith W. Hewitt (D)
▌ 7 . William H. Forney (D)
▌ 8 . Joseph Wheeler (D), until June 3, 1882
▌ William M. Lowe (GB), June 3, 1882 – October 12, 1882
▌ Joseph Wheeler (D), from January 15, 1883
▌ 1 . Poindexter Dunn (D)
▌ 2 . James K. Jones (D)
▌ 3 . Jordan E. Cravens (D)
▌ 4 . Thomas M. Gunter (D)
▌ 1 . William S. Rosecrans (D)
▌ 2 . Horace F. Page (R)
▌ 3 . Campbell P. Berry (D)
▌ 4 . Romualdo Pacheco (R)
▌ At-large . James B. Belford (R)
▌ 1 . John R. Buck (R)
▌ 2 . James Phelps (D)
▌ 3 . John T. Wait (R)
▌ 4 . Frederick Miles (R)
▌ At-large . Edward L. Martin (D)
▌ 1 . Robert H. M. Davidson (D)
▌ 2 . Jesse J. Finley (D), until June 1, 1882
▌ Horatio Bisbee Jr. (R), from June 1, 1882
▌ 1 . George R. Black (D)
▌ 2 . Henry G. Turner (D)
▌ 3 . Philip Cook (D)
▌ 4 . Hugh Buchanan (D)
▌ 5 . Nathaniel J. Hammond (D)
▌ 6 . James H. Blount (D)
▌ 7 . Judson C. Clements (D)
▌ 8 . Alexander H. Stephens (D), until November 4, 1882
▌ Seaborn Reese (D), from December 4, 1882
9 . Emory Speer (ID )
▌ 1 . William Aldrich (R)
▌ 2 . George R. Davis (R)
▌ 3 . Charles B. Farwell (R)
▌ 4 . John C. Sherwin (R)
▌ 5 . Robert M. A. Hawk (R), until June 29, 1882
▌ Robert R. Hitt (R), from December 4, 1882
▌ 6 . Thomas J. Henderson (R)
▌ 7 . William Cullen (R)
▌ 8 . Lewis E. Payson (R)
▌ 9 . John H. Lewis (R)
▌ 10 . Benjamin F. Marsh (R)
▌ 11 . James W. Singleton (D)
▌ 12 . William M. Springer (D)
▌ 13 . Dietrich C. Smith (R)
▌ 14 . Joseph G. Cannon (R)
▌ 15 . Samuel W. Moulton (D)
▌ 16 . William A. J. Sparks (D)
▌ 17 . William R. Morrison (D)
▌ 18 . John R. Thomas (R)
▌ 19 . Richard W. Townshend (D)
▌ 1 . William Heilman (R)
▌ 2 . Thomas R. Cobb (D)
▌ 3 . Strother M. Stockslager (D)
▌ 4 . William S. Holman (D)
▌ 5 . Courtland C. Matson (D)
▌ 6 . Thomas M. Browne (R)
▌ 7 . Stanton J. Peelle (R)
▌ 8 . Robert B. F. Peirce (R)
▌ 9 . Godlove S. Orth (R), until December 16, 1882
▌ Charles T. Doxey (R), from January 17, 1883
▌ 10 . Mark L. De Motte (R)
▌ 11 . George W. Steele (R)
▌ 12 . Walpole G. Colerick (D)
▌ 13 . William H. Calkins (R)
▌ 1 . Moses A. McCoid (R)
▌ 2 . Sewall S. Farwell (R)
▌ 3 . Thomas Updegraff (R)
▌ 4 . Nathaniel C. Deering (R)
▌ 5 . William G. Thompson (R)
▌ 6 . Marsena E. Cutts (R), until March 3, 1883
▌ John C. Cook (D), from March 3, 1883
▌ 7 . John A. Kasson (R)
▌ 8 . William P. Hepburn (R)
▌ 9 . Cyrus C. Carpenter (R)
▌ 1 . John A. Anderson (R)
▌ 2 . Dudley C. Haskell (R)
▌ 3 . Thomas Ryan (R)
▌ 1 . Oscar Turner (D)
▌ 2 . James A. McKenzie (D)
▌ 3 . John William Caldwell (D)
▌ 4 . J. Proctor Knott (D)
▌ 5 . Albert S. Willis (D)
▌ 6 . John G. Carlisle (D)
▌ 7 . Joseph C. S. Blackburn (D)
▌ 8 . Philip B. Thompson Jr. (D)
▌ 9 . John D. White (R)
▌ 10 . Elijah C. Phister (D)
▌ 1 . Randall L. Gibson (D)
▌ 2 . E. John Ellis (D)
▌ 3 . Chester B. Darrall (R)
▌ 4 . Newton C. Blanchard (D)
▌ 5 . J. Floyd King (D)
▌ 6 . Edward W. Robertson (D)
▌ 1 . Thomas B. Reed (R)
▌ 2 . William P. Frye (R), until March 17, 1881
▌ Nelson Dingley Jr. (R) from September 12, 1881
▌ 3 . Stephen D. Lindsey (R)
▌ 4 . George W. Ladd (GB)
▌ 5 . Thompson H. Murch (GB)
▌ 1 . George W. Covington (D)
▌ 2 . J. Frederick C. Talbott (D)
▌ 3 . Fetter S. Hoblitzell (D)
▌ 4 . Robert M. McLane (D)
▌ 5 . Andrew G. Chapman (D)
▌ 6 . Milton G. Urner (R)
▌ 1 . William W. Crapo (R)
▌ 2 . Benjamin W. Harris (R)
▌ 3 . Ambrose A. Ranney (R)
▌ 4 . Leopold Morse (D)
▌ 5 . Selwyn Z. Bowman (R)
▌ 6 . Eben F. Stone (R)
▌ 7 . William A. Russell (R)
▌ 8 . John W. Candler (R)
▌ 9 . William W. Rice (R)
▌ 10 . Amasa Norcross (R)
▌ 11 . George D. Robinson (R)
▌ 1 . Henry W. Lord (R)
▌ 2 . Edwin Willits (R)
▌ 3 . Edward S. Lacey (R)
▌ 4 . Julius C. Burrows (R)
▌ 5 . George W. Webber (R)
▌ 6 . Oliver L. Spaulding (R)
▌ 7 . John T. Rich (R), from April 5, 1881
▌ 8 . Roswell G. Horr (R)
▌ 9 . Jay A. Hubbell (R)
▌ 1 . Mark H. Dunnell (R)
▌ 2 . Horace B. Strait (R)
▌ 3 . William D. Washburn (R)
▌ 1 . Henry L. Muldrow (D)
▌ 2 . Vannoy H. Manning (D)
▌ 3 . Hernando Money (D)
▌ 4 . Otho R. Singleton (D)
▌ 5 . Charles E. Hooker (D)
▌ 6 . James R. Chalmers (D), until April 29, 1882
▌ John R. Lynch (R), from April 29, 1882
▌ 1 . Martin L. Clardy (D)
▌ 2 . Thomas Allen (D), until April 8, 1882
▌ James Henry McLean (R), from December 15, 1882
▌ 3 . Richard G. Frost (D), until March 2, 1883
▌ Gustavus Sessinghaus (R), from March 2, 1883
▌ 4 . Lowndes H. Davis (D)
▌ 5 . Richard P. Bland (D)
▌ 6 . Ira Haseltine (GB)
▌ 7 . Theron M. Rice (GB)
▌ 8 . Robert T. Van Horn (R)
▌ 9 . Nicholas Ford (GB)
▌ 10 . Joseph H. Burrows (GB)
▌ 11 . John B. Clark Jr. (D)
▌ 12 . William H. Hatch (D)
▌ 13 . Aylett H. Buckner (D)
▌ At-large . Edward K. Valentine (R)
▌ At-large . George W. Cassidy (D)
▌ 1 . Joshua G. Hall (R)
▌ 2 . James F. Briggs (R)
▌ 3 . Ossian Ray (R)
▌ 1 . George M. Robeson (R)
▌ 2 . J. Hart Brewer (R)
▌ 3 . Miles Ross (D)
▌ 4 . Henry S. Harris (D)
▌ 5 . John Hill (R)
▌ 6 . Phineas Jones (R)
▌ 7 . Augustus A. Hardenbergh (D)
▌ 1 . Perry Belmont (D)
▌ 2 . William E. Robinson (D)
▌ 3 . J. Hyatt Smith (I)
▌ 4 . Archibald M. Bliss (D)
▌ 5 . Benjamin Wood (D)
▌ 6 . Samuel S. Cox (D)
▌ 7 . P. Henry Dugro (D)
▌ 8 . Anson G. McCook (R)
▌ 9 . John Hardy (D), from December 5, 1881
▌ 10 . Abram S. Hewitt (D)
▌ 11 . Levi P. Morton (R), until March 21, 1881
▌ Roswell P. Flower (D), from November 8, 1881
▌ 12 . Waldo Hutchins (D)
▌ 13 . John H. Ketcham (R)
▌ 14 . Lewis Beach (D)
▌ 15 . Thomas Cornell (R)
▌ 16 . Michael N. Nolan (D)
▌ 17 . Walter A. Wood (R)
▌ 18 . John Hammond (R)
▌ 19 . Abraham X. Parker (R)
▌ 20 . George West (R)
▌ 21 . Ferris Jacobs Jr. (R)
▌ 22 . Warner Miller (R), until July 26, 1881
▌ Charles R. Skinner (R) from November 18, 1881
▌ 23 . Cyrus D. Prescott (R)
▌ 24 . Joseph Mason (R)
▌ 25 . Frank Hiscock (R)
▌ 26 . John H. Camp (R)
▌ 27 . Elbridge G. Lapham (R), until July 29, 1881
▌ James W. Wadsworth (R), from November 8, 1881
▌ 28 . Jeremiah W. Dwight (R)
▌ 29 . David P. Richardson (R)
▌ 30 . John Van Voorhis (R)
▌ 31 . Richard Crowley (R)
▌ 32 . Jonathan Scoville (D)
▌ 33 . Henry H. Van Aernam (R)
▌ 1 . Louis C. Latham (D)
▌ 2 . Orlando Hubbs (R)
▌ 3 . John W. Shackelford (D), until January 18, 1883
▌ 4 . William Ruffin Cox (D)
▌ 5 . Alfred M. Scales (D)
▌ 6 . Clement Dowd (D)
▌ 7 . Robert F. Armfield (D)
▌ 8 . Robert B. Vance (D)
▌ 1 . Benjamin Butterworth (R)
▌ 2 . Thomas L. Young (R)
▌ 3 . Henry L. Morey (R)
▌ 4 . Emanuel Shultz (R)
▌ 5 . Benjamin Le Fevre (D)
▌ 6 . James M. Ritchie (R)
▌ 7 . John P. Leedom (D)
▌ 8 . J. Warren Keifer (R)
▌ 9 . James S. Robinson (R)
▌ 10 . John B. Rice (R)
▌ 11 . Henry S. Neal (R)
▌ 12 . George L. Converse (D)
▌ 13 . Gibson Atherton (D)
▌ 14 . George W. Geddes (D)
▌ 15 . Rufus R. Dawes (R)
▌ 16 . Jonathan T. Updegraff (R), until November 30, 1882
▌ Joseph D. Taylor (R), from January 2, 1883
▌ 17 . William McKinley (R)
▌ 18 . Addison S. McClure (R)
▌ 19 . Ezra B. Taylor (R)
▌ 20 . Amos Townsend (R)
▌ At-large . Melvin C. George (R)
▌ 1 . Henry H. Bingham (R)
▌ 2 . Charles O'Neill (R)
▌ 3 . Samuel J. Randall (D)
▌ 4 . William D. Kelley (R)
▌ 5 . Alfred C. Harmer (R)
▌ 6 . William Ward (R)
▌ 7 . William Godshalk (R)
▌ 8 . Daniel Ermentrout (D)
▌ 9 . A. Herr Smith (R)
▌ 10 . William Mutchler (D)
▌ 11 . Robert Klotz (D)
▌ 12 . Joseph A. Scranton (R)
▌ 13 . Charles N. Brumm (GB)
▌ 14 . Samuel F. Barr (R)
▌ 15 . Cornelius C. Jadwin (R)
▌ 16 . Robert J. C. Walker (R)
▌ 17 . Jacob M. Campbell (R)
▌ 18 . Horatio G. Fisher (R)
▌ 19 . Frank E. Beltzhoover (D)
▌ 20 . Andrew G. Curtin (D)
▌ 21 . Morgan R. Wise (D)
▌ 22 . Russell Errett (R)
▌ 23 . Thomas M. Bayne (R)
▌ 24 . William S. Shallenberger (R)
▌ 25 . James Mosgrove (GB)
▌ 26 . Samuel H. Miller (R)
▌ 27 . Lewis F. Watson (R)
▌ 1 . Nelson W. Aldrich (R), until October 4, 1881
▌ Henry J. Spooner (R), from December 5, 1881
▌ 2 . Jonathan Chace (R)
▌ 1 . John S. Richardson (D)
▌ 2 . Michael P. O'Connor (D), until April 26, 1881
▌ Samuel Dibble (D), June 9, 1881 – May 31, 1882
▌ Edmund W. M. Mackey (IR), from May 31, 1882
▌ 3 . D. Wyatt Aiken (D)
▌ 4 . John H. Evins (D)
▌ 5 . George D. Tillman (D), until June 19, 1882
▌ Robert Smalls (R), from July 19, 1882
▌ 1 . Augustus H. Pettibone (R)
▌ 2 . Leonidas C. Houk (R)
▌ 3 . George G. Dibrell (D)
▌ 4 . Benton McMillin (D)
▌ 5 . Richard Warner (D)
▌ 6 . John F. House (D)
▌ 7 . Washington C. Whitthorne (D)
▌ 8 . John D. C. Atkins (D)
▌ 9 . Charles B. Simonton (D)
▌ 10 . William R. Moore (R)
▌ 1 . John H. Reagan (D)
▌ 2 . David B. Culberson (D)
▌ 3 . Olin Wellborn (D)
▌ 4 . Roger Q. Mills (D)
▌ 5 . George W. Jones (GB)
▌ 6 . Christopher C. Upson (D)
▌ 1 . Charles H. Joyce (R)
▌ 2 . James M. Tyler (R)
▌ 3 . William W. Grout (R)
▌ 1 . George T. Garrison (D)
▌ 2 . John F. Dezendorf (R)
▌ 3 . George D. Wise (D)
▌ 4 . Joseph Jorgensen (R)
▌ 5 . George Cabell (D)
▌ 6 . John R. Tucker (D)
▌ 7 . John Paul (D)
▌ 8 . John S. Barbour Jr. (D)
▌ 9 . Abram Fulkerson (D)
▌ 1 . Benjamin Wilson (D)
▌ 2 . John B. Hoge (D)
▌ 3 . John E. Kenna (D)
▌ 1 . Charles G. Williams (R)
▌ 2 . Lucien B. Caswell (R)
▌ 3 . George C. Hazelton (R)
▌ 4 . Peter V. Deuster (D)
▌ 5 . Edward S. Bragg (D)
▌ 6 . Richard W. Guenther (R)
▌ 7 . Herman L. Humphrey (R)
▌ 8 . Thaddeus C. Pound (R)
Non-voting delegates
▌ Arizona Territory . Granville H. Oury (D)
▌ Dakota Territory . Richard F. Pettigrew (R)
▌ Idaho Territory . George Ainslie (D)
▌ Montana Territory . Martin Maginnis (D)
▌ New Mexico Territory . Tranqulino Luna (R)
▌ Utah Territory . John T. Caine (D)
▌ Washington Territory . Thomas H. Brents (R)
▌ Wyoming Territory . Morton E. Post (D)
Speaker of the HouseJ. Warren Keifer
Changes in membership
The count below reflects changes from the beginning of this Congress.
Senate
Deaths: 2
Resignations: 8
Interim appointments: 1
Total replacements: 8
Total seats with changes: 10
Senate changes
State (class)
Vacated by
Reason for change
Successor
Date of successor's formal installation[ ba]
Wisconsin (3)
Vacant
Senator Matthew H. Carpenter died in the previous congress. Successor elected March 14, 1881.
Angus Cameron (R)
March 14, 1881
Maine (2)
James G. Blaine (R)
Resigned March 5, 1881, to become U.S. Secretary of State . Successor elected March 18, 1881.
William P. Frye (R)
March 18, 1881
Iowa (2)
Samuel J. Kirkwood (R)
Resigned March 7, 1881, to become U.S. Secretary of the Interior . Successor appointed March 8, 1881, to continue the term. Appointee elected January 25, 1882, to finish the term.
James W. McDill (R)
March 8, 1881
Minnesota (2)
William Windom (R)
Resigned March 7, 1881, to become U.S. Secretary of the Treasury . Successor appointed March 12, 1881, to continue the term.
Alonzo J. Edgerton (R)
March 12, 1881
New York (1)
Thomas C. Platt (R)
Resigned May 16, 1881, as a protest against federal appointments made in New York. Successor elected October 11, 1881.
Warner Miller (R)
July 27, 1881
New York (3)
Roscoe Conkling (R)
Resigned May 16, 1881, as a protest against federal appointments made in New York. Successor elected October 11, 1881.
Elbridge G. Lapham (R)
August 2, 1881
Rhode Island (1)
Ambrose Burnside (R)
Died September 13, 1881. Successor elected October 5, 1881.
Nelson W. Aldrich (R)
October 5, 1881
Minnesota (2)
Alonzo J. Edgerton (R)
Interim appointee replaced by successor elected October 30, 1881.
William Windom (R)
November 15, 1881
Colorado (2)
Henry M. Teller (R)
Resigned April 17, 1882, to become U.S. Secretary of the Interior . Successor appointed April 17, 1882.
George M. Chilcott (R)
April 17, 1882
Georgia (2)
Benjamin H. Hill (D)
Died August 16, 1882. Successor elected November 15, 1882.
M. Pope Barrow (D)
November 15, 1882
Colorado (2)
George M. Chilcott (R)
Interim appointee replaced by successor elected January 27, 1883.
Horace Tabor (R)
January 27, 1883
House of Representatives
Deaths: 6
Resignations: 9
Contested elections: 8
Total replacements: 14
Total seats with changes: 22
House changes
District
Vacated by
Reason for change
Successor
Date of successor's formal installation[ ba]
Michigan 7
Vacant
Rep. Omar D. Conger resigned during previous congress
John T. Rich (R)
April 5, 1881
New York 9
Vacant
Rep. Fernando Wood elected but died before Congress convened
John Hardy (D)
December 5, 1881
Maine 2
William P. Frye (R)
Resigned March 17, 1881 when elected U.S. Senator .
Nelson Dingley Jr. (R)
September 12, 1881
New York 11
Levi P. Morton (R)
Resigned March 21, 1881 to become U.S. Minister to France .
Roswell P. Flower (D)
November 8, 1881
South Carolina 2
Michael P. O'Connor (D)
Died April 26, 1881, during a contested election. Dibble presented credentials to replace him due to his death.
Samuel Dibble (D)
June 9, 1881
New York 22
Warner Miller (R)
Resigned July 26, 1881 when elected U.S. Senator .
Charles R. Skinner (R)
November 8, 1881
New York 27
Elbridge G. Lapham (R)
Resigned July 29, 1881 when elected U.S. Senator .
James W. Wadsworth (R)
November 8, 1881
Rhode Island 1
Nelson W. Aldrich (R)
Resigned October 5, 1881 when elected U.S. Senator . Successor elected November 22, 1881.
Henry J. Spooner (R)
December 5, 1881
Missouri 2
Thomas Allen (D)
Died April 8, 1882
James H. McLean (R)
December 15, 1882
Mississippi 6
James R. Chalmers (D)
Lost contested election April 29, 1882
John R. Lynch (R)
April 29, 1882
South Carolina 2
Samuel Dibble (D)
Lost contested election May 31, 1882, during an election originally contested with Michael P. O'Connor . Dibble presented credentials to replace him until Mackey was determined to be the victor under terms of the original election.
Edmund W. M. Mackey (IR)
May 31, 1882
Florida 2
Jesse J. Finley (D)
Lost contested election June 1, 1882
Horatio Bisbee Jr. (R)
June 1, 1882
Alabama 8
Joseph Wheeler (D)
Lost contested election June 3, 1882
William M. Lowe (GB)
June 3, 1882
Illinois 5
Robert M. A. Hawk (R)
Died June 29, 1882
Robert R. Hitt (R)
November 7, 1882
South Carolina 5
George D. Tillman (D)
Lost contested election July 19, 1882
Robert Smalls (R)
July 19, 1882
Alabama 4
Charles M. Shelley (D)
Election contested by James Q. Smith . Seat declared vacant July 20, 1882. Shelley re-elected to fill seat .
Charles M. Shelley (D)
November 7, 1882
Alabama 8
William M. Lowe (GB)
Died October 12, 1882
Joseph Wheeler (D)
January 15, 1883
Georgia 8
Alexander H. Stephens (D)
Resigned November 4, 1882 when elected Governor of Georgia .
Seaborn Reese (D)
December 4, 1882
Ohio 16
Jonathan T. Updegraff (R)
Died November 30, 1882
Joseph D. Taylor (R)
January 2, 1883
Indiana 9
Godlove S. Orth (R)
Died December 16, 1882
Charles T. Doxey (R)
January 17, 1883
North Carolina 3
John W. Shackelford (D)
Died January 18, 1883
Vacant
Not filled this term
Missouri 3
Richard G. Frost (D)
Lost contested election March 2, 1883
Gustavus Sessinghaus (R)
March 2, 1883
Iowa 6
Marsena E. Cutts (R)
Lost election contest March 3, 1883
John C. Cook (D)
March 3, 1883
Committees
Lists of committees and their party leaders for members of the House and Senate committees can be found through the Official Congressional Directory at the bottom of this article. The directory after the pages of terms of service lists committees of the Senate, House (Standing with Subcommittees, Select and Special) and Joint and, after that, House/Senate committee assignments. On the committees section of the House and Senate in the Official Congressional Directory, the committee's members on the first row on the left side shows the chairman of the committee and on the right side shows the ranking member of the committee.
Senate
House of Representatives
Joint committees
Caucuses
Employees
Senate
House of Representatives
Clerk : George M. Adams , until December 5, 1881
Sergeant at Arms : John G. Thompson, until December 5, 1881
Doorkeeper : Walter P. Brownlow , elected December 5, 1881
Postmaster : Henry Sherwood , elected December 5, 1881
Clerk at the Speaker's Table : J. Guilford White
Reading Clerks : Charles N. Clisbee (D) and Neill S. Brown Jr. (R)
Chaplain : William P. Harrison (Methodist ), until December 5, 1881
See also
Notes
^ Special session of the Senate.
^ Special session of the Senate.
^ In Maine : James G. Blaine (R) resigned to become Secretary of State .
^ In Iowa : Samuel J. Kirkwood (R) resigned to become Secretary of the Interior . In Minnesota : William Windom (R) resigned to become Secretary of the Treasury .
^ In Iowa : James W. McDill (R) was appointed to finish Samuel J. Kirkwood 's term.
^ In Minnesota : Alonzo J. Edgerton (R) was appointed to finish William Windom 's term.
^ In Wisconsin : Angus Cameron (R) was elected to finish the term of Matthew H. Carpenter (R), who had died the previous month.
^ In Maine : William P. Frye (R) was elected to finish James G. Blaine 's term.
^ William Mahone caucused with Republicans beginning on March 14, 1881. Vice President Chester A. Arthur (R) held the tie-breaking vote.
^ In New York : Roscoe Conkling (R) and Thomas C. Platt (R) resigned as a protest against federal patronage appointments made in New York.
^ In New York : Warner Miller (R) was elected to finish the term of Thomas C. Platt (R).
^ In New York : Elbridge G. Lapham (R) was elected to finish the term of Roscoe Conkling (R).
^ In Rhode Island : Ambrose Burnside (R) died.
^ In Rhode Island : Nelson W. Aldrich (R) was elected to finish Ambrose Burnside 's term. With Arthur having assumed the Presidency after James A. Garfield 's assassination, there was no tie-breaking vote. Independent David Davis was elected president pro tempore and both parties agreed to perpetuate the organizational status quo. Leadership of the Senate committees remained in Republican hands, while the Democrats continued to control the offices of Secretary and Sergeant at Arms.
^ Independent David Davis did not caucus with the Republicans, but was elected president pro tempore in a compromise that allowed Republican control of the committees.
^ In Minnesota : William Windom (R) was elected to succeed interim appointee Alonzo J. Edgerton (R).
^ In Colorado : Henry M. Teller (R) resigned to become Secretary of the Interior . His successor, George M. Chilcott (R), was seated the same day.
^ In Georgia : Benjamin Harvey Hill (D) died.
^ In Georgia : Middleton P. Barrow (D) was elected to finish the term of Benjamin Harvey Hill (D).
^ In Colorado : Horace Tabor (R) was elected to succeed interim appointee George M. Chilcott (R).
^ In Maine's 2nd district : William P. Frye (R) resigned when he was elected to the U.S. Senate .
^ In New York's 11th district : Levi P. Morton (R) resigned when he was appointed U.S. Minister to France .
^ In Michigan's 7th district : John Treadway Rich (R) was elected to replace Omar D. Conger (R). Conger had been reelected in 1880 but did not take his seat because he had been elected to the U.S. Senate .
^ In South Carolina's 2nd district : Michael P. O'Connor (D) died. He had been seated at the opening of Congress, but his election was still being contested when he died.
^ In South Carolina's 2nd district : Samuel Dibble (D) was elected to fill the vacancy created by the death of Michael P. O'Connor (D). The seat was the subject of an election contest, which was eventually resolved in favor of the Republican, Edmund W. M. Mackey , meaning that this vacancy never properly existed.
^ In New York's 22nd district : Warner Miller (R) resigned when he was elected to the U.S. Senate .
^ In New York's 27th district : Elbridge G. Lapham (R) resigned when he was elected to the U.S. Senate .
^ In Maine's 2nd district : Samuel Dibble (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when William P. Frye (R) resigned to enter the U.S. Senate .
^ In Rhode Island's 1st district : Nelson W. Aldrich (R) resigned when he was elected to the U.S. Senate .
^ In New York's 11th district : Roswell P. Flower (D) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Levi P. Morton (R) resigned to become U.S. Minister to France . In New York's 22nd district : Charles R. Skinner (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Warner Miller (R) resigned to enter the U.S. Senate . In New York's 27th district : James Wolcott Wadsworth (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Elbridge G. Lapham (R) resigned to enter the U.S. Senate .
^ In New York's 9th district : John Hardy (D) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Fernando Wood (D) died before Congress convened. In Rhode Island's 1st district : Charles R. Skinner (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Nelson W. Aldrich (R) resigned to enter the U.S. Senate .
^ In Missouri's 2nd district : Thomas Allen (D) died.
^ In Mississippi's 6th district : James Ronald Chalmers (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, John R. Lynch (R).
^ In South Carolina's 2nd district : Samuel Dibble (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, Edmund W. M. Mackey (IR).
^ In Florida's 2nd district : Jesse J. Finley (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, Horatio Bisbee Jr. (R).
^ In Alabama's 8th district : Joseph Wheeler (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, William M. Lowe (G).
^ In Illinois's 5th district : Robert M. A. Hawk (R) died.
^ In South Carolina's 5th district : George D. Tillman (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, Robert Smalls (R).
^ In South Carolina's 5th district : Charles M. Shelley (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now declared vacant and called for a new election.
^ In Alabama's 8th district : William M. Lowe (G) died.
^ In Georgia's 8th district : Alexander H. Stephens (D) resigned when he was elected Governor of Georgia .
^ In Illinois's 5th district : Robert R. Hitt (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Robert M. A. Hawk (R) died. In South Carolina's 5th district : Charles M. Shelley (D) was elected to fill the vacancy created when the house voided his previous election.
^ In Ohio's 16th district : Jonathan T. Updegraff (R) died.
^ In Georgia's 8th district : Seaborn Reese (D) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Alexander H. Stephens (D) was elected Governor of Georgia .
^ In Missouri's 2nd district : James Henry McLean (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Thomas Allen (D) died.
^ In Indiana's 9th district : Godlove Stein Orth (R) died.
^ In Ohio's 16th district : Joseph D. Taylor (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Jonathan T. Updegraff (R) died.
^ In Alabama's 8th district : Joseph Wheeler (D) was elected to fill the vacancy created when William M. Lowe (G) died.
^ In Indiana's 9th district : Charles T. Doxey (R) was elected to fill the vacancy created when Godlove Stein Orth (R) died.
^ In North Carolina's 3rd district : John Williams Shackelford (D) died.
^ In Missouri's 3rd district : Richard Graham Frost (D) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, Gustavus Sessinghaus ] (R).
^ In Iowa's 6th district : Marsena E. Cutts (R) had been seated pending the resolution of an election dispute, which the House now decided in favor of his opponent, John C. Cook ] (D).
^ a b When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.
References
Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress . New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts . New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
External links