United States congressional delegations from New Jersey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

These are tables of congressional delegations from New Jersey to the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives.

Contents

[edit] United States Senate

See also: List of United States Senators from New Jersey
Class 1 Senators Congress Class 2 Senators
Jonathan Elmer
(Pro-Admin)
1st (1789–1791) William Paterson
(Pro-Admin)
Philemon Dickinson
(Pro-Admin)
John Rutherfurd
(Pro-Admin)
2nd (1791–1793)
3rd (1793–1795) Frederick Frelinghuysen
(Pro-Admin)
4th (1795–1797)
Richard Stockton (F)
5th (1797–1799)
Franklin Davenport (F)
James Schureman (F) 6th (1799–1801) Jonathan Dayton (F)
Aaron Ogden (F)
7th (1801–1803)
John Condit (D-R) 8th (1803–1805)
9th (1805–1807) Aaron Kitchell (D-R)
10th (1807–1809)
John Lambert (D-R) 11th (1809–1811)
John Condit (D-R)
12th (1811–1813)
13th (1813–1815)
James J. Wilson (D-R) 14th (1815–1817)
15th (1817–1819) Mahlon Dickerson (D-R,
then Crawford Republican,
then Pro-Jackson)
16th (1819–1821)
Samuel L. Southard (D-R)
17th (1821–1823)
Joseph McIlvaine
(Adams-Clay D-R)
18th (1823–1825)
19th (1825–1827)
Ephraim Bateman
(Adams)
20th (1827–1829)
Mahlon Dickerson
(Jacksonian)
21st (1829–1831) Theodore Frelinghuysen
(Anti-J)
22nd (1831–1833)
Samuel L. Southard 23rd (1833–1835)
24th (1835–1837) Garret D. Wall
(Pro-Jackson, then D)
25th (1837–1839)
26th (1839–1841)
27th (1841–1843) Jacob W. Miller (W)
William L. Dayton (W)
28th (1843–1845)
29th (1845–1847)
30th (1847–1849)
31st (1849–1851)
Robert F. Stockton (D) 32nd (1851–1853)
John R. Thomson (D) 33rd (1853–1855) William Wright (D)
34th (1855–1857)
35th (1857–1859)
36th (1859–1861) John C. Ten Eyck (R)
37th (1861–1863)
Richard S. Field (R)
James W. Wall (D)
William Wright (D) 38th (1863–1865)
39th (1865–1867) John P. Stockton (D)
Frederick T. Frelinghuysen (R) Alexander G. Cattell (R)
40th (1867–1869)
John P. Stockton (D) 41st (1869–1871)
42nd (1871–1873) Frederick T. Frelinghuysen (R)
43rd (1873–1875)
Theodore F. Randolph (D) 44th (1875–1877)
45th (1877–1879) John R. McPherson (D)
46th (1879–1881)
William J. Sewell (R) 47th (1881–1883)
48th (1883–1885)
49th (1885–1887)
Rufus Blodgett (D) 50th (1887–1889)
51st (1889–1891)
52nd (1891–1893)
James Smith, Jr. (D) 53rd (1893–1895)
54th (1895–1897) William J. Sewell (R)
55th (1897–1899)
John Kean (R) 56th (1899–1901)
57th (1901–1903) John F. Dryden (R)
58th (1903–1905)
59th (1905–1907)
60th (1907–1909) Frank O. Briggs (R)
61st (1909–1911)
James E. Martine (D) 62nd (1911–1913)
63rd (1913–1915) William Hughes (D)
64th (1915–1917)
Joseph S. Frelinghuysen (R) 65th (1917–1919)
David Baird (R)
66th (1919–1921) Walter E. Edge (R)
67th (1921–1923)
Edward I. Edwards (D) 68th (1923–1925)
69th (1925–1927)
70th (1927–1929)
Hamilton F. Kean (R) 71st (1929–1931)
David Baird, Jr. (R)
Dwight W. Morrow (R)
72nd (1931–1933)
W. Warren Barbour (R)
73rd (1933–1935)
A. Harry Moore (D) 74th (1935–1937)
75th (1937–1939) William H. Smathers (D)
John G. Milton (D)
W. Warren Barbour (R)
76th (1939–1941)
77th (1941–1943)
78th (1943–1945) Albert W. Hawkes (R)
Arthur Walsh (D)
H. Alexander Smith (R)
79th (1945–1947)
80th (1947–1949)
81st (1949–1951) Robert C. Hendrickson (R)
82nd (1951–1953)
83rd (1953–1955)
84th (1955–1957) Clifford P. Case (R)
85th (1957–1959)
Harrison A. Williams, Jr. (D) 86th (1959–1961)
87th (1961–1963)
88th (1963–1965)
89th (1965–1967)
90th (1967–1969)
91st (1969–1971)
92nd (1971–1973)
93rd (1973–1975)
94th (1975–1977)
95th (1977–1979)
96th (1979–1981) Bill Bradley (D)
97th (1981–1983)
Nicholas F. Brady (R)
Frank Lautenberg (D)
98th (1983–1985)
99th (1985–1987)
100th (1987–1989)
101st (1989–1991)
102nd (1991–1993)
103rd (1993–1995)
104th (1995–1997)
105th (1997–1999) Robert Torricelli (D)
106th (1999–2001)
Jon S. Corzine (D) 107th (2001–2003)
108th (2003–2005) Frank Lautenberg (D)
109th (2005–2007)
Robert Menendez (D)
110th (2007–2009)

[edit] United States House of Representatives

See also: List of United States Representatives from New Jersey
Congress Elected at-large state-wide on a general ticket
1st seat 2nd seat 3rd seat 4th seat 5th seat
1st
1789–1791
Elias Boudinot (Pro-Admin) Lambert Cadwalader (Pro-Admin) James Schureman (Pro-Admin) Thomas Sinnickson (Pro-Admin)
2nd
1791–1793
Abraham Clark[1] (Pro-Admin) Jonathan Dayton (Pro-Admin) Aaron Kitchell
3rd
1793–1795
John Beatty (Pro-Admin) Lambert Cadwalader (Pro-Admin)
Aaron Kitchell
4th
1795–1797
Jonathan Dayton (F) Mark Thomson (F) Thomas Henderson (F) Isaac Smith (F)
5th
1797–1799
James Henderson Imlay (F) James Schureman (F) Thomas Sinnickson (F)
District
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
6th
1799–1801
John Condit (DR) James Henderson Imlay (F) James Linn
(DR)
Aaron Kitchell Franklin Davenport (F)
Elected at-large state-wide on a general ticket
1st seat 2nd seat 3rd seat 4th seat 5th seat 6th seat
7th
1801–1803
John Condit (DR) Ebenezer Elmer (DR) William Helms
(DR)
James Mott (DR) Henry Southard
(DR)
8th
1803–1805
Adam Boyd (DR) James Sloan (DR)
9th
1805–1807
Ezra Darby[2] (DR) John Lambert (DR)
10th
1807–1809
Thomas Newbold (DR)
Adam Boyd (DR)
11th
1809–1811
James Cox[3](DR) Jacob Hufty (DR)
John A. Scudder (DR)
12th
1811–1813
Lewis Condict (DR) George C. Maxwell (DR) James Morgan (DR)
3 districts with general tickets
1st district 2nd district 3rd district
Seat A Seat B Seat A Seat B Seat A Seat B
13th
1813–1815
Lewis Condict (DR) Thomas Ward (DR) James Schureman (F) Richard Stockton (F) William Coxe, Jr. (F) Jacob Hufty (F)[4]
Thomas Bines (DR)
Elected at-large state-wide on a general ticket
1st seat 2nd seat 3rd seat 4th seat 5th seat 6th seat
14th
1815–1817
Lewis Condict (DR) Thomas Ward (DR) Benjamin Bennet (DR) Henry Southard (DR) Ezra Baker (DR) Ephraim Bateman (DR)
15th
1817–1819
Charles Kinsey (DR) John Linn[5] (DR) Joseph Bloomfield (DR)
16th
1819–1821
John Condit[6] (DR) Bernard Smith (DR)
Charles Kinsey (DR)
17th
1821–1823
George Cassedy (DR) Lewis Condict (DR) George Holcombe (DR) James Matlack(DR) Samuel Swan(DR)


18th
1823–1825
George Cassedy (Jacksonian D-R) Lewis Condict (Jacksonian D-R) George Holcombe[7] (Jacksonian D-R) James Matlack (Adams-Clay D-R) Samuel Swan(Jacksonian D-R) Daniel Garrison (Jacksonian D-R)
19th
1825–1827
George Cassedy (J) Lewis Condict (Adams) George Holcombe[8] (J) Ebenezer Tucker Samuel Swan (Adams) Daniel Garrison (J)
20th
1827–1829
Hedge Thompson[9] Isaac Pierson (Adams)
Thomas Sinnickson(Adams) James F. Randolph (Adams)
21st
1829–1831
Richard M. Cooper (Anti-J) Lewis Condict (Anti-J) James F. Randolph (Anti-J) Thomas H. Hughes (Anti-J) Samuel Swan (Anti-J) Isaac Pierson (Anti-J)
22nd
1831–1833
Isaac Southard (Anti-J) Silas Condit (Anti-J)
23rd
1833–1835
Philemon Dickerson[10] (J) Samuel Fowler (J) Thomas Lee (J) James Parker (J) Ferdinand Schureman Schenck (J) William Norton Shinn (J)
24th
1835–1837
William Chetwood[11] (W)
25th
1837–1839
Joseph Fitz Randolph (W) John Bancker Aycrigg (W) William Halstead (W) John Patterson Bryan Maxwell (W) Charles C. Stratton (W) Thomas Jones Yorke (W)
26th
1839–1841
William Raworth Cooper (D) Philemon Dickerson (D) Joseph Kille (D) Daniel Bailey Ryall (D) Peter Dumont Vroom (D)
27th
1841–1843
John Bancker Aycrigg (W) William Halstead (W) John Patterson Bryan Maxwell (W) Charles C. Stratton (W) Thomas Jones Yorke (W)
District
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th
28th
1843–1845
Lucius Q.C. Elmer (D) George Sykes (D) Isaac G. Farlee (D) Littleton Kirkpatrick (D) William Wright (W)
29th
1845–1847
James G. Hampton (W) Samuel G. Wright(W)[12]
George Sykes[13] (D)
John Runk (W) Joseph E. Edsall (D)
30th
1847–1849
William A. Newell (W) Joseph E. Edsall (D) John Van Dyke (W) Dudley S. Gregory (W)
31st
1849–1851
Andrew K. Hay (W) Isaac Wildrick (D) James G. King (W)
32nd
1851–1853
Nathan T. Stratton (D) Charles Skelton (D) George H. Brown (W) Rodman M. Price (D)
33rd
1853–1855
Samuel Lilly (D) George Vail (D) Alexander C.M. Pennington (W)
34th
1855–1857
Isaiah D. Clawson (O) George R. Robbins (O) James Bishop (O) Alexander C.M. Pennington (O)
35th
1857–1859
Isaiah D. Clawson (R) George R. Robbins (R) Garnett Adrain (D) John Huyler (D) Jacob R. Wortendyke (D)
36th
1859–1861
John T. Nixon (R) John L.N. Stratton (R) Garnett Adrain
(Anti-Lecompton Democrat)
Jetur R. Riggs
(Anti-Lecompton Democrat)
William Pennington (R)
37th
1861–1863
William G. Steele (D) George T. Cobb (D) Nehemiah Perry (D)
38th
1863–1865
John F. Starr (R) George Middleton (D) Andrew J. Rogers (D)
39th
1865–1867
William A. Newell (R) Charles Sitgreaves (D) Edwin R. V. Wright (D)
40th
1867–1869
William Moore (R) Charles Haight (D) John Hill (R) George A. Halsey (R)
41st
1869–1871
John T. Bird (D) Orestes Cleveland (D)
42nd
1871–1873
John W. Hazelton (R) Samuel C. Forker (D) George A. Halsey (R)
43rd
1873–1875
Samuel A. Dobbins (R) Amos Clark, Jr. (R) Robert Hamilton (D) William W. Phelps (R) Marcus L. Ward (R) Isaac W. Scudder (R)
44th
1875–1877
Clement H. Sinnickson (R) Miles Ross (D) Augustus W. Cutler (D) Frederick H. Teese (D) Augustus A. Hardenbergh (D)
45th
1877–1879
John H. Pugh (R) Alvah A. Clark (D) Thomas B. Peddie (R)
46th
1879–1881
George M. Robeson (R) Hezekiah B. Smith (D) Charles H. Voorhis (R) John L. Blake (R) Lewis A. Brigham (R)
47th
1881–1883
J. Hart Brewer (R) Henry S. Harris (D) John Hill (R) Phineas Jones (R) Augustus A. Hardenbergh (D)
48th
1883–1885
Thomas M. Ferrell (D) John Kean (R) Benjamin F. Howey (R) William W. Phelps (R) William H.F. Fiedler (D) William McAdoo (D)
49th
1885–1887
George Hires (R) James Buchanan (R) Robert S. Green[14] (D) James N. Pidcock (D) Herman Lehlbach (R)
50th
1887–1889
John Kean (R)
51st
1889–1891
Christopher A. Bergen (R) Jacob A. Geissenhainer (D) Samuel Fowler (D) Charles D. Beckwith (R)
52nd
1891–1893
Cornelius A. Cadmus (D) Thomas D. English (D) Edward F. McDonald[15] (D)
53rd
1893–1895
Henry C. Loudenslager[16] (R) John J. Gardner (R) Johnston Cornish (D) George B. Fielder (D) John T. Dunn (D)
54th
1895–1897
Benjamin F. Howell (R) Mahlon Pitney[17] (R) James F. Stewart (R) Richard W. Parker (R) Thomas McEwan, Jr. (R) Charles N. Fowler (R)
55th
1897–1899
56th
1899–1901
Joshua S. Salmon[18] (D) William D. Daly[19] (D)
57th
1901–1903
Allan L. McDermott[20] (D)
De Witt C. Flanagan[21] (D)
58th
1903–1905
William M. Lanning[22] (R) Charles N. Fowler (R) William Hughes (D) Richard W. Parker (R) William H. Wiley (R) Allan Benny (D) Allan L. McDermott (D)
59th
1905–1907
Ira W. Wood[23] (R) Henry C. Allen (R) Marshall Van Winkle (R)
60th
1907–1909
William Hughes[24] (D) Le Gage Pratt (D) Eugene W. Leake (D) James A. Hamill (D)
61st
1909–1911
William H. Wiley (R) Eugene F. Kinkead[25] (D)
62nd
1911–1913
Thomas J. Scully (D) William E. Tuttle, Jr. (D) Edward W. Townsend (D) Walter I. McCoy[26] (D)
William J. Browning[27][28] (R) Archibald C. Hart[29] (D)
63rd
1913–1915
J. Thompson Baker (D) Allan B. Walsh (D) Lewis J. Martin[30] (D) Robert G. Bremner[31] (D) Eugene F. Kinkead[32] (D) Walter I. McCoy[33] (D) Edward W. Townsend (D) John J. Eagan (D) James A. Hamill (D)
Archibald C. Hart[34] (D) Dow H. Drukker[35] (R) Richard W. Parker[36] (R)
64th
1915–1917
Isaac Bacharach (R) Elijah C. Hutchinson (R) John H. Capstick[37] (R) Edward W. Gray (R) Frederick R. Lehlbach (R)
65th
1917–1919
John R. Ramsey (R)
William F. Birch[38] (R)
66th
1919–1921
Ernest R. Ackerman[39] (R) Amos H. Radcliffe (R) Cornelius A. McGlennon (D) Daniel F. Minahan (D)
67th
1921–1923
Francis F. Patterson, Jr.[40] (R) T. Frank Appleby (R) Randolph Perkins (R) Herbert W. Taylor (R) Richard W. Parker (R) Archibald E. Olpp (R) Charles F.X. O'Brien (D)
68th
1923–1925
Elmer H. Geran (D) Charles Browne (D) George N. Seger (R) Frank J. McNulty (D) Daniel F. Minahan (D) John J. Eagan (D)
69th
1925–1927
Stewart H. Appleby[41] (R) Charles A. Eaton (R) Herbert W. Taylor (R) Franklin W. Fort (R) Oscar L. Auf der Heide (D) Mary T. Norton (D)
70th
1927–1929
Charles A. Wolverton (R) Harold G. Hoffman (R) Paul J. Moore (D)
71st
1929–1931
Fred A. Hartley, Jr.
72nd
1931–1933
William H. Sutphin Percy Hamilton Stewart Peter A. Caviccia
73rd
1933–1935
D. Lane Powers Charles A. Eaton Donald H. McLean Randolph Perkins[42] George N. Seger[43] Edward A. Kenney Fred A. Hartley, Jr. Peter A. Cavicchia Frederick R. Lehlbach Mary T. Norton Oscar L. Auf der Heide
74th
1935–1937
Edward J. Hart
75th
1937–1939
Elmer H. Wene J. Parnell Thomas Edward L. O'Neill Frank W. Towey, Jr.
76th
1939–1941
Walter S. Jeffries Frank C. Osmers, Jr. Albert L. Vreeland Robert W. Kean
77th
1941–1943
Elmer H. Wene Gordon Canfield
78th
1943–1945
James C. Auchincloss Harry L. Towe Frank Sundstrom
79th
1945–1947
T. Millet Hand Clifford P. Case
80th
1947–1949
Frank A. Mathews, Jr.
81st
1949–1951
Charles R. Howell Peter W. Rodino, Jr. Hugh J. Addonizio
82nd
1951–1953
William B. Widnall Alfred D. Sieminski
83rd
1953–1955
Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr. Harrison A. Williams Frank C. Osmers, Jr.
84th
1955–1957
Frank Thompson, Jr. T. James Tumulty
85th
1957–1959
Milton W. Glenn Florence P. Dwyer Vincent J. Dellay
86th
1959–1961
William T. Cahill George M. Wallhauser Cornelius E. Gallagher Dominick V. Daniels
87th
1961–1963
Charles S. Joelson
88th
1963–1965
Joseph G. Minish Edward J. Patten
89th
1965–1967
Thomas C. McGrath, Jr. James J. Howard Henry Helstoski Paul J. Krebs
90th
1967–1969
John E. Hunt Charles W. Sandman, Jr. William T. Cahill Florence P. Dwyer
91st
1969–1971
Robert A. Roe
92nd
1971–1973
Edwin B. Forsythe
93rd
1973–1975
Matthew J. Rinaldo Joseph J. Maraziti
94th
1975–1977
James J. Florio William J. Hughes Millicent Fenwick Andrew Maguire Helen Stevenson Meyner
95th
1977–1979
Harold C. Hollenbeck Joseph A. LeFante
96th
1979–1981
James A. Courter Frank J. Guarini, Jr.
97th
1981–1983
Christopher H. Smith Marge Roukema Bernard J. Dwyer
98th
1983–1985
Marge Roukema Bernard J. Dwyer Matthew J. Rinaldo Robert G. Torricelli James A. Courter Edwin B. Forsythe
99th
1985–1987
Dean A. Gallo H. James Saxton
100th
1987–1989
101st
1989–1991
Frank Pallone, Jr. Donald M. Payne
102nd
1991–1993
Robert E. Andrews Dick Zimmer
103rd
1993–1995
H. James Saxton Frank Pallone, Jr. Bob Franks Herb Klein Bob Menendez[44]
104th
1995–1997
Frank A. LoBiondo William J. Martini Rodney P. Frelinghuysen
105th
1997–1999
William J. Pascrell, Jr. Steven R. Rothman Michael J. Pappas
106th
1999–2001
Rush D. Holt, Jr.
107th
2001–2003
Michael Ferguson
108th
2003–2005
Scott Garrett
109th
2005–2007
110th
2007–2009
Albio Sires
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th
  1. ^ Abraham Clark died September 15, 1794
  2. ^ Ezra Darby died January 27, 1808 and was replaced by Adam Boyd.
  3. ^ James Cox died September 12, 1810
  4. ^ Jacob Hufty died in 1814 and was replaced by Thomas Bines on November 2, 1814
  5. ^ John Linn died January 5, 1821 and was not replaced
  6. ^ John Condit resigned November 4, 1819 and was replaced by Charles Kinsey
  7. ^ George Holcombe died January 14, 1828
  8. ^ George Holcombe died January 14, 1828
  9. ^ Hedge Thompson left office (unknown reason and date)
  10. ^ Philemon Dickerson resigned December 3, 1836
  11. ^ William Chetwood replaced Philemon Dickerson on December 5, 1836
  12. ^ Samuel Wright died July 30, 1845
  13. ^ George Sykes replaced Samuel Wright on November 4, 1845
  14. ^ Robert Green resigned January 17, 1887 to become Governor
  15. ^ Edward McDonald died November 5, 1892
  16. ^ Henry Loudenslager died August 12, 1911
  17. ^ Mahlon Pitney resigned January 10, 1899 to become a State Senator
  18. ^ Joshua Salmon died May 6, 1902
  19. ^ William Daly died July 31, 1900
  20. ^ Allan McDermott replaced William Daly December 3, 1900
  21. ^ De Witt Flanagan replaced Joshua Salmon June 18, 1902
  22. ^ William Lanning resigned June 6, 1904 to become a United States District Court Judge for New Jersey
  23. ^ Ira Wood replaced William Lanning November 8, 1904
  24. ^ William Hughes resigned September 27, 1912 to become a judge of the court of common pleas of Passaic County
  25. ^ Eugene Kinkead resigned February 4, 1915 to become sheriff of Hudson County
  26. ^ Walter McCoy resigned October 3, 1914 to become associate justice of the supreme court of the District of Columbia
  27. ^ William Browning replaced Henry Loudenslager November 7, 1911
  28. ^ William Browning died March 24, 1920
  29. ^ Archibald Hart replaced William Hughes November 5, 1912
  30. ^ Lewis Martin died May 5, 1913
  31. ^ Robert Bremner died February 5, 1914
  32. ^ Eugene Kinkead resigned February 4, 1915 to become Hudson County Sherriff
  33. ^ Walter McCoy resigned October 3, 1914 to become Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court
  34. ^ Archibald Hart replaced Lewis Martin July 22, 1913
  35. ^ Dow Drukker replaced Robert Gunn Bremner April 7, 1914
  36. ^ Richard Parker replaced Walter McCoy December 1, 1914
  37. ^ John Capstick died March 17, 1918
  38. ^ William Birch replaced John Capstick on November 5, 1918
  39. ^ Ernest Ackerman died October 18, 1931
  40. ^ Francis Patterson replaced William Browning November 2, 1920
  41. ^ Stewart Appleby took office November 3, 1925 after a special election to fill the vacant seat left by his father T. Frank Appleby who died before taking office.
  42. ^ Randolph Perkins died May 25, 1936
  43. ^ George Seger died August 26, 1940
  44. ^ Bob Menendez resigned January 17, 2006 to become a United States Senator; leaving the seat vacant until a special election was held on November 7, 2006, where the seat was won by Albio Sires. Sires won both the special and general election, and was sworn in on November 13, 2006.

[edit] Key

This is a key to party colors and abbreviations for Members of the U.S. Congress:
American (Know-Nothing) (K-N)
Anti-Administration (Anti-Admin)
Adams (A)/
Anti-Jacksonian (Anti-J)/
National Republican (NR)
Anti-Masonic (Anti-M)
Democratic (D)
Democratic-Republican (D-R)
Farmer-Labor (FL)
Federalist (F)
Free Soil (FS)
Free Silver (FSv)
Greenback (GB)
Independent / Unaffiliated
or changed during term
Jacksonian (J)
Non-Partisan League (NPL)
Nullifier (N)
Opposition (O)
Populist (Pop)
Pro-Administration (Pro-Admin)
Progressive (Prog)
Prohibition (Proh.)
Readjuster (Rea)
Republican (R)
Socialist (Soc)
Unionist (U)
Whig (W)
Party abbreviations or full names must be retained for universal visual access.

[edit] Sources

Languages