United States congressional delegations from Arkansas
Arkansas's congressional districts since 2013[1]
These are tables of congressional delegations from Arkansas to the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate.
House of Representatives
Current Representatives
List of members of the Arkansas United States House delegation, their terms in office, district boundaries, and the district political ratings according to the CPVI. The delegation has a total of 4 members, with all being Republicans.
Delegation timeline (1819 – Present)
Tables showing membership in the Arkansas federal House delegation throughout history of statehood in the United States.
Members of the House of Representatives
Key
Key to party colors and abbreviations for members of the U.S. Congress |
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United States Senate
Current delegation
Senate delegation timeline (1835 – Present)
Tables showing membership in the Arkansas federal Senate delegation throughout history of statehood in the United States.
Key
Key to party colors and abbreviations for members of the U.S. Congress |
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As of January 2016, there are five former U.S. Senators from the U.S. State of Arkansas are alive who are currently living at this time, four from Class 2 and one from Class 3.
See also
References
- ↑ "The national atlas". nationalatlas.gov. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 From secession until readmission to the Union, Arkansas did not participate in the U.S. Congress.
- ↑ 1st district incumbent Thomas Carmichael Hindman (D) was re-elected to the 37th Congress, but chose not to take his seat.
- ↑ Anthony A.C. Rogers was elected to the 38th Congress but was not permitted to take his seat because Arkansas had not been re-admitted to the Union.
- ↑ McRae was elected to fill the vacancy caused by James K. Jones, who had been elected to the next term, but resigned before this Congress.
- ↑ Breckinridge was initially declared elected to the 51st United States Congress and took his seat. John M. Clayton eventually won a contest before the U.S. House, but died before the contest was complete, so the House declared the seat vacant. Breckinridge was then re-elected to finish the term.
- ↑ Elected to fill the vacancy caused by the previous representative's death before the term began.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Died
- 1 2 3 4 5 Resigned
- ↑ Augustus H. Garland presented credentials as a senator-elect to the 40th Congress but was not perm
- ↑ Heiskell was appointed to the office and served until an elected successor qualified.
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