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词条 58th United States Congress
释义

  1. Major events

  2. Major Legislation

  3. Party summary

      Senate    House of Representatives  

  4. Leadership

      Senate    House of Representatives    Majority (Republican) leadership    Minority (Democratic) leadership  

  5. Members

      Senate    Alabama    Arkansas    California    Colorado    Connecticut    Delaware    Florida    Georgia    Idaho    Illinois    Indiana    Iowa    Kansas    Kentucky    Louisiana    Maine    Maryland    Massachusetts    Michigan    Minnesota    Mississippi    Missouri    Montana    Nebraska    Nevada    New Hampshire    New Jersey    New York    North Carolina    North Dakota    Ohio    Oregon    Pennsylvania    Rhode Island    South Carolina    South Dakota    Tennessee    Texas    Utah    Vermont    Virginia    Washington    West Virginia    Wisconsin    Wyoming    House of Representatives    Alabama    Arkansas    California    Colorado    Connecticut    Delaware    Florida    Georgia    Idaho    Illinois    Indiana    Iowa    Kansas    Kentucky    Louisiana    Maine    Maryland    Massachusetts    Michigan    Minnesota    Mississippi    Missouri    Montana    Nebraska    Nevada    New Hampshire    New Jersey    New York    North Carolina    North Dakota    Ohio    Oregon    Pennsylvania    Rhode Island    South Carolina    South Dakota    Tennessee    Texas    Utah    Vermont    Virginia    Washington    West Virginia    Wisconsin    Wyoming    Non-voting members  

  6. Changes in membership

     Senate  House of Representatives 

  7. Committees

     Senate  House of Representatives  Joint committees 

  8. Caucuses

  9. Employees

      Senate    House of Representatives  

  10. See also

  11. References

{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2016}}{{Infobox United States Congress
|number = 58th
|image = USCapitol1906.jpg
|imagename = United States Capitol
|imagedate = 1906
|start = March 4, 1903
|end = March 4, 1905
|vp = Vacant
|pro tem = William P. Frye (R)
|speaker = Joseph G. Cannon (R)
|senators = 90
|reps = 386
|delegates = 5
|s-majority = Republican
|h-majority = Republican
|sessionnumber1 = Special
|sessionstart1 = March 5, 1903
|sessionend1 = March 19, 1903
|sessionnumber2 = 1st
|sessionstart2 = November 9, 1903
|sessionend2 = December 7, 1903
|sessionnumber3 = 2nd
|sessionstart3 = December 7, 1903
|sessionend3 = April 28, 1904
|sessionnumber4 = 3rd
|sessionstart4 = December 5, 1904
|sessionend4 = March 3, 1905
|previous = 57th
|next = 59th
}}

The Fifty-eighth United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, DC, from March 4, 1903, to March 4, 1905, during the third and fourth years of Theodore Roosevelt's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Twelfth Census of the United States in 1900. Both chambers had a Republican majority.

{{TOC limit|2}}

Major events

{{Main|1903 in the United States|1904 in the United States|1905 in the United States}}

Major Legislation

{{Main|List of United States federal legislation#58th United States Congress}}
  • April 28, 1904: Kinkaid Act
  • February 1, 1905: Transfer Act of 1905

Party summary

Senate

{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=58
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Populist
| party3=Republican
| party4=Silver Republican
| abb1=D
| abb2=P
| abb3=R
| abb4=SR
| seats1_last=29
| seats2_last=2
| seats3_last=56
| seats4_last=2
| seats_vacant_last=1
| seats1_begin=33
| seats2_begin=0
| seats3_begin=57
| seats4_begin=0
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=33
| seats2_end=0
| seats3_end=56
| seats4_end=0
| seats_vacant_end=1
| seats1_next=31
| seats2_next=0
| seats3_next=57
| seats4_next=0
| seats_vacant_next=2
}}

House of Representatives

  • Republican (R): 209 (majority)
  • Democratic (D): 176
  • Silver Republican (SR): 1
Total members: 386

Leadership

Senate

  • President: Vacant
  • President pro tempore: William P. Frye (R)
  • Republican Conference Chairman: William B. Allison (R)
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: Arthur P. Gorman (D)
  • Democratic Caucus Secretary: Edward W. Carmack

House of Representatives

  • Speaker: Joseph G. Cannon (R)

Majority (Republican) leadership

  • Majority Leader: Sereno E. Payne
  • Majority Whip: James A. Tawney
  • Republican Conference Chair: William Peters Hepburn

Minority (Democratic) leadership

  • Minority Leader: John Sharp Williams
  • Minority Whip: James T. Lloyd
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: James Hay
  • Democratic Campaign Committee Chairman: James M. Griggs

Members

This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed in order of seniority, and Representatives are listed by district.

Senate

At this time, 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, In this Congress, Class 1 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1904; Class 2 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1906; and Class 3 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1908.

Skip to House of Representatives, below

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Alabama

  • 2. John T. Morgan (D)
  • 3. Edmund W. Pettus (D)

Arkansas

  • 2. James H. Berry (D)
  • 3. James P. Clarke (D)

California

  • 3. George C. Perkins (R)
  • 1. Thomas R. Bard (R)

Colorado

  • 3. Henry M. Teller (D)
  • 2. Thomas M. Patterson (D)

Connecticut

  • 3. Orville H. Platt (R)
  • 1. Joseph R. Hawley (R)

Delaware

  • 1. L. Heisler Ball (R)
  • 2. J. Frank Allee (R)

Florida

  • 3. Stephen Mallory (D)
  • 2. James P. Taliaferro (D)

Georgia

  • 2. Augustus O. Bacon (D)
  • 3. Alexander S. Clay (D)

Idaho

  • 2. Fred T. Dubois (D)
  • 3. Weldon B. Heyburn (R)

Illinois

  • 2. Shelby M. Cullom (R)
  • 3. Albert J. Hopkins (R)

Indiana

  • 3. Charles W. Fairbanks (R), until March 3, 1905
  • 1. Albert J. Beveridge (R)

Iowa

  • 3. William B. Allison (R)
  • 2. Jonathan P. Dolliver (R)

Kansas

  • 2. Joseph R. Burton (R)
  • 3. Chester I. Long (R)

Kentucky

  • 2. Joseph C. S. Blackburn (D)
  • 3. James B. McCreary (D)

Louisiana

  • 3. Samuel D. McEnery (D)
  • 2. Murphy J. Foster (D)

Maine

  • 1. Eugene Hale (R)
  • 2. William P. Frye (R)

Maryland

  • 1. Louis E. McComas (R)
  • 3. Arthur P. Gorman (D)

Massachusetts

  • 2. George F. Hoar (R), until September 30, 1904

Winthrop M. Crane (R), from October 12, 1904

  • 1. Henry Cabot Lodge (R)

Michigan

  • 1. Julius C. Burrows (R)
  • 2. Russell A. Alger (R)

Minnesota

  • 2. Knute Nelson (R)
  • 1. Moses E. Clapp (R)

Mississippi

  • 1. Hernando D. Money (D)
  • 2. Anselm J. McLaurin (D)

Missouri

  • 1. Francis M. Cockrell (D)
  • 3. William J. Stone (D)

Montana

  • 2. William A. Clark (D)
  • 1. Paris Gibson (D)
{{col-2}}

Nebraska

  • 2. Joseph H. Millard (R)
  • 1. Charles H. Dietrich (R)

Nevada

  • 1. William M. Stewart (R)
  • 3. Francis G. Newlands (D)

New Hampshire

  • 3. Jacob H. Gallinger (R)
  • 2. Henry E. Burnham (R)

New Jersey

  • 1. John Kean (R)
  • 2. John F. Dryden (R)

New York

  • 3. Thomas C. Platt (R)
  • 1. Chauncey M. Depew (R)

North Carolina

  • 2. Furnifold M. Simmons (D)
  • 3. Lee S. Overman (D)

North Dakota

  • 3. Henry C. Hansbrough (R)
  • 1. Porter J. McCumber (R)

Ohio

  • 3. Joseph B. Foraker (R)
  • 1. Marcus A. Hanna (R), until February 15, 1904

Charles W. F. Dick (R), from March 2, 1904

Oregon

  • 2. John H. Mitchell (R)
  • 3. Charles W. Fulton (R)

Pennsylvania

  • 3. Boies Penrose (R)
  • 1. Matthew S. Quay (R), until May 28, 1904

Philander C. Knox (R), from June 10, 1904

Rhode Island

  • 1. Nelson W. Aldrich (R)
  • 2. George P. Wetmore (R)

South Carolina

  • 2. Benjamin R. Tillman (D)
  • 3. Asbury C. Latimer (D)

South Dakota

  • 2. Robert J. Gamble (R)
  • 3. Alfred B. Kittredge (R)

Tennessee

  • 1. William B. Bate (D)
  • 2. Edward W. Carmack (D)

Texas

  • 1. Charles A. Culberson (D)
  • 2. Joseph W. Bailey (D)

Utah

  • 1. Thomas Kearns (R)
  • 3. Reed Smoot (R)

Vermont

  • 1. Redfield Proctor (R)
  • 3. William P. Dillingham (R)

Virginia

  • 1. John W. Daniel (D)
  • 2. Thomas S. Martin (D)

Washington

  • 1. Addison G. Foster (R)
  • 3. Levi Ankeny (R)

West Virginia

  • 2. Stephen B. Elkins (R)
  • 1. Nathan B. Scott (R)

Wisconsin

  • 3. John C. Spooner (R)
  • 1. Joseph V. Quarles (R)

Wyoming

  • 1. Clarence D. Clark (R)
  • 2. Francis E. Warren (R)
{{col-end}}

House of Representatives

The names of members of the House of Representatives elected statewide on the general ticket or otherwise at-large, are preceded by an "At-large," and the names of those elected from districts, whether plural or single member, are preceded by their district numbers.

Many of the congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress.

{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}

Alabama

(9 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Alabama|1|1}}. George W. Taylor (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|2|2}}. Ariosto A. Wiley (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|3|3}}. Henry D. Clayton (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|4|4}}. Sydney J. Bowie (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|5|5}}. Charles Winston Thompson (D), until March 20, 1904
    • J. Thomas Heflin (D), from May 19, 1904
  • {{ushr|Alabama|6|6}}. John H. Bankhead (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|7|7}}. John L. Burnett (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|8|8}}. William N. Richardson (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|9|9}}. Oscar W. Underwood (D)

Arkansas

(7 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Arkansas|1|1}}. Robert B. Macon (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|2|2}}. Stephen Brundidge Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|3|3}}. Hugh A. Dinsmore (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|4|4}}. John S. Little (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|5|5}}. Charles C. Reid (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|6|6}}. Joseph Taylor Robinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|7|7}}. Robert M. Wallace (D)

California

(5–3 Republican)

  • {{ushr|California|1|1}}. James N. Gillett (R)
  • {{ushr|California|2|2}}. Theodore A. Bell (D)
  • {{ushr|California|3|3}}. Victor H. Metcalf (R), until July 1, 1904
    • Joseph R. Knowland (R), from November 8, 1904
  • {{ushr|California|4|4}}. Edward J. Livernash (D)
  • {{ushr|California|5|5}}. William J. Wynn (D)
  • {{ushr|California|6|6}}. James C. Needham (R)
  • {{ushr|California|7|7}}. James McLachlan (R)
  • {{ushr|California|8|8}}. Milton J. Daniels (R)

Colorado

(2–1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Colorado|1|1}}. John F. Shafroth (D), until February 15, 1904
    • Robert W. Bonynge (R), from February 16, 1904
  • {{ushr|Colorado|2|2}}. Herschel M. Hogg (R)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|AL|At-large}}. Franklin E. Brooks (R)

Connecticut

(5 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Connecticut|1|1}}. E. Stevens Henry (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|2|2}}. Nehemiah D. Sperry (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|3|3}}. Frank B. Brandegee (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|4|4}}. Ebenezer J. Hill (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|AL|At-large}}. George L. Lilley (R)

Delaware

(1 Democrat)

  • {{ushr|Delaware|AL|At-large}}. Henry A. Houston (D)

Florida

(3 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Florida|1|1}}. Stephen M. Sparkman (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|2|2}}. Robert Wyche Davis (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|3|3}}. William B. Lamar (D)

Georgia

(11 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Georgia|1|1}}. Rufus E. Lester (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|2|2}}. James M. Griggs (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|3|3}}. Elijah B. Lewis (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|4|4}}. William C. Adamson (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|5|5}}. Leonidas F. Livingston (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|6|6}}. Charles L. Bartlett (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|7|7}}. John W. Maddox (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|8|8}}. William M. Howard (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|9|9}}. Farish C. Tate (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|10|10}}. Thomas W. Hardwick (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|11|11}}. William G. Brantley (D)

Idaho

(1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Idaho|AL|At-large}}. Burton L. French (R)

Illinois

(17–8 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Illinois|1|1}}. Martin Emerich (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|2|2}}. James R. Mann (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|3|3}}. William W. Wilson (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|4|4}}. George P. Foster (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|5|5}}. James McAndrews (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|6|6}}. William Lorimer (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|7|7}}. Philip Knopf (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|8|8}}. William F. Mahoney (D), until December 27, 1904
  • {{ushr|Illinois|9|9}}. Henry S. Boutell (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|10|10}}. George E. Foss (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|11|11}}. Howard M. Snapp (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|12|12}}. Charles Eugene Fuller (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|13|13}}. Robert R. Hitt (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|14|14}}. Benjamin F. Marsh (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|15|15}}. George W. Prince (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|16|16}}. Joseph V. Graff (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|17|17}}. John A. Sterling (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|18|18}}. Joseph G. Cannon (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|19|19}}. Vespasian Warner (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|20|20}}. Henry T. Rainey (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|21|21}}. Ben F. Caldwell (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|22|22}}. William A. Rodenberg (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|23|23}}. Joseph B. Crowley (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|24|24}}. James R. Williams (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|25|25}}. George W. Smith (R)

Indiana

(9–4 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Indiana|1|1}}. James A. Hemenway (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|2|2}}. Robert W. Miers (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|3|3}}. William T. Zenor (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|4|4}}. Francis M. Griffith (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|5|5}}. Elias S. Holliday (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|6|6}}. James E. Watson (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|7|7}}. Jesse Overstreet (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|8|8}}. George W. Cromer (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|9|9}}. Charles B. Landis (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|10|10}}. Edgar D. Crumpacker (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|11|11}}. Frederick Landis (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|12|12}}. James M. Robinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|13|13}}. Abraham L. Brick (R)

Iowa

(10–1 Democratic)

  • {{ushr|Iowa|1|1}}. Thomas Hedge (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|2|2}}. Martin Joseph Wade (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|3|3}}. Benjamin P. Birdsall (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|4|4}}. Gilbert N. Haugen (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|5|5}}. Robert G. Cousins (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|6|6}}. John F. Lacey (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|7|7}}. John A. T. Hull (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|8|8}}. William P. Hepburn (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|9|9}}. Walter I. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|10|10}}. James P. Conner (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|11|11}}. Lot Thomas (R)

Kansas

(8 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Kansas|1|1}}. Charles Curtis (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|2|2}}. Justin De Witt Bowersock (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|3|3}}. Philip P. Campbell (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|4|4}}. James Monroe Miller (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|5|5}}. William A. Calderhead (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|6|6}}. William A. Reeder (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|7|7}}. Victor Murdock (R), from May 26, 1903
  • {{ushr|Kansas|AL|At-large}}. Charles F. Scott (R)

Kentucky

(10–1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Kentucky|1|1}}. Ollie M. James (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|2|2}}. Augustus Stanley (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|3|3}}. John Stockdale Rhea (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|4|4}}. David Highbaugh Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|5|5}}. J. Swagar Sherley (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|6|6}}. Daniel Linn Gooch (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|7|7}}. South Trimble (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|8|8}}. George G. Gilbert (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|9|9}}. James Nicholas Kehoe (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|10|10}}. Francis A. Hopkins (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|11|11}}. Vincent Boreing (R), until September 16, 1903
    • W. Godfrey Hunter (R), from November 10, 1903

Louisiana

(7 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Louisiana|1|1}}. Adolph Meyer (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|2|2}}. Robert Charles Davey (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|3|3}}. Robert Foligny Broussard (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. Phanor Breazeale (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|5|5}}. Joseph Eugene Ransdell (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|6|6}}. Samuel Matthews Robertson (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|7|7}}. Arsène Paulin Pujó (D)

Maine

(4 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Maine|1|1}}. Amos L. Allen (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|2|2}}. Charles E. Littlefield (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|3|3}}. Edwin C. Burleigh (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|4|4}}. Llewellyn Powers (R)

Maryland

(4–2 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Maryland|1|1}}. William Humphreys Jackson (R)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|2|2}}. J. Frederick C. Talbott (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|3|3}}. Frank C. Wachter (R)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|4|4}}. James W. Denny (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|5|5}}. Sydney Emanuel Mudd I (R)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|6|6}}. George A. Pearre (R)

Massachusetts

(10–4 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|1|1}}. George P. Lawrence (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|2|2}}. Frederick H. Gillett (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|3|3}}. John R. Thayer (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|4|4}}. Charles Q. Tirrell (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|5|5}}. Butler Ames (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|6|6}}. Augustus P. Gardner (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|7|7}}. Ernest W. Roberts (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|8|8}}. Samuel W. McCall (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|9|9}}. John A. Keliher (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|10|10}}. William S. McNary (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|11|11}}. John Andrew Sullivan (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|12|12}}. Samuel Leland Powers (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|13|13}}. William S. Greene (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|14|14}}. William C. Lovering (R)

Michigan

(11–1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Michigan|1|1}}. Alfred Lucking (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|2|2}}. Charles E. Townsend (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|3|3}}. Washington Gardner (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|4|4}}. Edward L. Hamilton (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|5|5}}. William A. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|6|6}}. Samuel W. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|7|7}}. Henry McMorran (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|8|8}}. Joseph W. Fordney (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|9|9}}. Roswell P. Bishop (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|10|10}}. George A. Loud (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|11|11}}. Archibald B. Darragh (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|12|12}}. H. Olin Young (R)

Minnesota

(8–1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Minnesota|1|1}}. James Albertus Tawney (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|2|2}}. James McCleary (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|3|3}}. Charles Russell Davis (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|4|4}}. Frederick Stevens (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|5|5}}. John Lind (D)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|6|6}}. Clarence Buckman (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|7|7}}. Andrew Volstead (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|8|8}}. James Bede (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|9|9}}. Halvor Steenerson (R)

Mississippi

(8 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Mississippi|1|1}}. Ezekiel S. Candler Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|2|2}}. Thomas Spight (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|3|3}}. Benjamin G. Humphreys II (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|4|4}}. Wilson S. Hill (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|5|5}}. Adam M. Byrd (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|6|6}}. Eaton J. Bowers (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|7|7}}. Frank A. McLain (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|8|8}}. John Sharp Williams (D)

Missouri

(15–1 Democratic)

  • {{ushr|Missouri|1|1}}. James Tilghman Lloyd (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|2|2}}. William W. Rucker (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|3|3}}. John Anderson Dougherty (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|4|4}}. Charles Fremont Cochran (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|5|5}}. William Strother Cowherd (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|6|6}}. David A. De Armond (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|7|7}}. Courtney W. Hamlin (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|8|8}}. Dorsey W. Shackleford (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|9|9}}. James Beauchamp Clark (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|10|10}}. Richard Bartholdt (R)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|11|11}}. John T. Hunt (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|12|12}}. James Joseph Butler (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|13|13}}. Edward Franklin Robb (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|14|14}}. Willard Duncan Vandiver (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|15|15}}. Maecenas Eason Benton (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|16|16}}. J. Robert Lamar (D)

Montana

(1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Montana|AL|At-large}}. Joseph M. Dixon (R)

Nebraska

(6 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Nebraska|1|1}}. Elmer Jacob Burkett (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|2|2}}. Gilbert M. Hitchcock (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|3|3}}. John J. McCarthy (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|4|4}}. Edmund H. Hinshaw (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|5|5}}. George W. Norris (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|6|6}}. Moses P. Kinkaid (R)

Nevada

(1 Democrat)

  • {{ushr|Nevada|AL|At-large}}. Clarence D. Van Duzer (D)
{{col-2}}

New Hampshire

(2 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|1|1}}. Cyrus Adams Sulloway (R)
  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|2|2}}. Frank Dunklee Currier (R)

New Jersey

(7–3 Republican)

  • {{ushr|New Jersey|1|1}}. Henry C. Loudenslager (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|2|2}}. John James Gardner (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|3|3}}. Benjamin F. Howell (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|4|4}}. William M. Lanning (R), until June 6, 1904
    • Ira W. Wood (R), from November 8, 1904
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|5|5}}. Charles N. Fowler (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|6|6}}. William Hughes (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|7|7}}. Richard W. Parker (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|8|8}}. William H. Wiley (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|9|9}}. Allan Benny (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|10|10}}. Allan L. McDermott (D)

New York

(20–17 Republican)

  • {{ushr|New York|1|1}}. Townsend Scudder (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|2|2}}. George H. Lindsay (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|3|3}}. Charles T. Dunwell (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|4|4}}. Frank E. Wilson (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|5|5}}. Edward M. Bassett (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|6|6}}. Robert Baker (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|7|7}}. John J. Fitzgerald (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|8|8}}. Timothy D. Sullivan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|9|9}}. Henry M. Goldfogle (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|10|10}}. William Sulzer (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|11|11}}. William Randolph Hearst (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|12|12}}. George B. McClellan Jr. (D), until December 21, 1903
    • W. Bourke Cockran (D), from February 23, 1904
  • {{ushr|New York|13|13}}. Francis B. Harrison (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|14|14}}. Ira E. Rider (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|15|15}}. William H. Douglas (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|16|16}}. Jacob Ruppert Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|17|17}}. Francis E. Shober (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|18|18}}. Joseph A. Goulden (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|19|19}}. Norton P. Otis (R), until February 20, 1905
  • {{ushr|New York|20|20}}. Thomas W. Bradley (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|21|21}}. John H. Ketcham (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|22|22}}. William H. Draper (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|23|23}}. George N. Southwick (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|24|24}}. George J. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|25|25}}. Lucius N. Littauer (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|26|26}}. William H. Flack (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|27|27}}. James S. Sherman (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|28|28}}. Charles L. Knapp (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|29|29}}. Michael E. Driscoll (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|30|30}}. John W. Dwight (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|31|31}}. Sereno E. Payne (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|32|32}}. James B. Perkins (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|33|33}}. Charles W. Gillet (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|34|34}}. James Wolcott Wadsworth (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|35|35}}. William H. Ryan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|36|36}}. De Alva S. Alexander (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|37|37}}. Edward B. Vreeland (R)

North Carolina

(10 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|North Carolina|1|1}}. John Humphrey Small (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|2|2}}. Claude Kitchin (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|3|3}}. Charles Randolph Thomas (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|4|4}}. Edward W. Pou (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|5|5}}. William Walton Kitchin (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|6|6}}. Gilbert B. Patterson (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|7|7}}. Robert N. Page (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|8|8}}. Theodore F. Kluttz (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|9|9}}. Edwin Y. Webb (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|10|10}}. James M. Gudger Jr. (D)

North Dakota

(2 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Thomas Frank Marshall (R)
  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Burleigh F. Spalding (R)

Ohio

(17–4 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Ohio|1|1}}. Nicholas Longworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|2|2}}. Herman P. Goebel (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|3|3}}. Robert M. Nevin (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|4|4}}. Harvey C. Garber (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|5|5}}. John S. Snook (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|6|6}}. Charles Q. Hildebrant (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|7|7}}. Thomas B. Kyle (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|8|8}}. William R. Warnock (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|9|9}}. James H. Southard (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|10|10}}. Stephen Morgan (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|11|11}}. Charles H. Grosvenor (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|12|12}}. De Witt C. Badger (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|13|13}}. Amos H. Jackson (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|14|14}}. William W. Skiles (R), until January 9, 1904
    • Amos R. Webber (R), from November 8, 1904
  • {{ushr|Ohio|15|15}}. Henry C. Van Voorhis (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|16|16}}. John J. Gill (R), until October 31, 1903
    • Capell L. Weems (R), from November 3, 1903
  • {{ushr|Ohio|17|17}}. John W. Cassingham (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|18|18}}. James Kennedy (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|19|19}}. Charles William Dick (R), until March 23, 1904
    • W. Aubrey Thomas (R), from November 8, 1904
  • {{ushr|Ohio|20|20}}. Jacob A. Beidler (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|21|21}}. Theodore Elijah Burton (R)

Oregon

(2 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Oregon|1|1}}. Binger Hermann (R), from June 1, 1903
  • {{ushr|Oregon|2|2}}. John N. Williamson (R)

Pennsylvania

(28–4 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|1}}. Henry H. Bingham (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|2}}. Robert Adams Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|3}}. Henry Burk (R), until December 5, 1903
    • George A. Castor (R), from February 16, 1904
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|4}}. Robert H. Foerderer (R), until July 26, 1903
    • Reuben O. Moon (R), from November 3, 1903
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|5}}. Edward de Veaux Morrell (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|6}}. George D. McCreary (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|7}}. Thomas S. Butler (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|8}}. Irving P. Wanger (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|9}}. Henry B. Cassel (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|10}}. George Howell (D), until February 10, 1904
    • William Connell (R), from February 10, 1904
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|11}}. Henry W. Palmer (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|12}}. George R. Patterson (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|13}}. Marcus C.L. Kline (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|14}}. Charles F. Wright (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|15}}. Elias Deemer (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|16}}. Charles H. Dickerman (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|17}}. Thaddeus M. Mahon (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|18}}. Marlin E. Olmsted (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|19}}. Alvin Evans (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|20}}. Daniel F. Lafean (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|21}}. Solomon R. Dresser (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|22}}. George F. Huff (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|23}}. Allen F. Cooper (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|24}}. Ernest F. Acheson (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|25}}. Arthur L. Bates (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|26}}. Joseph H. Shull (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|27}}. William O. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|28}}. Joseph C. Sibley (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|29}}. George Shiras III (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|30}}. John Dalzell (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|31|31}}. Henry K. Porter (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|32|32}}. James W. Brown (R)

Rhode Island

(1–1 split)

  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|1|1}}. Daniel L. D. Granger (D)
  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|2|2}}. Adin B. Capron (R)

South Carolina

(7 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|South Carolina|1|1}}. George S. Legare (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|2|2}}. George W. Croft (D), until March 10, 1904
    • Theodore G. Croft (D), from May 17, 1904
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|3|3}}. Wyatt Aiken (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|4|4}}. Joseph T. Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|5|5}}. David E. Finley (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|6|6}}. Robert Bethea Scarborough (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|7|7}}. Asbury F. Lever (D)

South Dakota

(2 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|South Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Charles Henry Burke (R)
  • {{ushr|South Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Eben Wever Martin (R)

Tennessee

(8–2 Democratic)

  • {{ushr|Tennessee|1|1}}. Walter P. Brownlow (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. Henry Richard Gibson (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|3|3}}. John Austin Moon (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|4|4}}. Morgan Cassius Fitzpatrick (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. James Daniel Richardson (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|6|6}}. John Wesley Gaines (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|7|7}}. Lemuel Phillips Padgett (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|8|8}}. Thetus Willrette Sims (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|9|9}}. Rice Alexander Pierce (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|10|10}}. Malcolm R. Patterson (D)

Texas

(16 Democrats)

  • {{ushr|Texas|1|1}}. Morris Sheppard (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|2|2}}. Samuel Bronson Cooper (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|3|3}}. Gordon James Russell (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|4|4}}. Choice Boswell Randell (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|5|5}}. James Andrew Beall (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|6|6}}. Scott Field (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|7|7}}. Alexander W. Gregg (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|8|8}}. Thomas Henry Ball (D), until November 16, 1903
    • John M. Pinckney (D), from November 17, 1903
  • {{ushr|Texas|9|9}}. George Farmer Burgess (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|10|10}}. Albert Sidney Burleson (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|11|11}}. Robert L. Henry (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|12|12}}. Oscar W. Gillespie (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|13|13}}. John Hall Stephens (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|14|14}}. James L. Slayden (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|15|15}}. John Nance Garner (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|16|16}}. William R. Smith (D)

Utah

(1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Utah|AL|At-large}}. Joseph Howell (R)

Vermont

(2 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Vermont|1|1}}. David J. Foster (R)
  • {{ushr|Vermont|2|2}}. Kittredge Haskins (R)

Virginia

(9–1 Democratic)

  • {{ushr|Virginia|1|1}}. William Atkinson Jones (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|2|2}}. Harry Lee Maynard (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|3|3}}. John Fletcher Lamb (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|4|4}}. Robert G. Southall (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|5|5}}. Claude Augustus Swanson (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|6|6}}. Carter Glass (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|7|7}}. James Hay (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|8|8}}. John Franklin Rixey (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|9|9}}. Campbell Slemp (R)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|10|10}}. Henry De Flood (D)

Washington

(3 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|Washington|AL|At-large}}. Wesley Livsey Jones (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|AL|At-large}}. Francis Wellington Cushman (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|AL|At-large}}. William E. Humphrey (R)

West Virginia

(5 Republicans)

  • {{ushr|West Virginia|1|1}}. Blackburn B. Dovener (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|2|2}}. Alston G. Dayton (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|3|3}}. Joseph Holt Gaines (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|4|4}}. Harry C. Woodyard (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|5|5}}. James Anthony Hughes (R)

Wisconsin

(10–1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|1|1}}. Henry Allen Cooper (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|2|2}}. Henry Cullen Adams (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|3|3}}. Joseph W. Babcock (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|4|4}}. Theobald Johnston Otjen (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|5|5}}. William H. Stafford (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|6|6}}. Charles H. Weisse (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|7|7}}. John Jacob Esch (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|8|8}}. James Henry Davidson (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|9|9}}. Edward Sloman Minor (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|10|10}}. Webster Everett Brown (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|11|11}}. John J. Jenkins (R)

Wyoming

(1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Wyoming|AL|At-large}}. Franklin Wheeler Mondell (R)

Non-voting members

(3–1 Republican)

  • {{ushr|Arizona Territory|AL|Arizona Territory}}. John Frank Wilson (D)
  • {{ushr|Hawaii Territory|AL|Hawaii Territory}}. Jonah Kunio Kalanianaole
  • {{ushr|New Mexico Territory|AL|New Mexico Territory}}. Bernard Shandon Rodey (R)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma Territory|AL|Oklahoma Territory}}. Bird Segle McGuire (R)
  • {{ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Federico Degetau (Resident Commissioner) (R)
{{col-break}}{{col-end}}

Changes in membership

The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.

Senate

  • replacements: 3
    • Democratic: no net change
    • Republican: no net change
  • deaths: 3
  • resignations: 1
  • vacancy: 0
  • Total seats with changes: 4
State
(class)
Vacator Reason for vacancy Subsequent Date of successor's installation
Ohio
(1)
Mark Hanna (R)Died February 15, 1904. Successor was elected.Charles W. F. Dick (R) March 2, 1904
Pennsylvania
(1)
Matthew Quay (R)Died May 28, 1904. Successor was appointed and subsequently elected.Philander C. Knox (R) June 10, 1904
Massachusetts
(2)
George Frisbie Hoar (R)Died September 30, 1904. Successor was appointed and subsequently elected.Winthrop M. Crane (R) October 12, 1904
Indiana
(3)
Charles W. Fairbanks (R)Resigned March 3, 1905, after being elected Vice-president of the United StatesVacant until next Congress

House of Representatives

  • replacements: 14
    • Democratic: 2 seat loss
    • Republican: 2 seat gain
  • deaths: 8
  • resignations: 7
  • contested elections: 1
  • Total seats with changes: 18
District Previous Reason for change Subsequent Date of successor's installation
Kansas|7|Kansas 7th}} Vacant Rep. Chester I. Long resigned during previous congressVictor Murdock (R) May 26, 1903
Oregon|1|Oregon 1st}} Vacant Rep. Thomas H. Tongue died during previous congressBinger Hermann (R) June 1, 1903
Pennsylvania|4|Pennsylvania 4th}}Robert H. Foerderer (R) Died July 26, 1903Reuben Moon (R) November 3, 1903
Kentucky|11|Kentucky 11th}}Vincent Boreing (R) Died September 16, 1903W. Godfrey Hunter (R) November 10, 1903
Ohio|16|Ohio 16th}}Joseph J. Gill (R) Resigned October 31, 1903Capell L. Weems (R) November 3, 1903
Texas|8|Texas 8th}}Thomas Henry Ball (D) Resigned November 16, 1903John M. Pinckney (D) November 17, 1903
Pennsylvania|3|Pennsylvania 3rd}}Henry Burk (R) Died December 5, 1903George A. Castor (R) February 16, 1904
New York|12|New York 12th}}George B. McClellan Jr. (D) Resigned December 21, 1903, after being elected Mayor of New YorkWilliam B. Cockran (D) February 23, 1904
Ohio|14|Ohio 14th}}William W. Skiles (R) Died January 9, 1904Amos R. Webber (R) November 8, 1904
Pennsylvania|10|Pennsylvania 10th}}George Howell (D) Lost contested election February 10, 1904William Connell (R) February 10, 1904
Colorado|1|Colorado 1st}}John F. Shafroth (D) Resigned February 15, 1904, after believing he was elected due to election irregularitiesRobert W. Bonynge (R) February 16, 1904
South Carolina|2|South Carolina 2nd}}George W. Croft (D) Died March 10, 1904Theodore G. Croft (D) May 17, 1904
Ohio|19|Ohio 19th}}Charles W. F. Dick (R) Resigned March 23, 1904, after being elected to the U.S. SenateW. Aubrey Thomas (R) November 8, 1904
Alabama|5|Alabama 5th}}Charles W. Thompson (D) Died March 20, 1904J. Thomas Heflin (D) May 19, 1904
New Jersey|4|New Jersey 4th}}William M. Lanning (R) Resigned June 6, 1904, after being appointed judge for the United States District Court for the District of New JerseyIra W. Wood (R) November 8, 1904
California|3|California 3rd}}Victor H. Metcalf (R) Resigned July 1, 1904, after being appointed United States Department of Commerce and LaborJoseph R. Knowland (R) November 8, 1904
Illinois|8|Illinois 8th}}William F. Mahoney (D) Died December 27, 1904Seat remained vacant until next Congress
New York|19|New York 19th}}Norton P. Otis (R) Died February 20, 1905Seat remained vacant until next Congress

Committees

Lists of committees and their party leaders, for members (House and Senate) of the committees and their assignments, go into the Official Congressional Directory at the bottom of the article and click on the link (7 links), in the directory after the pages of terms of service, you will see the committees of the Senate, House (Standing with Subcommittees, Select and Special) and Joint and after the committee pages, you will see the House/Senate committee assignments in the directory, 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

  • Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress (Select)
  • Agriculture and Forestry
  • Appropriations
  • Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate
  • Canadian Relations
  • Census
  • Civil Service and Retrenchment
  • Claims
  • Coast and Insular Survey
  • Commerce
  • Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia
  • Cuban Relations
  • Distributing Public Revenue Among the States (Select)
  • District of Columbia
  • Education and Labor
  • Engrossed Bills
  • Enrolled Bills
  • Establish a University in the United States (Select)
  • Examine the Several Branches in the Civil Service
  • Expenditures in Executive Departments
  • Finance
  • Fisheries
  • Foreign Relations
  • Five Civilized Tribes of Indians (Select)
  • Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game
  • Geological Survey
  • Immigration
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • Impeachment of Charles H. Swayne (Select)
  • Indian Affairs
  • Industrial Expositions
  • Interoceanic Canals
  • Interstate Commerce
  • Irrigation and Reclamation
  • Judiciary
  • Library
  • Manufactures
  • Military Affairs
  • Mines and Mining
  • Mississippi River and its Tributaries (Select)
  • National Banks (Select)
  • Naval Affairs
  • Pacific Islands and Puerto Rico
  • Pacific Railroads
  • Patents
  • Pensions
  • Philippines
  • Post Office and Post Roads
  • Potomac River Front (Select)
  • Printing
  • Private Land Claims
  • Privileges and Elections
  • Public Buildings and Grounds
  • Public Health and National Quarantine
  • Public Lands
  • Railroads
  • Revision of the Laws
  • Revolutionary Claims
  • Rules
  • Standards, Weights and Measures (Select)
  • Tariff Regulation (Select)
  • Territories
  • Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select)
  • Transportation Routes to the Seaboard
  • Ventilation and Acoustics (Select)
  • Whole
  • Woman Suffrage (Select)

House of Representatives

  • Accounts
  • Agriculture
  • Alcoholic Liquor Traffic
  • Appropriations
  • Banking and Currency
  • Census
  • Claims
  • Coinage, Weights and Measures
  • Disposition of Executive Papers
  • District of Columbia
  • Education
  • Election of the President, Vice President and Representatives in Congress
  • Elections
  • Enrolled Bills
  • Expenditures in the Agriculture Department
  • Expenditures in the Interior Department
  • Expenditures in the Justice Department
  • Expenditures in the Navy Department
  • Expenditures in the Post Office Department
  • Expenditures in the State Department
  • Expenditures in the Treasury Department
  • Expenditures in the War Department
  • Expenditures on Public Buildings
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • Indian Affairs
  • Industrial Arts and Expositions
  • Insular Affairs
  • Interstate and Foreign Commerce
  • Invalid Pensions
  • Irrigation of Arid Lands
  • Labor
  • Levees and Improvements of the Mississippi River
  • Manufactures
  • Merchant Marine and Fisheries
  • Mileage
  • Military Affairs
  • Militia
  • Mines and Mining
  • Naval Affairs
  • Pacific Railroads
  • Patents
  • Pensions
  • Post Office and Post Roads
  • Public Buildings and Grounds
  • Public Lands
  • Railways and Canals
  • Reform in the Civil Service
  • Revision of Laws
  • Rivers and Harbors
  • Rules
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Territories
  • Ventilation and Acoustics
  • War Claims
  • Ways and Means
  • Whole

Joint committees

  • Conditions of Indian Tribes (Special)
  • Disposition of (Useless) Executive Papers

Caucuses

  • Democratic (House)
  • Democratic (Senate)

Employees

  • Architect of the Capitol: Elliott Woods, appointed February 19, 1902
  • Librarian of Congress: Herbert Putnam
  • Public Printer of the United States: Frank W. Palmer

Senate

  • Secretary: Charles G. Bennett of New York, elected February 1, 1900
  • Sergeant at Arms: Daniel M. Ransdell of Indiana, elected February 1, 1900
  • Chaplain:
    • F.J. Prettyman, Methodist, elected December 2, 1902
    • Edward E. Hale, Unitarian, elected December 14, 1903

House of Representatives

  • Clerk: Alexander McDowell of Pennsylvania, elected November 9, 1903
  • Sergeant at Arms: Henry Casson of Wisconsin, elected November 9, 1903
  • Doorkeeper: Frank B. Lyon of New York, elected November 9, 1903
  • Postmaster: Joseph C. McElroy of Ohio, elected November 9, 1903
  • Reading Clerks: {{dm}}
  • Clerk at the Speaker’s Table: Asher C. Hinds
  • Chaplain: Henry N. Couden, Universalist, elected November 9, 1903

See also

  • United States elections, 1902 (elections leading to this Congress)
    • United States Senate elections, 1902
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1902
  • United States elections, 1904 (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
    • United States presidential election, 1904
    • United States Senate elections, 1904
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1904

References

  • {{Cite book | last = Gould | first = Lewis L. | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = 2005 | title = The Most Exclusive Club | publisher = Perseus Books Group | location = Cambridge, MA | isbn = 0-465-02778-4}}
  • {{Cite book | last = Remini | first = Robert V. | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = 2006 | title = The House | publisher = HarperCollins Publishers, Inc | location = New York | isbn = 0-06-088434-7}}
  • {{Cite web|last=U.S. Congress |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2005 |url=http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/cdocuments/hd108-222/index.html |title=Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress |work= |publisher= |accessdate=June 1, 2006 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060601025644/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/cdocuments/hd108-222/index.html |archivedate=June 1, 2006 |deadurl=yes |df=mdy }}
  • {{Cite web|last=U.S. House of Representatives |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2006 |url=http://clerk.house.gov/histHigh/Congressional_History/index.html |title=Congressional History |work= |publisher= |accessdate=June 1, 2006 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060601013451/http://clerk.house.gov/histHigh/Congressional_History/index.html |archivedate=June 1, 2006 |deadurl=yes |df=mdy }}
  • {{Cite web | last = U.S. Senate | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = | year = 2006 | url = https://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/stats_and_lists.htm | title = Statistics and Lists | work = | publisher = | accessdate = June 1, 2006 | archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20060601011043/http://senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/stats_and_lists.htm| archivedate= June 1, 2006 | deadurl= no}}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, Special Session |url= https://archive.org/stream/officialcongres05pringoog#page/n3/mode/1up }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, Extraordinary Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758687;view=1up;seq=9 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, 2nd Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433081796967;view=1up;seq=11 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, 2nd Session (1st Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758703;view=1up;seq=11g }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, 2nd Session (2nd Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d00840071o;view=1up;seq=9 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, 3rd Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758661;view=1up;seq=11 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 58th Congress, 3rd Session (Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d00840073k;view=1up;seq=9 }}
{{USCongresses}}

1 : 58th United States Congress

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