请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 65th United States Congress
释义

  1. Major events

  2. Major legislation

  3. Constitutional amendments

  4. Party summary

     Senate    House of Representatives  

  5. Leadership

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

  6. Members

     Senate   Alabama    Arizona    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 Mexico    New York    North Carolina    North Dakota    Ohio    Oklahoma    Oregon    Pennsylvania    Rhode Island    South Carolina    South Dakota    Tennessee    Texas    Utah    Vermont    Virginia    Washington    West Virginia    Wisconsin    Wyoming   House of Representatives   Alabama    Arizona    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 Mexico    New York    North Carolina    North Dakota    Ohio    Oklahoma    Oregon    Pennsylvania    Rhode Island    South Carolina    South Dakota    Tennessee    Texas    Utah    Vermont    Virginia    Washington    West Virginia    Wisconsin    Wyoming    Non-voting members  

  7. Changes in membership

     Senate  House of Representatives 

  8. Committees

     Senate  House of Representatives  Joint committees 

  9. Caucuses

  10. Employees

     Senate  House of Representatives 

  11. See also

  12. References

{{Infobox United States Congress
| image=USCapitol1906.jpg
| imagedate=1906
|number = 65th
|start = March 4, 1917
|end = March 4, 1919
|vp = Thomas R. Marshall (D)
|pro tem = Willard Saulsbury, Jr. (D)
|speaker = Champ Clark (D)
|senators = 96
|reps = 435
|delegates = 5
|s-majority = Democratic
|h-majority = Democratic (coalition)
|sessionnumber1 = Special
|sessionstart1 = March 5, 1917
|sessionend1 = March 16, 1917
|sessionnumber2 = 1st
|sessionstart2 = April 2, 1917
|sessionend2 = October 6, 1917
|sessionnumber3 = 2nd
|sessionstart3 = December 3, 1917
|sessionend3 = November 21, 1918
|sessionnumber4 = 3rd
|sessionstart4 = December 2, 1918
|sessionend4 = March 3, 1919
|previous = 64th
|next = 66th
}}

The Sixty-fifth 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, 1917, to March 4, 1919, during the fifth and sixth years of Woodrow Wilson's presidency. The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the Thirteenth Census of the United States in 1910. The Senate had a Democratic majority, and the House had a Republican plurality but the Democrats remained in control with the support of the Progressives and Socialist Representative Meyer London.

{{TOClimit|2}}

Major events

{{main article|1917 in the United States|1918 in the United States|1919 in the United States}}
  • March 4, 1917: Jeannette Rankin of Montana became the first woman member of the United States House of Representatives.
  • March 8, 1917: The United States Senate adopted the cloture rule to limit filibusters.
  • March 31, 1917: The United States took possession of the Danish West Indies, which become the US Virgin Islands, after paying $25 million to Denmark.
  • April 2, 1917: World War I: President Woodrow Wilson asks the U.S. Congress for a declaration of war on Germany.
  • April 10, 1917: An ammunition factory explosion in Chester, Pennsylvania, kills 133.
  • May 21, 1917: Over 300 acres (73 blocks) are destroyed in the Great Atlanta fire of 1917.
  • May 26, 1917: A tornado strikes Mattoon, Illinois, causing devastation and killing 101 people.
  • July 1, 1917: A labor dispute ignited a race riot in East St. Louis, Illinois, which left 250 dead.
  • July 12, 1917: The Phelps Dodge Corporation deported over 1,000 suspected Industrial Workers of the World members from Bisbee, Arizona.
  • July 28, 1917: The Silent Protest was organized by the NAACP in New York to protest the East St. Louis Riot of July 2, as well as lynchings in Texas and Tennessee.
  • August, 1917: The Green Corn Rebellion, an uprising by several hundred farmers against the World War I draft, took place in central Oklahoma.
  • November 24, 1917: In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 9 members of the Milwaukee Police Department were killed by a bomb, the most fatal single event in U.S. police history until the September 11, 2001, attacks.
  • December 26, 1917: President Woodrow Wilson used the Federal Possession and Control Act to place most U.S. railroads under the United States Railroad Administration, hoping to more efficiently transport troops and materials for the war effort.
  • January 8, 1918: Woodrow Wilson delivered his Fourteen Points speech.
  • March 4, 1918: A soldier at Camp Fuston, Kansas, fell sick with the first confirmed case of the Spanish flu.
  • April 3, 1918 "The American's Creed" is the title of a resolution passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on this date. It is a statement written in 1917 by William Tyler Page as an entry into a patriotic contest. Source:The American's Creed at USHistory.org
  • May 15, 1918: The United States Post Office Department (later renamed the United States Postal Service) began the first regular airmail service in the world (between New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, DC).
  • October 8, 1918: World War I: In the Argonne Forest in France, U.S. Corporal Alvin C. York almost single-handedly killed 25 German soldiers and captures 132.
  • December 4, 1918: U.S. President Woodrow Wilson sailed for the Paris Peace Conference, becoming the first U.S. president to travel to Europe while in office.
  • January 6, 1919: Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States, died.
  • January 15, 1919: The Boston Molasses Disaster: A wave of molasses released from an exploding storage tank sweeps through Boston, killing 21 and injuring 150.
  • February 25, 1919: Oregon placed a 1 cent per U.S. gallon (.26¢/L) tax on gasoline, becoming the first U.S. state to levy a gasoline tax.

Major legislation

{{main article|List of United States federal legislation#65th United States Congress}}
  • April 6, 1917: Declaration of war against Germany, Sess. 1 ch. 1, {{USStat|40|1}}
  • April 24, 1917: First Liberty Bond Act, Sess. 1, ch. 4, {{USStat|40|35}}
  • May 12, 1917: Enemy Vessel Confiscation Joint Resolution, {{USPL|65|2}}, {{USStat|40|75}}
  • May 12, 1917: First Army Appropriations Act of 1917, {{USStat|40|69}}
  • May 18, 1917: Selective Service Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 15, {{USStat|40|76}}
  • May 29, 1917: Esch Car Service Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 23, {{USStat|40|101}}
  • June 15, 1917: Emergency Shipping Fund Act of 1917, c. 29, {{USStat|40|182}}
  • June 15, 1917: Second Army Appropriations Act of 1917, {{USStat|40|188}}
  • June 15, 1917: Espionage Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 30, {{USStat|40|217}} (incl. title XI: Search Warrant Act of 1917)
  • August 8, 1917: River and Harbor Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 49, {{USStat|40|250}}
  • August 10, 1917: Priority of Shipments Act of 1917 (Obstruction of Interstate Commerce Act of 1917), Sess. 1, ch. 51, {{USStat|40|272}}
  • August 10, 1917: Food and Fuel Control Act (Lever Act), Sess. 1, ch. 53, {{USStat|40|27}}
  • October 1, 1917: Second Liberty Bond Act, Sess. 1, ch. 56, {{USStat|40|288}}
  • October 1, 1917: Aircraft Board Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 61, {{USStat|40|296}}
  • October 3, 1917: War Revenue Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 63, {{USStat|40|300}}
  • October 5, 1917: Repatriation Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 68, {{USStat|40|340}}
  • October 6, 1917: Federal Explosives Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 83, {{USStat|40|385}}
  • October 6, 1917: War Risk Insurance Act of 1917, Sess. 1, ch. 105, {{USStat|40|398}}
  • October 6, 1917: International Emergency Economic Powers Act (Trading with the Enemy Act), Sess. 1, ch. 106, {{USStat|40|411}}
  • December 7, 1917: Declaration of war against Austria-Hungary, Sess. 2, ch. 1, {{USStat|40|429}}
  • February 24, 1918: Revenue Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 18, {{USStat|40|1057}}
  • March 8, 1918: Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act, Sess. 2, ch. 20, {{USStat|40|440}}
  • March 19, 1918: Standard Time Act of 1918 (Calder Act), Sess. 2, ch. 24, {{USStat|40|450}}
  • March 21, 1918: Federal Control Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 25, {{USStat|40|451}}
  • April 4, 1918: Third Liberty Bond Act, Sess. 2, ch. 44, {{USStat|40|502}}
  • April 5, 1918: War Finance Corporation Act, Sess. 2, ch. 45, {{USStat|40|506}}
  • April 10, 1918: Webb-Pomerene Act, Sess. 2, ch. 50, {{USStat|40|516}}
  • April 18, 1918: American Forces Abroad Indemnity Act, Sess. 2, ch. 57, {{USStat|40|532}}
  • April 20, 1918: Destruction of War Materials Act, Sess. 2, ch. 59, {{USStat|40|533}}
  • April 23, 1918: Pittman Act, Sess. 2, ch. 63, {{USStat|40|535}}
  • May 9, 1918: Alien Naturalization Act, Sess. 2, ch. 69, {{USStat|40|542}}
  • May 16, 1918: Housing Act, Sess. 2, ch. 74, {{USStat|40|550}}
  • May 16, 1918: Sedition Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 75, {{USStat|40|553}}
  • May 20, 1918: Departmental Reorganization Act (Overman Act), Sess. 2, ch. 78, {{USStat|40|556}}
  • May 22, 1918: Wartime Measure Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 81, {{USStat|40|559}}
  • May 31, 1918: Saulsbury Resolution, Sess. 2, ch. 90, {{USStat|40|593}}
  • June 27, 1918: Veterans Rehabilitation Act (Smith-Sears Act), Sess. 2, ch. 107, {{USStat|40|617}}
  • July 3, 1918: Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 128, {{USStat|40|755}}
  • July 9, 1918: Fourth Liberty Bond Act, Sess. 2, ch. 142, {{USStat|40|844}}
  • July 9, 1918: Army Appropriations Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 143, {{USStat|40|845}} (incl. ch. 15: Public Health and Research Act of 1918 (Chamberlain-Kahn Act))
  • July 18, 1918: River and Harbor Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 155, {{USStat|40|904}}
  • July 18, 1918: Charter Rate and Requisition Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 157, {{USStat|40|913}}
  • October 16, 1918: Immigration Act of 1918 (Dillingham-Hardwick Act), Sess. 2, ch. 186, {{USStat|40|1012}}
  • October 16, 1918: Corrupt Practices Act of 1918 (Gerry Act), Sess. 2, ch. 187, {{USStat|40|1013}}
  • November 7, 1918: National Bank Consolidation Act of 1918, Sess. 2, ch. 209, {{USStat|40|1043}}
  • November 21, 1918: Food Production Stimulation Act (War-Time Prohibition Act), Sess. 2, ch. 212, {{USStat|40|1045}}
  • February 24, 1919: Child Labor Act of 1919, Sess. 3, ch. 18, {{USStat|40|1138}}
  • February 26, 1919: Grand Canyon National Park Act of 1919, Sess. 3, ch. 44, {{USStat|40|1178}}
  • February 26, 1919: Acadia National Park Act of 1919, Sess. 3, ch. 45, {{USStat|40|1178}}
  • March 2, 1919: War Risk Insurance Act of 1919 (War Minerals Relief Act of 1919, Dent Act), Sess. 3, ch. 94, {{USStat|40|1272}}
  • March 2, 1919: River and Harbors Act of 1919, Sess. 3, ch. 95, {{USStat|40|1275}}
  • March 3, 1919: Hospitalization Act of 1919, Sess. 3, ch. 98, {{USStat|40|1302}}
  • March 3, 1919: Fifth Liberty Bond Act, Sess. 3, ch. 100, {{USStat|40|1309}}
  • March 4, 1919: Wheat Price Guarantee Act, Sess. 3, ch. 125, {{USStat|40|1348}}

Constitutional amendments

  • December 18, 1917: Approved an amendment to the United States Constitution declaring the production, transport, and sale of alcohol (though not the consumption or private possession) illegal, and submitted it to the state legislatures for ratification
    • Amendment was later ratified on January 16, 1919, becoming the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

Party summary

Senate

{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=65
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Republican
| abb1=D
| abb2=R
| seats1_last=55
| seats2_last=41
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=54
| seats2_begin=42
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=49
| seats2_end=47
| seats_vacant_end=0
| seats1_next=47
| seats2_next=49
| seats_vacant_next=0
}}

House of Representatives

AffiliationParty
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
Democratic Progressive Socialist Prohibition Republican Farmer Labor Vacant
End of previous Congress230611 196 0 435 0
Begin213311 2150 434 1
End211 212 429 6
Final voting share50.2% 0.2% 49.5% 0.0%
Beginning of the next Congress 192 0 1 1240 1 435 0

Leadership

Senate

  • President: Thomas R. Marshall (D)
  • President pro tempore: Willard Saulsbury, Jr. (D)
  • Majority Whip: J. Hamilton Lewis (D)
  • Minority Whip: Charles Curtis (R)
  • Republican Conference Chairman: Jacob Harold Gallinger (until August 17, 1918)
    • Henry Cabot Lodge (from 1918)
  • Democratic Caucus Chair : Thomas S. Martin
  • Republican Conference Secretary: James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr.
  • Democratic Caucus Secretary: William H. King

House of Representatives

  • Speaker: Champ Clark (D)

Majority (Democratic) leadership

  • Majority Leader: Claude Kitchin
  • Majority Whip: vacant
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: Edward W. Saunders
  • Democratic Campaign Committee Chairman: Scott Ferris

Minority (Republican) leadership

  • Minority Leader: James R. Mann
  • Minority Whip: Charles M. Hamilton
  • Republican Conference Chair: William S. Greene

Members

Skip to House of Representatives, below

Senate

Because of the 17th Amendment, starting in 1914 U.S. Senators were directly elected instead of by the state legislatures. However, this did not affect the terms of U.S. Senators whose terms had started before that Amendment took effect, In this Congress, Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1918; Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1920; and Class 1 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1922.

{{col-begin}}{{col-break}}

Alabama

  • 2. John H. Bankhead (D)
  • 3. Oscar W. Underwood (D)

Arizona

  • 1. Henry F. Ashurst (D)
  • 3. Marcus A. Smith (D)

Arkansas

  • 2. Joseph T. Robinson (D)
  • 3. Lee S. Overman (D)

California

  • 1. Hiram Johnson (R)[1]
  • 3. James D. Phelan (D)

Colorado

  • 2. John F. Shafroth (D)
  • 3. Charles S. Thomas (D)

Connecticut

  • 1. George P. McLean (R)
  • 3. Frank B. Brandegee (R)

Delaware

  • 1. Josiah O. Wolcott (D)
  • 2. Willard Saulsbury, Jr. (D)

Florida

  • 1. Park Trammell (D)
  • 3. Duncan U. Fletcher (D)

Georgia

  • 2. Thomas W. Hardwick (D)
  • 3. Hoke Smith (D)

Idaho

  • 2. William E. Borah (R)
  • 3. James H. Brady (R), until January 13, 1918
    • John F. Nugent (D), from January 22, 1918

Illinois

  • 2. James Hamilton Lewis (D)
  • 3. Lawrence Y. Sherman (R)

Indiana

  • 1. Harry S. New (R)
  • 3. James E. Watson (R)

Iowa

  • 2. William S. Kenyon (R)
  • 3. Albert B. Cummins (R)

Kansas

  • 2. William H. Thompson (D)
  • 3. Charles Curtis (R)

Kentucky

  • 2. Ollie M. James (D), until August 28, 1918
    • George B. Martin (D), from September 7, 1918
  • 3. J. C. W. Beckham (D)

Louisiana

  • 2. Joseph E. Ransdell (D)
  • 3. Robert F. Broussard (D), until April 12, 1918
    • Walter Guion (D), April 22, 1918 – November 5, 1918
    • Edward J. Gay (D), from November 6, 1918

Maine

  • 1. Frederick Hale (R)
  • 2. Bert M. Fernald (R)

Maryland

  • 1. Joseph I. France (R)
  • 3. John Walter Smith (D)

Massachusetts

  • 1. Henry Cabot Lodge (R)
  • 2. John W. Weeks (R)

Michigan

  • 1. Charles E. Townsend (R)
  • 2. William Alden Smith (R)

Minnesota

  • 1. Frank B. Kellogg (R)
  • 2. Knute Nelson (R)

Mississippi

  • 1. John Sharp Williams (D)
  • 2. James K. Vardaman (D)

Missouri

  • 1. James A. Reed (D)
  • 3. William J. Stone (D), until April 14, 1918
    • Xenophon P. Wilfley (D), April 30, 1918 – November 5, 1918
    • Selden P. Spencer (R), from November 6, 1918

Montana

  • 1. Henry L. Myers (D)
  • 2. Thomas J. Walsh (D)

Nebraska

  • 1. Gilbert M. Hitchcock (D)
  • 2. George W. Norris (R)
{{col-break}}

Nevada

  • 1. Key Pittman (D)
  • 3. Francis G. Newlands (D), until December 24, 1917
    • Charles B. Henderson (D), from January 12, 1918

New Hampshire

  • 2. Henry F. Hollis (D)
  • 3. Jacob H. Gallinger (R), until August 17, 1918
    • Irving W. Drew (R), September 2, 1918 – November 5, 1918
    • George H. Moses (R), from November 6, 1918

New Jersey

  • 1. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen (R)
  • 2. William Hughes (D), until February 27 1918
    • David Baird (R), from February 23, 1918

New Mexico

  • 1. Andrieus A. Jones (D)
  • 2. Albert B. Fall (R)

New York

  • 1. William M. Calder (R)
  • 3. James W. Wadsworth, Jr. (R)

North Carolina

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

North Dakota

  • 1. Porter J. McCumber (R)
  • 3. Asle J. Gronna (R)

Ohio

  • 1. Atlee Pomerene (D)
  • 3. Warren G. Harding (R)

Oklahoma

  • 2. Robert L. Owen (D)
  • 3. Thomas P. Gore (D)

Oregon

  • 2. Harry Lane (D), until May 23, 1917
    • Charles L. McNary (R), May 29, 1917 – November 5, 1918
    • Frederick W. Mulkey (R), November 6, 1918 – December 17, 1918
    • Charles L. McNary (R), from December 18, 1918
  • 3. George E. Chamberlain (D)

Pennsylvania

  • 1. Philander C. Knox (R)
  • 3. Boies Penrose (R)

Rhode Island

  • 1. Peter G. Gerry (D)
  • 2. LeBaron B. Colt (R)

South Carolina

  • 2. Benjamin R. Tillman (D), until July 3, 1918
    • Christie Benet (D), July 6, 1918 – November 5, 1918
    • William P. Pollock (D), from November 6, 1918
  • 3. Ellison D. Smith (D)

South Dakota

  • 2. Thomas Sterling (R)
  • 3. Edwin S. Johnson (D)

Tennessee

  • 1. Kenneth D. McKellar (D)
  • 2. John K. Shields (D)

Texas

  • 1. Charles A. Culberson (D)
  • 2. Morris Sheppard (D)

Utah

  • 1. William H. King (D)
  • 3. Reed Smoot (R)

Vermont

  • 1. Carroll S. Page (R)
  • 3. William P. Dillingham (R)

Virginia

  • 1. Claude A. Swanson (D)
  • 2. Thomas S. Martin (D)

Washington

  • 1. Miles Poindexter (R)
  • 3. Wesley L. Jones (R)

West Virginia

  • 1. Howard Sutherland (R)
  • 2. Nathan Goff (R)

Wisconsin

  • 1. Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (R)
  • 3. Paul O. Husting (D), until October 21, 1917
    • Irvine Lenroot (R), from April 18, 1918

Wyoming

  • 1. John B. Kendrick (D)
  • 2. Francis E. Warren (R)
{{Col-break}}{{col-end}}

House of Representatives

{{col-begin}}{{col-break}}

Alabama

  • {{ushr|Alabama|1|1}}. Oscar Lee Gray (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|2|2}}. S. Hubert Dent, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|3|3}}. Henry B. Steagall (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|4|4}}. Fred L. Blackmon (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|5|5}}. J. Thomas Heflin (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|6|6}}. William B. Oliver (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|7|7}}. John L. Burnett (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|8|8}}. Edward B. Almon (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|9|9}}. George Huddleston (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|10|10}}. William B. Bankhead (D)

Arizona

  • {{ushr|Arizona|AL|At-large}}. Carl Hayden (D)

Arkansas

  • {{ushr|Arkansas|1|1}}. Thaddeus H. Caraway (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|2|2}}. William A. Oldfield (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|3|3}}. John N. Tillman (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|4|4}}. Otis Wingo (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|5|5}}. Henderson M. Jacoway (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|6|6}}. Samuel M. Taylor (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|7|7}}. William S. Goodwin (D)

California

  • {{ushr|California|1|1}}. Clarence F. Lea (D)
  • {{ushr|California|2|2}}. John E. Raker (D)
  • {{ushr|California|3|3}}. Charles F. Curry (R)
  • {{ushr|California|4|4}}. Julius Kahn (R)
  • {{ushr|California|5|5}}. John I. Nolan (R)
  • {{ushr|California|6|6}}. John A. Elston (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|California|7|7}}. Denver S. Church (D)
  • {{ushr|California|8|8}}. Everis A. Hayes (R)
  • {{ushr|California|9|9}}. Charles H. Randall (Proh.)
  • {{ushr|California|10|10}}. Henry Z. Osborne (R)
  • {{ushr|California|11|11}}. William Kettner (D)

Colorado

  • {{ushr|Colorado|1|1}}. Benjamin Clark Hilliard (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|2|2}}. Charles Bateman Timberlake (R)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|3|3}}. Edward Keating (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|4|4}}. Edward Thomas Taylor (D)

Connecticut

  • {{ushr|Connecticut|1|1}}. Augustine Lonergan (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|2|2}}. Richard P. Freeman (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|3|3}}. John Q. Tilson (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|4|4}}. Ebenezer J. Hill (R), until September 27, 1917
    • Schuyler Merritt (R), from November 6, 1917
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|5|5}}. James P. Glynn (R)

Delaware

  • {{ushr|Delaware|AL|At-large}}. Albert F. Polk (D)

Florida

  • {{ushr|Florida|1|1}}. Herbert J. Drane (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|2|2}}. Frank Clark (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|3|3}}. Walter Kehoe (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|4|4}}. William J. Sears (D)

Georgia

  • {{ushr|Georgia|1|1}}. James W. Overstreet (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|2|2}}. Frank Park (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|3|3}}. Charles R. Crisp (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|4|4}}. William C. Adamson (D), until December 18, 1917
    • William C. Wright (D), from January 16, 1918
  • {{ushr|Georgia|5|5}}. William S. Howard (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|6|6}}. James W. Wise (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|7|7}}. Gordon Lee (congressman) (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|8|8}}. Charles H. Brand (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|9|9}}. Thomas Montgomery Bell (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|10|10}}. Carl Vinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|11|11}}. John R. Walker (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|12|12}}. William W. Larsen (D)

Idaho

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

Illinois

  • {{ushr|Illinois|1|1}}. Martin B. Madden (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|2|2}}. James R. Mann (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|3|3}}. William W. Wilson (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|4|4}}. Charles Martin (D), until October 28, 1917
    • John W. Rainey (D), from April 2, 1918
  • {{ushr|Illinois|5|5}}. Adolph J. Sabath (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|6|6}}. James McAndrews (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|7|7}}. Niels Juul (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|8|8}}. Thomas Gallagher (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|9|9}}. Frederick A. Britten (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|10|10}}. George E. Foss (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|11|11}}. Ira C. Copley (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|12|12}}. Charles Eugene Fuller (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|13|13}}. John C. McKenzie (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|14|14}}. William J. Graham (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|15|15}}. Edward John King (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|16|16}}. Clifford Ireland (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|17|17}}. John A. Sterling (R), until October 17, 1918
  • {{ushr|Illinois|18|18}}. Joseph G. Cannon (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|19|19}}. William B. McKinley (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|20|20}}. Henry T. Rainey (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|21|21}}. Loren E. Wheeler (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|22|22}}. William A. Rodenberg (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|23|23}}. Martin D. Foster (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|24|24}}. Thomas S. Williams (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|25|25}}. Edward E. Denison (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|AL|At-large}}. Medill McCormick (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|AL|At-large}}. William E. Mason (R)

Indiana

  • {{ushr|Indiana|1|1}}. George K. Denton (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|2|2}}. Oscar E. Bland (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|3|3}}. William E. Cox (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|4|4}}. Lincoln Dixon (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|5|5}}. Everett Sanders (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|6|6}}. Daniel Webster Comstock (R), until May 19, 1917
    • Richard N. Elliott (R), from June 29, 1917
  • {{ushr|Indiana|7|7}}. Merrill Moores (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|8|8}}. Albert H. Vestal (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|9|9}}. Fred S. Purnell (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|10|10}}. William R. Wood (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|11|11}}. Milton Kraus (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|12|12}}. Louis W. Fairfield (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|13|13}}. Henry A. Barnhart (D)

Iowa

  • {{ushr|Iowa|1|1}}. Charles A. Kennedy (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|2|2}}. Harry E. Hull (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|3|3}}. Burton E. Sweet (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|4|4}}. Gilbert N. Haugen (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|5|5}}. James W. Good (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|6|6}}. C. William Ramseyer (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|7|7}}. Cassius C. Dowell (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|8|8}}. Horace M. Towner (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|9|9}}. William R. Green (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|10|10}}. Frank P. Woods (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|11|11}}. George Cromwell Scott (R)

Kansas

  • {{ushr|Kansas|1|1}}. Daniel Read Anthony, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|2|2}}. Edward C. Little (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|3|3}}. Philip P. Campbell (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|4|4}}. Dudley Doolittle (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|5|5}}. Guy T. Helvering (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|6|6}}. John R. Connelly (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|7|7}}. Jouett Shouse (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|8|8}}. William A. Ayres (D)

Kentucky

  • {{ushr|Kentucky|1|1}}. Alben Barkley (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|2|2}}. David Hayes Kincheloe (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|3|3}}. Robert Y. Thomas, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|4|4}}. Ben Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|5|5}}. J. Swagar Sherley (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|6|6}}. Arthur B. Rouse (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|7|7}}. J. Campbell Cantrill (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|8|8}}. Harvey Helm (D), until March 3, 1919
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|9|9}}. William Jason Fields (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|10|10}}. John W. Langley (R)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|11|11}}. Caleb Powers (R)

Louisiana

  • {{ushr|Louisiana|1|1}}. Albert Estopinal (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|2|2}}. Henry Garland Dupré (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|3|3}}. Whitmell P. Martin (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. John Thomas Watkins (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|5|5}}. Riley Joseph Wilson (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|6|6}}. Jared Y. Sanders, Sr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|7|7}}. Ladislas Lazaro (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|8|8}}. James Benjamin Aswell (D)

Maine

  • {{ushr|Maine|1|1}}. Louis B. Goodall (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|2|2}}. Wallace H. White, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|3|3}}. John A. Peters (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|4|4}}. Ira G. Hersey (R)

Maryland

  • {{ushr|Maryland|1|1}}. Jesse D. Price (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|2|2}}. Joshua Frederick Cockey Talbott (D), until October 5, 1918
    • Carville Benson (D), from November 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|Maryland|3|3}}. Charles P. Coady (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|4|4}}. J. Charles Linthicum (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|5|5}}. Sydney Emanuel Mudd II (R)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|6|6}}. Frederick N. Zihlman (R)

Massachusetts

  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|1|1}}. Allen T. Treadway (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|2|2}}. Frederick H. Gillett (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|3|3}}. Calvin D. Paige (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|4|4}}. Samuel E. Winslow (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|5|5}}. John J. Rogers (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|6|6}}. Augustus P. Gardner (R), until May 15, 1917
    • Willfred W. Lufkin (R), from November 6, 1917
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|7|7}}. Michael F. Phelan (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|8|8}}. Frederick W. Dallinger (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|9|9}}. Alvan T. Fuller (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|10|10}}. Peter F. Tague (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|11|11}}. George H. Tinkham (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|12|12}}. James A. Gallivan (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|13|13}}. William H. Carter (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|14|14}}. Richard Olney II (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|15|15}}. William S. Greene (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|16|16}}. Joseph Walsh (R)

Michigan

  • {{ushr|Michigan|1|1}}. Frank E. Doremus (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|2|2}}. Mark R. Bacon (R), until December 13, 1917
    • Samuel Beakes (D), from December 13, 1917
  • {{ushr|Michigan|3|3}}. John M. C. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|4|4}}. Edward L. Hamilton (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|5|5}}. Carl Mapes (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|6|6}}. Patrick H. Kelley (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|7|7}}. Louis C. Cramton (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|8|8}}. Joseph W. Fordney (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|9|9}}. James C. McLaughlin (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|10|10}}. Gilbert A. Currie (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|11|11}}. Frank D. Scott (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|12|12}}. W. Frank James (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|13|13}}. Charles Archibald Nichols (R)

Minnesota

  • {{ushr|Minnesota|1|1}}. Sydney Anderson (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|2|2}}. Franklin Ellsworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|3|3}}. Charles Russell Davis (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|4|4}}. Carl Van Dyke (D)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|5|5}}. Ernest Lundeen (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|6|6}}. Harold Knutson (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|7|7}}. Andrew Volstead (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|8|8}}. Clarence B. Miller (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|9|9}}. Halvor Steenerson (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|10|10}}. Thomas D. Schall (R)

Mississippi

  • {{ushr|Mississippi|1|1}}. Ezekiel S. Candler, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|2|2}}. Hubert D. Stephens (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|3|3}}. Benjamin G. Humphreys II (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|4|4}}. Thomas U. Sisson (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|5|5}}. William Webb Venable (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|6|6}}. Pat Harrison (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|7|7}}. Percy E. Quin (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|8|8}}. James W. Collier (D)

Missouri

  • {{ushr|Missouri|1|1}}. Milton A. Romjue (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|2|2}}. William W. Rucker (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|3|3}}. Joshua Willis Alexander (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|4|4}}. Charles F. Booher (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|5|5}}. William Patterson Borland (D), until February 20, 1919
  • {{ushr|Missouri|6|6}}. Clement C. Dickinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|7|7}}. Courtney W. Hamlin (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|8|8}}. Dorsey W. Shackleford (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|9|9}}. Champ Clark (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|10|10}}. Jacob Edwin Meeker (R), until October 16, 1918
    • Frederick Essen (R), from November 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|Missouri|11|11}}. William Leo Igoe (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|12|12}}. Leonidas C. Dyer (R)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|13|13}}. Walter Lewis Hensley (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|14|14}}. Joseph J. Russell (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|15|15}}. Perl D. Decker (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|16|16}}. Thomas L. Rubey (D)

Montana

  • {{ushr|Montana|AL|At-large}}. John M. Evans (D)
  • {{ushr|Montana|AL|At-large}}. Jeannette Rankin (R)

Nebraska

  • {{ushr|Nebraska|1|1}}. C. Frank Reavis (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|2|2}}. Charles O. Lobeck (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|3|3}}. Dan V. Stephens (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|4|4}}. Charles Henry Sloan (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|5|5}}. Ashton C. Shallenberger (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|6|6}}. Moses P. Kinkaid (R)

Nevada

  • {{ushr|Nevada|AL|At-large}}. Edwin E. Roberts (R)

New Hampshire

  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|1|1}}. Cyrus A. Sulloway (R), until March 11, 1917
    • Sherman Everett Burroughs (R), from May 29, 1917
  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|2|2}}. Edward Hills Wason (R)
{{col-break}}

New Jersey

  • {{ushr|New Jersey|1|1}}. William J. Browning (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|2|2}}. Isaac Bacharach (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|3|3}}. Thomas J. Scully (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|4|4}}. Elijah C. Hutchinson (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|5|5}}. John H. Capstick (R), until March 17, 1918
    • William F. Birch (R), from November 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|6|6}}. John R. Ramsey (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|7|7}}. Dow H. Drukker (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|8|8}}. Edward W. Gray (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|9|9}}. Richard W. Parker (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|10|10}}. Frederick R. Lehlbach (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|11|11}}. John J. Eagan (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|12|12}}. James A. Hamill (D)

New Mexico

  • {{ushr|New Mexico|AL|At-large}}. William Bell Walton (D)

New York

  • {{ushr|New York|1|1}}. Frederick C. Hicks (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|2|2}}. C. Pope Caldwell (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|3|3}}. Joseph V. Flynn (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|4|4}}. Harry H. Dale (D), until January 6, 1919
  • {{ushr|New York|5|5}}. James P. Maher (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|6|6}}. Frederick W. Rowe (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|7|7}}. John J. Fitzgerald (D), until December 31, 1917
    • John J. Delaney (D), from March 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|New York|8|8}}. Daniel J. Griffin (D), until December 31, 1917
    • William E. Cleary (D), from March 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|New York|9|9}}. Oscar W. Swift (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|10|10}}. Reuben L. Haskell (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|11|11}}. Daniel J. Riordan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|12|12}}. Meyer London (Soc.)
  • {{ushr|New York|13|13}}. Christopher D. Sullivan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|14|14}}. Fiorello H. LaGuardia (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|15|15}}. Thomas Francis Smith (D), from April 12, 1917
  • {{ushr|New York|16|16}}. Peter J. Dooling (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|17|17}}. John F. Carew (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|18|18}}. George B. Francis (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|19|19}}. Walter M. Chandler (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|20|20}}. Isaac Siegel (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|21|21}}. George Murray Hulbert (D), until January 1, 1918
    • Jerome F. Donovan (D), from March 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|New York|22|22}}. Henry Bruckner (D), until December 31, 1917
    • Anthony Griffin (D), from March 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|New York|23|23}}. Daniel C. Oliver (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|24|24}}. Benjamin L. Fairchild (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|25|25}}. James W. Husted (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|26|26}}. Edmund Platt (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|27|27}}. Charles B. Ward (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|28|28}}. Rollin B. Sanford (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|29|29}}. James S. Parker (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|30|30}}. George R. Lunn (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|31|31}}. Bertrand H. Snell (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|32|32}}. Luther W. Mott (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|33|33}}. Homer P. Snyder (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|34|34}}. George W. Fairchild (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|35|35}}. Walter W. Magee (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|36|36}}. Norman J. Gould (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|37|37}}. Harry H. Pratt (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|38|38}}. Thomas B. Dunn (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|39|39}}. Archie D. Sanders (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|40|40}}. S. Wallace Dempsey (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|41|41}}. Charles B. Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|42|42}}. William F. Waldow (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|43|43}}. Charles M. Hamilton (R)

North Carolina

  • {{ushr|North Carolina|1|1}}. John Humphrey Small (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|2|2}}. Claude Kitchin (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|3|3}}. George E. Hood (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|4|4}}. Edward W. Pou (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|5|5}}. Charles M. Stedman (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|6|6}}. Hannibal L. Godwin (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|7|7}}. Leonidas D. Robinson (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|8|8}}. Robert L. Doughton (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|9|9}}. Edwin Y. Webb (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|10|10}}. Zebulon Weaver (D), until March 1, 1919
    • James Jefferson Britt (R), from March 1, 1919

North Dakota

  • {{ushr|North Dakota|1|1}}. Henry Thomas Helgesen (R), until April 10, 1917
    • John Miller Baer (R), from July 20, 1917
  • {{ushr|North Dakota|2|2}}. George M. Young (R)
  • {{ushr|North Dakota|3|3}}. Patrick Daniel Norton (R)

Ohio

  • {{ushr|Ohio|1|1}}. Nicholas Longworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|2|2}}. Victor Heintz (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|3|3}}. Warren Gard (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|4|4}}. Benjamin F. Welty (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|5|5}}. John S. Snook (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|6|6}}. Charles C. Kearns (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|7|7}}. Simeon D. Fess (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|8|8}}. John A. Key (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|9|9}}. Isaac R. Sherwood (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|10|10}}. Robert M. Switzer (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|11|11}}. Horatio C. Claypool (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|12|12}}. Clement L. Brumbaugh (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|13|13}}. Arthur W. Overmyer (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|14|14}}. Ellsworth R. Bathrick (D), until December 23, 1917
    • Martin L. Davey (D), from November 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|Ohio|15|15}}. George White (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|16|16}}. Roscoe C. McCulloch (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|17|17}}. William A. Ashbrook (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|18|18}}. David Hollingsworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|19|19}}. John G. Cooper (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|20|20}}. William Gordon (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|21|21}}. Robert Crosser (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|22|22}}. Henry I. Emerson (R)

Oklahoma

  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|1|1}}. Thomas Alberter Chandler (R)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|2|2}}. William W. Hastings (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|3|3}}. Charles D. Carter (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|4|4}}. Tom D. McKeown (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|5|5}}. Joseph Bryan Thompson (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|6|6}}. Scott Ferris (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|7|7}}. James V. McClintic (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|8|8}}. Dick Thompson Morgan (R)

Oregon

  • {{ushr|Oregon|1|1}}. Willis C. Hawley (R)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|2|2}}. Nicholas J. Sinnott (R)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|3|3}}. Clifton N. McArthur (R)

Pennsylvania

  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|1}}. William S. Vare (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|2}}. George S. Graham (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|3}}. J. Hampton Moore (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|4}}. George W. Edmonds (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|5}}. Peter E. Costello (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|6}}. George P. Darrow (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|7}}. Thomas S. Butler (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|8}}. Henry Winfield Watson (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|9}}. William W. Griest (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|10}}. John R. Farr (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|11}}. Thomas W. Templeton (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|12}}. Robert D. Heaton (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|13}}. Arthur G. Dewalt (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|14}}. Louis T. McFadden (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|15}}. Edgar R. Kiess (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|16}}. John V. Lesher (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|17}}. Benjamin K. Focht (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|18}}. Aaron S. Kreider (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|19}}. John M. Rose (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|20}}. Andrew R. Brodbeck (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|21}}. Charles H. Rowland (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|22}}. Edward E. Robbins (R), until January 25, 1919
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|23}}. Bruce F. Sterling (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|24}}. Henry W. Temple (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|25}}. Henry A. Clark (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|26}}. Henry J. Steele (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|27}}. Nathan L. Strong (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|28}}. Orrin D. Bleakley (R), until April 3, 1917
    • Earl Hanley Beshlin (D), from November 6, 1917
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|29}}. Stephen G. Porter (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|30}}. M. Clyde Kelly (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|31|31}}. John M. Morin (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|32|32}}. Guy E. Campbell (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|AL|At-large}}. Thomas S. Crago (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|AL|At-large}}. John R.K. Scott (R), until January 5, 1919
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|AL|At-large}}. Joseph McLaughlin (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|AL|At-large}}. Mahlon M. Garland (R)

Rhode Island

  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|1|1}}. George Francis O'Shaunessy (D)
  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|2|2}}. Walter Russell Stiness (R)
  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|3|3}}. Ambrose Kennedy (R)

South Carolina

  • {{ushr|South Carolina|1|1}}. Richard S. Whaley (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|2|2}}. James F. Byrnes (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|3|3}}. Fred H. Dominick (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|4|4}}. Samuel J. Nicholls (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|5|5}}. William F. Stevenson (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|6|6}}. J. Willard Ragsdale (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|7|7}}. Asbury F. Lever (D)

South Dakota

  • {{ushr|South Dakota|1|1}}. Charles H. Dillon (R)
  • {{ushr|South Dakota|2|2}}. Royal C. Johnson (R)
  • {{ushr|South Dakota|3|3}}. Harry L. Gandy (D)

Tennessee

  • {{ushr|Tennessee|1|1}}. Sam R. Sells (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. Richard W. Austin (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|3|3}}. John Austin Moon (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|4|4}}. Cordell Hull (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. William C. Houston (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|6|6}}. Joseph W. Byrns (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|7|7}}. Lemuel Phillips Padgett (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|8|8}}. Thetus Willrette Sims (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|9|9}}. Finis J. Garrett (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|10|10}}. Hubert Fisher (D)

Texas

  • {{ushr|Texas|1|1}}. Eugene Black (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|2|2}}. Martin Dies (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|3|3}}. James Young (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|4|4}}. Sam Rayburn (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|5|5}}. Hatton W. Sumners (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|6|6}}. Rufus Hardy (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|7|7}}. Alexander W. Gregg (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|8|8}}. Joe H. Eagle (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|9|9}}. Joseph J. Mansfield (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|10|10}}. James P. Buchanan (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|11|11}}. Tom T. Connally (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|12|12}}. James Clifton Wilson (D), until March 3, 1919
  • {{ushr|Texas|13|13}}. John Marvin Jones (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|14|14}}. James L. Slayden (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|15|15}}. John Nance Garner (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|16|16}}. Thomas L. Blanton (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|AL|At-large}}. Daniel E. Garrett (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|AL|At-large}}. A. Jeff McLemore (D)

Utah

  • {{ushr|Utah|1|1}}. Milton H. Welling (D)
  • {{ushr|Utah|2|2}}. James Henry Mays (D)

Vermont

  • {{ushr|Vermont|1|1}}. Frank L. Greene (R)
  • {{ushr|Vermont|2|2}}. Porter H. Dale (R)

Virginia

  • {{ushr|Virginia|1|1}}. William Atkinson Jones (D), until April 17, 1918
    • S. Otis Bland (D), from July 2, 1918
  • {{ushr|Virginia|2|2}}. Edward Everett Holland (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|3|3}}. Andrew Jackson Montague (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|4|4}}. Walter Allen Watson (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|5|5}}. Edward W. Saunders (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|6|6}}. Carter Glass (D), until December 16, 1918
    • James P. Woods (D), from February 25, 1919
  • {{ushr|Virginia|7|7}}. Thomas W. Harrison (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|8|8}}. Charles Creighton Carlin (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|9|9}}. C. Bascom Slemp (R)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|10|10}}. Henry De Flood (D)

Washington

  • {{ushr|Washington|1|1}}. John F. Miller (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|2|2}}. Lindley H. Hadley (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|3|3}}. Albert Johnson (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|4|4}}. William Leroy La Follette (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|5|5}}. Clarence Cleveland Dill (D)

West Virginia

  • {{ushr|West Virginia|1|1}}. Matthew M. Neely (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|2|2}}. George M. Bowers (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|3|3}}. Stuart F. Reed (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|4|4}}. Harry C. Woodyard (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|5|5}}. Edward Cooper (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|6|6}}. Adam B. Littlepage (D)

Wisconsin

  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|1|1}}. Henry A. Cooper (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|2|2}}. Edward Voigt (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|3|3}}. John M. Nelson (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|4|4}}. William J. Cary (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|5|5}}. William H. Stafford (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|6|6}}. James H. Davidson (R), until August 6, 1918
    • Florian Lampert (R), from November 5, 1918
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|7|7}}. John Jacob Esch (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|8|8}}. Edward E. Browne (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|9|9}}. David G. Classon (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|10|10}}. James A. Frear (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|11|11}}. Irvine L. Lenroot (R), until April 17, 1918
    • Adolphus P. Nelson (R), from November 5, 1918

Wyoming

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

Non-voting members

  • {{ushr|Alaska Territory|AL|Alaska Territory}}. Charles A. Sulzer (D), until January 7, 1919
    • James Wickersham (R), from January 7, 1919
  • {{ushr|Hawaii Territory|AL|Hawaii Territory}}. Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole (R)
  • {{ushr|Philippines|AL|Philippines}}. Jaime C. De Veyra (Resident Commissioner), (Nac.)
  • {{ushr|Philippines|AL|Philippines}}. Teodoro R. Yangco (Resident Commissioner), (Ind.)
  • {{ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Félix Córdova Dávila (Resident Commissioner), (Unionist), from August 7, 1917
{{Col-break}}{{col-end}}

Changes in membership

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

Senate

  • Replacements: 17
    • Democratic: 3-seat net loss
    • Republican: 3-seat net gain
  • Deaths: 10
  • Resignations: 1
  • Vacancy: 1
  • Total seats with changes: 17
State Senator Reason for Vacancy Successor Date of Successor's Installation
Oregon
(2)
Harry Lane (D) Died May 23, 1917.
Successor was appointed.
Charles L. McNary (R) May 29, 1917
Wisconsin
(3)
Paul O. Husting (D) Died October 21, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Irvine Lenroot (R) April 18, 1918
Nevada
(3)
Francis G. Newlands (D) Died December 24, 1917.
Successor was appointed and subsequently elected.
Charles Henderson (D) January 12, 1918
Idaho
(3)
James H. Brady (R) Died January 13, 1918.
Successor appointed and subsequently elected.
John F. Nugent (D) January 22, 1918
New Jersey
(2)
William Hughes (D) Died January 30, 1918.
Successor appointed and subsequently elected.
David Baird Sr. (R) February 23, 1918
Louisiana
(3)
Robert F. Broussard (D) Died April 12, 1918.
Successor was appointed.
Walter Guion (D) April 22, 1918
Missouri
(3)
William J. Stone (D) Died April 14, 1918.
Successor was appointed.
Xenophon P. Wilfley (D) April 30, 1918
South Carolina
(2)
Benjamin Tillman (D) Died July 3, 1918.
Successor was appointed.
Christie Benet (D) July 6, 1918
New Hampshire
(3)
Jacob H. Gallinger (R) Died August 17, 1918.
Successor was appointed.
Irving W. Drew (R) September 2, 1918
Kentucky
(2)
Ollie M. James (D) Died August 28, 1918.
Successor was appointed.
George B. Martin (D) September 17, 1918
Louisiana
(3)
Walter Guion (D) Interim appointee replaced by elected successor.Edward Gay (D) November 6, 1918
Missouri
(3)
Xenophon P. Wilfley (D) Interim appointee replaced by elected successor.Selden P. Spencer (R) November 6, 1918
New Hampshire
(3)
Irving W. Drew (R) Interim appointee replaced by elected successor.George H. Moses (R) November 6, 1918
Oregon
(2)
Charles L. McNary (R) Interim appointee replaced by elected successor.Frederick W. Mulkey (R) November 6, 1918
South Carolina
(2)
Christie Benet (D) Interim appointee replaced by elected successor.William P. Pollock (D) November 6, 1918
Oregon
(2)
Frederick W. Mulkey (R) Resigned December 17, 1918, to give successor preferential seniority.
Successor was appointed.
Charles L. McNary (R) December 18, 1918

House of Representatives

  • replacements: 23
    • Democratic: no net change
    • Republican: no net change
  • deaths: 15
  • resignations: 12
  • contested elections: 3
  • Total seats with changes: 31
District Vacator Reason for Vacancy Successor Date of Successor's Installation
New York|15|New York 15th}} Vacant Rep. Michael F. Conry died during previous congress.
Successor was elected.
Thomas F. Smith (D) April 12, 1917
New Hampshire|1|New Hampshire 1st}}Cyrus A. Sulloway (R) Died March 11, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Sherman E. Burroughs (R) May 29, 1917
Pennsylvania|28|Pennsylvania 28th}}Orrin D. Bleakley (R) Resigned April 3, 1917, after being convicted and fined under the Federal Corrupt Practices Act.
Successor was elected.
Earl H. Beshlin (D) November 6, 1917
North Dakota|1|North Dakota 1st}}Henry T. Helgesen (R) Died April 10, 1917.
Successor was elected.
John M. Baer (R) July 20, 1917
Massachusetts|6|Massachusetts 6th}}Augustus P. Gardner (R) Resigned May 15, 1917, to join the U.S. Army.
Successor was elected.
Willfred W. Lufkin (R) November 6, 1917
Indiana|6|Indiana 6th}}Daniel W. Comstock (R) Died May 19, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Richard N. Elliott (R) June 29, 1917
Connecticut|4|Connecticut 4th}}Ebenezer J. Hill (R) Died September 27, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Schuyler Merritt (R) November 6, 1917
Illinois|4|Illinois 4th}}Charles Martin (D) Resigned October 28, 1917.
Successor was elected.
John W. Rainey (D) April 2, 1918
Michigan|2|Michigan 2nd}}Mark R. Bacon (R) Lost contested election December 13, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Samuel Beakes (D) December 13, 1917
Georgia|4|Georgia 4th}}William C. Adamson (D) Resigned December 18, 1917.
Successor was elected.
William C. Wright (D) January 6, 1918
Ohio|14|Ohio 14th}}Ellsworth R. Bathrick (D) Died December 23, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Martin L. Davey (D) November 5, 1918
New York|7|New York 7th}}John J. Fitzgerald (D) Resigned December 31, 1917.
Successor was elected.
John J. Delaney (D) March 5, 1918
New York|8|New York 8th}}Daniel J. Griffin (D) Resigned December 31, 1917, after being elected Sheriff of Kings County, New York.
Successor was elected.
William E. Cleary (D) March 5, 1918
New York|22|New York 22nd}}Henry Bruckner (D) Resigned December 31, 1917.
Successor was elected.
Anthony J. Griffin (D) March 5, 1918
New York|21|New York 21st}}George M. Hulbert (D) Resigned January 1, 1918, to become Commissioner of Docks and director of the Port of New York.
Successor was elected.
Jerome F. Donovan (D) March 5, 1918
New Jersey|5|New Jersey 5th}}John H. Capstick (R) Died March 17, 1918.
Successor was elected.
William F. Birch (R) November 5, 1918
Virginia|1|Virginia 1st}}William A. Jones (D) Died April 17, 1918.
Successor was elected.
S. Otis Bland (D) July 2, 1918
Wisconsin|11|Wisconsin 11th}}Irvine Lenroot (R) Resigned April 17, 1918, after being elected to the U.S. Senate.
Successor was elected.
Adolphus P. Nelson (R) November 5, 1918
Wisconsin|6|Wisconsin 6th}}James H. Davidson (R) Died August 6, 1918.
Successor was elected.
Florian Lampert (R) November 5, 1918
Maryland|2|Maryland 2nd}}Fred Talbott (D) Died October 5, 1918.
Successor was elected.
Carville Benson (D) November 5, 1918
Missouri|10|Missouri 10th}}Jacob E. Meeker (R) Died October 16, 1918.
Successor was elected.
Frederick Essen (R) November 5, 1918
Illinois|17|Illinois 17th}}John Allen Sterling (R) Died October 17, 1918.
Successor was elected.
Seat remained vacant until next Congress.
Virginia|6|Virginia 6th}}Carter Glass (D) Resigned December 6, 1918, after being appointed United States Secretary of the Treasury.James P. Woods (D) February 25, 1919
Pennsylvania|AL|Pennsylvania At-large}}John R. K. Scott (R) Resigned January 5, 1919.Seat remained vacant until next Congress.
New York|4|New York 4th}}Harry H. Dale (D) Resigned January 6, 1919, after being appointed judge of magistrate court.Seat remained vacant until next Congress.
Alaska Territory|AL|Alaska Territory}}Charles A. Sulzer (D) Lost contested election January 7, 1919.James Wickersham (R) January 7, 1919
Pennsylvania|22|Pennsylvania 22nd}}Edward E. Robbins (R) Died January 25, 1919.Seat remained vacant until next Congress.
Missouri|5|Missouri 5th}}William P. Borland (D) Died February 20, 1919.Seat remained vacant until next Congress.
North Carolina|10|North Carolina 10th}}Zebulon Weaver (D) Lost contested election March 1, 1919.
Successor was elected.
James J. Britt (R) March 1, 1919
Kentucky|8|Kentucky 8th}}Harvey Helm (D) Died March 3, 1919.Seat remained vacant until next Congress.
Texas|12|Texas 12th}}James C. Wilson (D) Resigned March 3, 1919, to become judge of United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas.Seat 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 (6 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
  • Banking and Currency
  • Canadian Relations
  • Census
  • Civil Service and Retrenchment
  • Claims
  • Coast and Insular Survey
  • Coast Defenses
  • Commerce
  • Conservation of National Resources
  • Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia
  • Cuban Relations
  • Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Departments
  • 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 the Department of Agriculture
  • Expenditures in the Department of Commerce
  • Expenditures in the Interior Department
  • Expenditures in the Department of Justice
  • Expenditures in the Department of Labor
  • Expenditures in the Navy Department
  • Expenditures in the Post Office Department
  • Expenditures in the Treasury Department
  • Expenditures in the War Department
  • Finance
  • Fisheries
  • Five Civilized Tribes of Indians
  • Foreign Relations
  • Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game
  • Geological Survey
  • Immigration
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • 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
  • Naval Affairs
  • Pacific Islands and Puerto Rico
  • Pacific Railroads
  • Patents
  • Pensions
  • Philippines
  • Post Office and Post Roads
  • 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
  • Tariff Regulation (Select)
  • Territories
  • Transportation and Sale of Meat Products (Select)
  • Transportation Routes to the Seaboard
  • Trespassers upon Indian Lands (Select)
  • Washington Railway and Electrical Company (Select)
  • Whole
  • Woman Suffrage

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 Commerce Department
  • Expenditures in the Interior Department
  • Expenditures in the Justice Department
  • Expenditures in the Labor 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
  • Flood Control
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • Indian Affairs
  • Industrial Arts and Expositions
  • Insular Affairs
  • Interstate and Foreign Commerce
  • Invalid Pensions
  • Irrigation of Arid Lands
  • Labor
  • Merchant Marine and Fisheries
  • Mileage
  • Military Affairs
  • Mines and Mining
  • Naval Affairs
  • 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
  • Roads
  • Rules
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Territories
  • War Claims
  • Water Power (Special)
  • Ways and Means
  • Woman Suffrage
  • Whole

Joint committees

  • Conditions of Indian Tribes (Special)
  • Disposition of (Useless) Executive Papers
  • Interstate Commerce
  • Postal Salaries
  • Reclassification of Salaries

Caucuses

  • Democratic (House)
  • Democratic (Senate)

Employees

  • Architect of the Capitol: Elliott Woods
  • Librarian of Congress: Herbert Putnam
  • Public Printer of the United States: Cornelius Ford

Senate

  • Chaplain: F.J. Prettyman (Methodist)
  • Secretary: James M. Baker of South Carolina
  • Sergeant at Arms: Charles P. Higgins of Indiana

House of Representatives

  • Chaplain: Henry N. Couden (Universalist)
  • Clerk: South Trimble
  • Doorkeeper: Joseph J. Sinnott
  • Postmaster: William M. Dunbar
  • Clerk at the Speaker's Table: Bennett C. Clark
    • Clarence A. Cannon
  • Reading Clerks: Patrick Joseph Haltigan (D) and N/A (R)
  • Sergeant at Arms: Robert B. Gordon

See also

  • United States elections, 1916 (elections leading to this Congress)
    • United States presidential election, 1916
    • United States Senate elections, 1916
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1916
  • United States elections, 1918 (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
    • United States Senate elections, 1918
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1918

References

1. ^Hiram Johnson (R-California) didn't take his seat until March 16, 1917, as he wanted to remain Governor of California. However, he was still elected and qualified as Senator.
  • {{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=2006-06-01 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060601025644/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/cdocuments/hd108-222/index.html |archivedate=1 June 2006 |deadurl=yes |df= }}
  • {{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=2006-06-01 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060601013451/http://clerk.house.gov/histHigh/Congressional_History/index.html |archivedate=1 June 2006 |deadurl=yes |df= }}
  • {{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 = 2006-06-01 | archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20060601011043/http://senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/stats_and_lists.htm| archivedate= 1 June 2006 | deadurl= no}}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 65th Congress, 1st Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758265;view=1up;seq=9 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 65th Congress, 2nd Session (1st Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433081797189;view=1up;seq=9 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 65th Congress, 2nd Session (2nd Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=njp.32101072369042;view=1up;seq=9 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 65th Congress, 2nd Session (3rd Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758281;view=1up;seq=11 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 65th Congress, 3rd Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758414;view=1up;seq=13 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 65th Congress, 3rd Session (Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758299;view=1up;seq=9 }}
{{USCongresses}}

1 : 65th United States Congress

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/23 0:42:19