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词条 75th United States Congress
释义

  1. Major events

  2. Major legislation

  3. Party summary

      Senate    House of Representatives  

  4. Leadership

     Senate  House of Representatives 

  5. 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  

  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 American English|date = March 2019}}{{Short description|1937–1939 U.S. Congress}}{{Use mdy dates|date = March 2019}}{{Infobox United States Congress
|number = 75th
|image = USCapitol1956.jpg
|imagename = United States Capitol
|imagedate = 1956
|start = January 3, 1937
|end = January 3, 1939
|vp = John N. Garner (D)
|pro tem = Key Pittman (D)
|speaker = William B. Bankhead (D)
|senators = 96
|reps = 435
|delegates = 5
|s-majority = Democratic
|h-majority = Democratic
|sessionnumber1 = 1st
|sessionstart1 = January 5, 1937
|sessionend1 = August 21, 1937
|sessionnumber2 = 2nd
|sessionstart2 = November 15, 1937
|sessionend2 = December 21, 1937
|sessionnumber3 = 3rd
|sessionstart3 = January 3, 1938
|sessionend3 = June 16, 1938
|previous = 74th
|next = 76th
}}

The Seventy-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 January 3, 1937, to January 3, 1939, during the first two years of the second administration of U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. (Because of the 20th amendment, starting in 1937 the new Presidential term began 17 days after that of the new Congress). The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Fifteenth United States Census, conducted in 1930. Both chambers had a Democratic supermajority.

{{TOC Limit|2}}

Major events

{{Main|1937 in the United States|1938 in the United States|1939 in the United States}}
  • January 20, 1937: President Franklin D. Roosevelt begins his second term.
  • February 5, 1937: Roosevelt's court-packing plan proposed
  • March 26, 1937: William Henry Hastie becomes the first African-American appointed to a federal judgeship.
  • April 12, 1937: National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation: The Supreme Court of the United States ruled the National Labor Relations Act constitutional.
  • July 22, 1937: Senate rejects the court-packing plan
  • October 5, 1937: Roosevelt delivers the Quarantine Speech

Major legislation

{{Main|List of United States federal legislation, 1901–2001#75th United States Congress}}
  • May 1, 1937: Neutrality Acts of 1937
  • June 3, 1937: Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act, ch. 296, {{USStat|50|246}}
  • August 2, 1937: Marihuana Tax Act of 1937 {{USStat|50|553}}
  • August 5, 1937: National Cancer Institute Act, {{USPL|75|244}}, ch. 565, {{USStat|50|559}}
  • August 17, 1937: Miller-Tydings Act, ch. 690, title VIII, {{USStat|50|693}}
  • March 21, 1938: Wheeler–Lea Act, ch. 49, {{USStat|52|111}}
  • May 24, 1938: La Follette-Bulwinkle Act, ch. 267, {{USStat|52|439}}
  • June 8, 1938: Foreign Agents Registration Act, ch. 327, {{USStat|52|631}}
  • June 21, 1938: Natural Gas Act, ch. 556, {{USStat|52|821}}
  • June 25, 1938: Civil Aeronautics Act, ch. 601, {{USStat|52|973}}
  • June 25, 1938: Fair Labor Standards Act, ch. 676, {{USStat|52|1060}}
  • June 25, 1938: Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, ch. 675, {{USStat|52|1040}}
  • June 25, 1938: Wagner-O'Day Act, ch. 697, {{USStat|52|1196}}

Party summary

Senate

{{US Congress party summary
| congress=75
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Farmer-Labor
| party3=Progressive
| partylink3 = Progressive Party (United States, 1924–34)
| party4=Republican
| party5=Independent
| abb1=D
| abb2=F
| abb3=P
| abb4=R
| abb5=I
| seats1_last=73
| seats2_last=1
| seats3_last=1
| seats4_last=21
| seats5_last=0
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=76
| seats2_begin=2
| seats3_begin=1
| seats4_begin=16
| seats5_begin=1
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=74
| seats2_end=2
| seats3_end=1
| seats4_end=18
| seats5_end=1
| seats_vacant_end=0
| seats1_next=69
| seats2_next=2
| seats3_next=1
| seats4_next=23
| seats5_next=1
| seats_vacant_next=0
}}

House of Representatives

{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=74
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Farmer-Labor
| party3=Progressive
| partylink3 = Wisconsin Progressive Party (United States)
| party4=Republican
| party5=Other
| abb1=D
| abb2=FL
| abb3=P
| abb4=R
| seats1_last=311
| seats2_last=5
| seats3_last=0
| seats4_last=114
| seats5_last=0
| seats_vacant_last=5
| seats1_begin=334
| seats2_begin=5
| seats3_begin=1
| seats4_begin=88
| seats5_begin=7
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=325
| seats2_end=5
| seats3_end=1
| seats4_end=87
| seats5_end=8
| seats_vacant_end=9
| seats1_next=256
| seats2_next=1
| seats3_next=3
| seats4_next=173
| seats5_next=1
| seats_vacant_next=0
}}

Leadership

Senate

  • President: John N. Garner (D)
  • President pro tempore: Key Pittman (D)
  • Majority Leader: Joseph Taylor Robinson (D), until July 14, 1937
    • Alben W. Barkley (D), from July 14, 1937
  • Majority Whip: J. Hamilton Lewis (D)
  • Minority Leader: Charles McNary (R)
  • Democratic Caucus Secretary: Joshua B. Lee (D)
  • Republican Conference Secretary: Frederick Hale (R)

House of Representatives

  • Speaker: William B. Bankhead (D)
  • Majority Leader: Sam Rayburn (D)
  • Minority Leader: Bertrand Snell (R)
  • Democratic Whip: Patrick J. Boland
  • Republican Whip: Harry Lane Englebright
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: Robert L. Doughton
  • Republican Conference Chairman: Roy O. Woodruff
  • Democratic Campaign Committee Chairman: Patrick H. Drewry

Members

Senate

Senators are popularly elected statewide 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 3 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1938; Class 1 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1940; and Class 2 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1942.

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

Alabama

  • 2. John H. Bankhead II (D)
  • 3. Hugo Black (D), until August 19, 1937
    • Dixie Bibb Graves (D), August 20, 1937 - January 10, 1938
    • J. Lister Hill (D), from January 11, 1938

Arizona

  • 1. Henry F. Ashurst (D)
  • 3. Carl Hayden (D)

Arkansas

  • 2. Joseph Taylor Robinson (D), until July 14, 1937
    • John E. Miller (D), from November 15, 1937
  • 3. Hattie Caraway (D)

California

  • 1. Hiram Johnson (R)
  • 3. William Gibbs McAdoo (D), until November 8, 1938
    • Thomas M. Storke (D), from November 9, 1938

Colorado

  • 2. Edwin C. Johnson (D)
  • 3. Alva B. Adams (D)

Connecticut

  • 1. Francis T. Maloney (D)
  • 3. Augustine Lonergan (D)

Delaware

  • 1. John G. Townsend, Jr. (R)
  • 2. James H. Hughes (D)

Florida

  • 1. Charles O. Andrews (D)
  • 3. Claude Pepper (D)

Georgia

  • 2. Richard Russell, Jr. (D)
  • 3. Walter F. George (D)

Idaho

  • 2. William Borah (R)
  • 3. James P. Pope (D)

Illinois

  • 2. J. Hamilton Lewis (D)
  • 3. William H. Dieterich (D)

Indiana

  • 1. Sherman Minton (D)
  • 3. Frederick Van Nuys (D)

Iowa

  • 2. Clyde L. Herring (D)
  • 3. Guy Gillette (D)

Kansas

  • 2. Arthur Capper (R)
  • 3. George McGill (D)

Kentucky

  • 2. M. M. Logan (D)
  • 3. Alben W. Barkley (D)

Louisiana

  • 2. Allen J. Ellender (D)
  • 3. John H. Overton (D)

Maine

  • 1. Frederick Hale (R)
  • 2. Wallace H. White, Jr. (R)

Maryland

  • 1. George L. P. Radcliffe (D)
  • 3. Millard Tydings (D)

Massachusetts

  • 1. David I. Walsh (D)
  • 2. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R)

Michigan

  • 1. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R)
  • 2. Prentiss M. Brown (D)

Minnesota

  • 1. Henrik Shipstead (FL)
  • 2. Ernest Lundeen (FL)

Mississippi

  • 1. Theodore G. Bilbo (D)
  • 2. Pat Harrison (D)

Missouri

  • 1. Harry S. Truman (D)
  • 3. Bennett Champ Clark (D)

Montana

  • 1. Burton K. Wheeler (D)
  • 2. James E. Murray (D)

Nebraska

  • 1. Edward R. Burke (D)
  • 2. George W. Norris (I)
{{col-break}}

Nevada

  • 1. Key Pittman (D)
  • 3. Pat McCarran (D)

New Hampshire

  • 2. Styles Bridges (R)
  • 3. Fred H. Brown (D)

New Jersey

  • 1. A. Harry Moore (D), until January 17, 1938
    • John Gerald Milton (D), January 18, 1938 - November 8, 1938
    • William Warren Barbour (R), from November 8, 1938
  • 2. William H. Smathers (D)

New Mexico

  • 1. Dennis Chávez (D)
  • 2. Carl Hatch (D)

New York

  • 1. Royal S. Copeland (D), until June 17, 1938
    • James M. Mead (D), from December 3, 1938
  • 3. Robert F. Wagner (D)

North Carolina

  • 2. Josiah Bailey (D)
  • 3. Robert Rice Reynolds (D)

North Dakota

  • 1. Lynn Frazier (R)
  • 3. Gerald Nye (R)

Ohio

  • 1. A. Victor Donahey (D)
  • 3. Robert J. Bulkley (D)

Oklahoma

  • 2. Joshua B. Lee (D)
  • 3. Elmer Thomas (D)

Oregon

  • 2. Charles L. McNary (R)
  • 3. Frederick Steiwer (R), until January 31, 1938
    • Alfred E. Reames (D), February 1, 1938 – November 8, 1938
    • Alexander G. Barry (R), from November 9, 1938

Pennsylvania

  • 1. Joseph F. Guffey (D)
  • 3. James J. Davis (R)

Rhode Island

  • 1. Peter G. Gerry (D)
  • 2. Theodore F. Green (D)

South Carolina

  • 2. James F. Byrnes (D)
  • 3. Ellison D. Smith (D)

South Dakota

  • 2. William J. Bulow (D)
  • 3. Herbert E. Hitchcock (D), until November 8, 1938
    • Gladys Pyle (R), from November 9, 1938

Tennessee

  • 1. Kenneth McKellar (D)
  • 2. Nathan L. Bachman (D), until April 23, 1937
    • George L. Berry (D), May 6, 1937 - November 8, 1938
    • Tom Stewart (D), from November 8, 1938[1]

Texas

  • 1. Tom Connally (D)
  • 2. Morris Sheppard (D)

Utah

  • 1. William H. King (D)
  • 3. Elbert D. Thomas (D)

Vermont

  • 1. Warren Austin (R)
  • 3. Ernest Willard Gibson (R)

Virginia

  • 1. Harry F. Byrd (D)
  • 2. Carter Glass (D)

Washington

  • 1. Lewis B. Schwellenbach (D)
  • 3. Homer Bone (D)

West Virginia

  • 1. Rush D. Holt, Sr. (D)
  • 2. Matthew M. Neely (D)

Wisconsin

  • 1. Robert M. La Follette Jr. (Prog.)
  • 3. F. Ryan Duffy (D)

Wyoming

  • 1. Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D)
  • 2. Henry H. Schwartz (D)
{{col-end}}

House of Representatives

The names of members of the House of Representatives are preceded by their district numbers.

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

Alabama

  • {{ushr|Alabama|1|1}}. Frank W. Boykin (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|2|2}}. J. Lister Hill (D), until January 11, 1938
    • George M. Grant (D), from June 14, 1938
  • {{ushr|Alabama|3|3}}. Henry B. Steagall (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|4|4}}. Sam Hobbs (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|5|5}}. Joe Starnes (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|6|6}}. Pete Jarman (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|7|7}}. William B. Bankhead (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|8|8}}. John J. Sparkman (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|9|9}}. Luther Patrick (D)

Arizona

  • {{ushr|Arizona|AL|At-large}} John R. Murdock (D)

Arkansas

  • {{ushr|Arkansas|1|1}}. William J. Driver (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|2|2}}. John E. Miller (D), until November 14, 1937
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|3|3}}. Claude A. Fuller (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|4|4}}. William B. Cravens (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|5|5}}. David D. Terry (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|6|6}}. John L. McClellan (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|7|7}}. Wade H. Kitchens (D)

California

  • {{ushr|California|1|1}}. Clarence F. Lea (D)
  • {{ushr|California|2|2}}. Harry L. Englebright (R)
  • {{ushr|California|3|3}}. Frank H. Buck (D)
  • {{ushr|California|4|4}}. Franck R. Havenner (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|California|5|5}}. Richard J. Welch (R)
  • {{ushr|California|6|6}}. Albert E. Carter (R)
  • {{ushr|California|7|7}}. John H. Tolan (D)
  • {{ushr|California|8|8}}. John J. McGrath (D)
  • {{ushr|California|9|9}}. Bertrand W. Gearhart (R)
  • {{ushr|California|10|10}}. Henry E. Stubbs (D), until February 28, 1937
    • Alfred J. Elliott (D), from May 4, 1937
  • {{ushr|California|11|11}}. John S. McGroarty (D)
  • {{ushr|California|12|12}}. Jerry Voorhis (D)
  • {{ushr|California|13|13}}. Charles Kramer (D)
  • {{ushr|California|14|14}}. Thomas F. Ford (D)
  • {{ushr|California|15|15}}. John M. Costello (D)
  • {{ushr|California|16|16}}. John F. Dockweiler (D)
  • {{ushr|California|17|17}}. Charles J. Colden (D), until April 15, 1938
  • {{ushr|California|18|18}}. Byron N. Scott (D)
  • {{ushr|California|19|19}}. Harry R. Sheppard (D)
  • {{ushr|California|20|20}}. Edouard V. M. Izac (D)

Colorado

  • {{ushr|Colorado|1|1}}. Lawrence Lewis (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|2|2}}. Fred N. Cummings (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|3|3}}. John A. Martin (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|4|4}}. Edward T. Taylor (D)

Connecticut

  • {{ushr|Connecticut|1|1}}. Herman P. Kopplemann (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|2|2}}. William J. Fitzgerald (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|3|3}}. James A. Shanley (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|4|4}}. Alfred N. Phillips (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|5|5}}. J. Joseph Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|AL|At-large}}. William M. Citron (D)

Delaware

  • {{ushr|Delaware|AL|At-large}}. William F. Allen (D)

Florida

  • {{ushr|Florida|1|1}}. J. Hardin Peterson (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|2|2}}. Robert A. Green (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|3|3}}. Millard F. Caldwell (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|4|4}}. J. Mark Wilcox (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|5|5}}. Joe Hendricks (D)

Georgia

  • {{ushr|Georgia|1|1}}. Hugh Peterson (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|2|2}}. Edward E. Cox (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|3|3}}. Stephen Pace (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|4|4}}. Emmett M. Owen (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|5|5}}. Robert Ramspeck (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|6|6}}. Carl Vinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|7|7}}. Malcolm C. Tarver (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|8|8}}. Braswell Deen (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|9|9}}. B. Frank Whelchel (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|10|10}}. Paul Brown (D)

Idaho

  • {{ushr|Idaho|1|1}}. Compton I. White (D)
  • {{ushr|Idaho|2|2}}. D. Worth Clark (D)

Illinois

  • {{ushr|Illinois|1|1}}. Arthur W. Mitchell (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|2|2}}. Raymond S. McKeough (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|3|3}}. Edward A. Kelly (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|4|4}}. Harry P. Beam (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|5|5}}. Adolph J. Sabath (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|6|6}}. Thomas J. O’Brien (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|7|7}}. Leonard W. Schuetz (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|8|8}}. Leo Kocialkowski (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|9|9}}. James McAndrews (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|10|10}}. Ralph E. Church (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|11|11}}. Chauncey W. Reed (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|12|12}}. Noah M. Mason (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|13|13}}. Leo E. Allen (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|14|14}}. Chester C. Thompson (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|15|15}}. Lewis L. Boyer (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|16|16}}. Everett M. Dirksen (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|17|17}}. Leslie C. Arends (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|18|18}}. James A. Meeks (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|19|19}}. Hugh M. Rigney (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|20|20}}. Scott W. Lucas (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|21|21}}. Frank W. Fries (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|22|22}}. Edwin M. Schaefer (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|23|23}}. Laurence F. Arnold (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|24|24}}. Claude V. Parsons (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|25|25}}. Kent E. Keller (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|AL|At-large}}. Edwin V. Champion (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|AL|At-large}}. Lewis M. Long (D)

Indiana

  • {{ushr|Indiana|1|1}}. William T. Schulte (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|2|2}}. Charles A. Halleck (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|3|3}}. Samuel B. Pettengill (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|4|4}}. James I. Farley (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|5|5}}. Glenn Griswold (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|6|6}}. Virginia E. Jenckes (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|7|7}}. Arthur H. Greenwood (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|8|8}}. John W. Boehne, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|9|9}}. Eugene B. Crowe (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|10|10}}. Finly H. Gray (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|11|11}}. William H. Larrabee (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|12|12}}. Louis Ludlow (D)

Iowa

  • {{ushr|Iowa|1|1}}. Edward C. Eicher (D), until December 2, 1938
  • {{ushr|Iowa|2|2}}. William S. Jacobsen (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|3|3}}. John W. Gwynne (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|4|4}}. Fred Biermann (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|5|5}}. Lloyd Thurston (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|6|6}}. Cassius C. Dowell (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|7|7}}. Otha D. Wearin (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|8|8}}. Fred C. Gilchrist (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|9|9}}. Vincent F. Harrington (D)

Kansas

  • {{ushr|Kansas|1|1}}. William P. Lambertson (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|2|2}}. U. S. Guyer (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|3|3}}. Edward White Patterson (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|4|4}}. Edward Herbert Rees (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|5|5}}. John Mills Houston (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|6|6}}. Frank Carlson (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|7|7}}. Clifford R. Hope (R)

Kentucky

  • {{ushr|Kentucky|1|1}}. Noble J. Gregory (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|2|2}}. Beverly M. Vincent (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|3|3}}. Emmet O'Neal (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|4|4}}. Edward W. Creal (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|5|5}}. Brent Spence (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|6|6}}. Virgil Chapman (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|7|7}}. Andrew J. May (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|8|8}}. Fred M. Vinson (D), until May 27, 1938
    • Joe B. Bates (D), from June 4, 1938
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|9|9}}. John M. Robsion (R)

Louisiana

  • {{ushr|Louisiana|1|1}}. Joachim O. Fernandez (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|2|2}}. Paul H. Maloney (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|3|3}}. Robert L. Mouton (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. Overton Brooks (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|5|5}}. Newt V. Mills (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|6|6}}. John K. Griffith (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|7|7}}. René L. DeRouen (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|8|8}}. A. Leonard Allen (D)

Maine

  • {{ushr|Maine|1|1}}. James C. Oliver (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|2|2}}. Clyde H. Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|3|3}}. Ralph Owen Brewster (R)

Maryland

  • {{ushr|Maryland|1|1}}. T. Alan Goldsborough (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|2|2}}. William P. Cole, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|3|3}}. Vincent L. Palmisano (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|4|4}}. Ambrose J. Kennedy (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|5|5}}. Stephen W. Gambrill (D), until December 19, 1938
  • {{ushr|Maryland|6|6}}. David J. Lewis (D)

Massachusetts

  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|1|1}}. Allen T. Treadway (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|2|2}}. Charles Clason (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|3|3}}. Joseph E. Casey (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|4|4}}. Pehr G. Holmes (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|5|5}}. Edith Nourse Rogers (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|6|6}}. George J. Bates (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|7|7}}. William P. Connery, Jr. (D), until June 15, 1937
    • Lawrence J. Connery (D), from September 28, 1937
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|8|8}}. Arthur D. Healey (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|9|9}}. Robert Luce (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|10|10}}. George H. Tinkham (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|11|11}}. John P. Higgins (D), until September 30, 1937
    • Thomas A. Flaherty (D), from December 14, 1937
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|12|12}}. John W. McCormack (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|13|13}}. Richard B. Wigglesworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|14|14}}. Joseph W. Martin, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|15|15}}. Charles L. Gifford (R)

Michigan

  • {{ushr|Michigan|1|1}}. George G. Sadowski (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|2|2}}. Earl C. Michener (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|3|3}}. Paul W. Shafer (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|4|4}}. Clare E. Hoffman (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|5|5}}. Carl E. Mapes (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|6|6}}. Andrew J. Transue (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|7|7}}. Jesse P. Wolcott (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|8|8}}. Fred L. Crawford (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|9|9}}. Albert J. Engel (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|10|10}}. Roy O. Woodruff (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|11|11}}. John F. Luecke (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|12|12}}. Frank Hook (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|13|13}}. George D. O'Brien (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|14|14}}. Louis C. Rabaut (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|15|15}}. John D. Dingell, Sr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|16|16}}. John Lesinski, Sr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|17|17}}. George A. Dondero (R)

Minnesota

  • {{ushr|Minnesota|1|1}}. August H. Andresen (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|2|2}}. Elmer Ryan (D)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|3|3}}. Henry Teigan (FL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|4|4}}. Melvin Maas (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|5|5}}. Dewey Johnson (FL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|6|6}}. Harold Knutson (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|7|7}}. Paul John Kvale (FL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|8|8}}. John Bernard (FL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|9|9}}. Rich T. Buckler (FL)

Mississippi

  • {{ushr|Mississippi|1|1}}. John E. Rankin (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|2|2}}. Wall Doxey (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|3|3}}. William M. Whittington (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|4|4}}. Aaron L. Ford (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|5|5}}. Ross A. Collins (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|6|6}}. William M. Colmer (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|7|7}}. Dan R. McGehee (D)

Missouri

  • {{ushr|Missouri|1|1}}. Milton A. Romjue (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|2|2}}. William L. Nelson (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|3|3}}. Richard M. Duncan (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|4|4}}. C. Jasper Bell (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|5|5}}. Joseph B. Shannon (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|6|6}}. Reuben T. Wood (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|7|7}}. Dewey Short (R)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|8|8}}. Clyde Williams (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|9|9}}. Clarence Cannon (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|10|10}}. Orville Zimmerman (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|11|11}}. Thomas C. Hennings, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|12|12}}. Charles Arthur Anderson (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|13|13}}. John J. Cochran (D)

Montana

  • {{ushr|Montana|1|1}}. Jerry J. O'Connell (D)
  • {{ushr|Montana|2|2}}. James F. O'Connor (D)

Nebraska

  • {{ushr|Nebraska|1|1}}. Henry Carl Luckey (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|2|2}}. Charles F. McLaughlin (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|3|3}}. Karl Stefan (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|4|4}}. Charles Gustav Binderup (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|5|5}}. Harry B. Coffee (D)

Nevada

  • {{ushr|Nevada|AL|At-large}}. James G. Scrugham (D)

New Hampshire

  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|1|1}}. Arthur B. Jenks (R), until June 9, 1938
    • Alphonse Roy (D), from June 9, 1938
  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|2|2}}. Charles W. Tobey (R)
{{col-break}}

New Jersey

  • {{ushr|New Jersey|1|1}}. Charles A. Wolverton (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|2|2}}. Elmer H. Wene (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|3|3}}. William H. Sutphin (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|4|4}}. D. Lane Powers (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|5|5}}. Charles A. Eaton (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|6|6}}. Donald H. McLean (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|7|7}}. J. Parnell Thomas (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|8|8}}. George N. Seger (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|9|9}}. Edward A. Kenney (D), until January 27, 1938
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|10|10}}. Fred A. Hartley, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|11|11}}. Edward L. O'Neill (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|12|12}}. Frank W. Towey, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|13|13}}. Mary T. Norton (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|14|14}}. Edward J. Hart (D)

New Mexico

  • {{ushr|New Mexico|AL|At-large}}. John J. Dempsey (D)

New York

  • {{ushr|New York|1|1}}. Robert L. Bacon (R), until September 12, 1938
  • {{ushr|New York|2|2}}. William B. Barry (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|3|3}}. Joseph L. Pfeifer (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|4|4}}. Thomas H. Cullen (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|5|5}}. Marcellus H. Evans (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|6|6}}. Andrew L. Somers (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|7|7}}. John J. Delaney (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|8|8}}. Donald L. O'Toole (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|9|9}}. Eugene J. Keogh (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|10|10}}. Emanuel Celler (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|11|11}}. James A. O'Leary (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|12|12}}. Samuel Dickstein (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|13|13}}. Christopher D. Sullivan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|14|14}}. William I. Sirovich (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|15|15}}. John J. Boylan (D), until October 5, 1938
  • {{ushr|New York|16|16}}. John J. O'Connor (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|17|17}}. Theodore A. Peyser (D), until August 8, 1937
    • Bruce F. Barton (R), from November 2, 1937
  • {{ushr|New York|18|18}}. Martin J. Kennedy (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|19|19}}. Sol Bloom (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|20|20}}. James J. Lanzetta (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|21|21}}. Joseph A. Gavagan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|22|22}}. Edward W. Curley (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|23|23}}. Charles A. Buckley (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|24|24}}. James M. Fitzpatrick (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|25|25}}. Charles D. Millard (R), until September 29, 1937
    • Ralph A. Gamble (R), from November 2, 1937
  • {{ushr|New York|26|26}}. Hamilton Fish, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|27|27}}. Philip A. Goodwin (R), until June 6, 1937
    • Lewis K. Rockefeller (R), from November 2, 1937
  • {{ushr|New York|28|28}}. William T. Byrne (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|29|29}}. E. Harold Cluett (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|30|30}}. Frank Crowther (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|31|31}}. Bertrand H. Snell (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|32|32}}. Francis D. Culkin (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|33|33}}. Fred J. Douglas (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|34|34}}. Bert Lord (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|35|35}}. Clarence E. Hancock (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|36|36}}. John Taber (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|37|37}}. W. Sterling Cole (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|38|38}}. George B. Kelly (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|39|39}}. James W. Wadsworth, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|40|40}}. Walter G. Andrews (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|41|41}}. Alfred F. Beiter (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|42|42}}. James M. Mead (D), until December 2, 1938
  • {{ushr|New York|43|43}}. Daniel A. Reed (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|AL|At-large}}. Matthew J. Merritt (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|AL|At-large}}. Caroline O'Day (D)

North Carolina

  • {{ushr|North Carolina|1|1}}. Lindsay C. Warren (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|2|2}}. John H. Kerr (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|3|3}}. Graham A. Barden (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|4|4}}. Harold D. Cooley (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|5|5}}. Frank Hancock, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|6|6}}. William B. Umstead (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|7|7}}. J. Bayard Clark (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|8|8}}. J. Walter Lambeth (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|9|9}}. Robert L. Doughton (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|10|10}}. Alfred L. Bulwinkle (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|11|11}}. Zebulon Weaver (D)

North Dakota

  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-large}}. William Lemke (Nonpartisan Republican)
  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Usher L. Burdick (Nonpartisan Republican)

Ohio

  • {{ushr|Ohio|1|1}}. Joseph A. Dixon (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|2|2}}. Herbert S. Bigelow (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|3|3}}. Byron B. Harlan (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|4|4}}. Frank Le Blond Kloeb (D), until August 19, 1937
    • Walter H. Albaugh (R), from November 8, 1938
  • {{ushr|Ohio|5|5}}. Frank C. Kniffin (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|6|6}}. James G. Polk (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|7|7}}. Arthur W. Aleshire (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|8|8}}. Thomas B. Fletcher (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|9|9}}. John F. Hunter (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|10|10}}. Thomas A. Jenkins (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|11|11}}. Harold K. Claypool (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|12|12}}. Arthur P. Lamneck (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|13|13}}. Dudley A. White (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|14|14}}. Dow W. Harter (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|15|15}}. Robert T. Secrest (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|16|16}}. William R. Thom (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|17|17}}. William A. Ashbrook (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|18|18}}. Lawrence E. Imhoff (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|19|19}}. Michael J. Kirwan (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|20|20}}. Martin L. Sweeney (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|21|21}}. Robert Crosser (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|22|22}}. Anthony A. Fleger (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|AL|At-large}}. John McSweeney (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|AL|At-large}}. Harold G. Mosier (D)

Oklahoma

  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|1|1}}. Wesley E. Disney (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|2|2}}. John Conover Nichols (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|3|3}}. Wilburn Cartwright (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|4|4}}. Lyle Boren (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|5|5}}. Robert Potter Hill (D), until October 29, 1937
    • Gomer Griffith Smith (D), from December 10, 1937
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|6|6}}. Jed Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|7|7}}. Sam C. Massingale (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|8|8}}. Phil Ferguson (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|AL|At-large}}. Will Rogers (D)

Oregon

  • {{ushr|Oregon|1|1}}. James W. Mott (R)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|2|2}}. Walter M. Pierce (D)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|3|3}}. Nan Wood Honeyman (D)

Pennsylvania

  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|1}}. Leon Sacks (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|2}}. James P. McGranery (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|3}}. Michael J. Bradley (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|4}}. J. Burrwood Daly (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|5}}. Frank J.G. Dorsey (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|6}}. Michael J. Stack (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|7}}. Ira W. Drew (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|8}}. James Wolfenden (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|9}}. Oliver Walter Frey (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|10}}. J. Roland Kinzer (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|11}}. Patrick J. Boland (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|12}}. J. Harold Flannery (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|13}}. James H. Gildea (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|14}}. Guy L. Moser (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|15}}. Albert G. Rutherford (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|16}}. Robert F. Rich (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|17}}. J. William Ditter (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|18}}. Benjamin Kurtz Focht (R), until March 27, 1937
    • Richard M. Simpson (R), from May 11, 1937
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|19}}. Guy J. Swope (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|20}}. Benjamin Jarrett (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|21}}. Francis E. Walter (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|22}}. Harry L. Haines (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|23}}. Don Gingery (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|24}}. J. Buell Snyder (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|25}}. Charles I. Faddis (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|26}}. Charles R. Eckert (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|27}}. Joseph Gray (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|28}}. Robert G. Allen (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|29}}. Charles N. Crosby (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|30}}. Peter J. De Muth (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|31|31}}. James L. Quinn (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|32|32}}. Herman P. Eberharter (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|33|33}}. Henry Ellenbogen (D), until January 3, 1938
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|34|34}}. Matthew A. Dunn (D)

Rhode Island

  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|1|1}}. Aime Forand (D)
  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|2|2}}. John M. O'Connell (D)

South Carolina

  • {{ushr|South Carolina|1|1}}. Thomas S. McMillan (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|2|2}}. Hampton P. Fulmer (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|3|3}}. John C. Taylor (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|4|4}}. Gabriel H. Mahon, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|5|5}}. James P. Richards (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|6|6}}. Allard H. Gasque (D), until June 17, 1938
    • Elizabeth Hawley Gasque (D), from September 13, 1938

South Dakota

  • {{ushr|South Dakota|1|1}}. Fred H. Hildebrandt (D)
  • {{ushr|South Dakota|2|2}}. Francis Case (R)

Tennessee

  • {{ushr|Tennessee|1|1}}. B. Carroll Reece (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. J. Will Taylor (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|3|3}}. Sam D. McReynolds (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|4|4}}. John Ridley Mitchell (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. Richard Merrill Atkinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|6|6}}. Clarence W. Turner (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|7|7}}. Herron C. Pearson (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|8|8}}. Jere Cooper (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|9|9}}. Walter Chandler (D)

Texas

  • {{ushr|Texas|1|1}}. Wright Patman (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|2|2}}. Martin Dies, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|3|3}}. Morgan G. Sanders (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|4|4}}. Sam Rayburn (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|5|5}}. Hatton W. Sumners (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|6|6}}. Luther A. Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|7|7}}. Nat Patton (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|8|8}}. Albert Thomas (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|9|9}}. Joseph J. Mansfield (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|10|10}}. James P. Buchanan (D), until February 22, 1937
    • Lyndon B. Johnson (D), from April 10, 1937
  • {{ushr|Texas|11|11}}. William R. Poage (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|12|12}}. Fritz G. Lanham (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|13|13}}. William D. McFarlane (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|14|14}}. Richard M. Kleberg (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|15|15}}. Milton H. West (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|16|16}}. R. Ewing Thomason (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|17|17}}. Clyde L. Garrett (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|18|18}}. Marvin Jones (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|19|19}}. George H. Mahon (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|20|20}}. Maury Maverick (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|21|21}}. Charles L. South (D)

Utah

  • {{ushr|Utah|1|1}}. Abe Murdock (D)
  • {{ushr|Utah|2|2}}. J. W. Robinson (D)

Vermont

  • {{ushr|Vermont|AL|At-large}}. Charles A. Plumley (R)

Virginia

  • {{ushr|Virginia|1|1}}. S. Otis Bland (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|2|2}}. Norman R. Hamilton (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|3|3}}. Andrew J. Montague (D), until January 24, 1937
    • Dave E. Satterfield, Jr. (D), from November 2, 1937
  • {{ushr|Virginia|4|4}}. Patrick H. Drewry (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|5|5}}. Thomas G. Burch (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|6|6}}. Clifton A. Woodrum (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|7|7}}. A. Willis Robertson (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|8|8}}. Howard W. Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|9|9}}. John W. Flannagan, Jr. (D)

Washington

  • {{ushr|Washington|1|1}}. Warren G. Magnuson (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|2|2}}. Monrad C. Wallgren (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|3|3}}. Martin F. Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|4|4}}. Knute Hill (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|5|5}}. Charles H. Leavy (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|6|6}}. John M. Coffee (D)

West Virginia

  • {{ushr|West Virginia|1|1}}. Robert L. Ramsay (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|2|2}}. Jennings Randolph (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|3|3}}. Andrew Edmiston, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|4|4}}. George William Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|5|5}}. John Kee (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|6|6}}. Joe L. Smith (D)

Wisconsin

  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|1|1}}. Thomas Ryum Amlie (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|2|2}}. Harry Sauthoff (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|3|3}}. Gardner R. Withrow (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|4|4}}. Randolph Joseph Cannon (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|5|5}}. Thomas David Patrick O'Malley (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|6|6}}. Michael K. Reilly (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|7|7}}. Gerald J. Boileau (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|8|8}}. George J. Schneider (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|9|9}}. Merlin Hull (Prog.)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|10|10}}. Bernard J. Gehrmann (Prog.)

Wyoming

  • {{ushr|Wyoming|AL|At-large}}. Paul Ranous Greever (D)

Non-voting members

  • {{ushr|Alaska Territory|AL|Alaska Territory}}. Anthony J. Dimond (D)
  • {{ushr|Hawaii Territory|AL|Hawaii Territory}}. Samuel Wilder King (R)
  • {{ushr|Philippines|AL|Philippines}}. Quintin Paredes (Resident Commissioner) (Nac.), until September 29, 1938
    • Joaquin Miguel Elizalde (Resident Commissioner) (Nac.), from September 29, 1938
  • {{ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Santiago Iglesias Pantín (Resident Commissioner) (Coalitionist)
{{col-break}}{{col-end}}

Changes in membership

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

Senate

{{see also|List of special elections to the United States Senate}}{{Ordinal US Congress Senate}}
|-
| Tennessee
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Nathan L. Bachman (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died April 23, 1937. Successor was appointed to serve until the next election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | George L. Berry (D)
| May 6, 1937
|-
| Arkansas
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Joseph T. Robinson (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died July 14, 1937
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | John E. Miller (D)
| November 15, 1937
|-
| Alabama
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Hugo Black (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned August 19, 1937, after being appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Successor was appointed to serve until the next election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Dixie Bibb Graves (D)
| August 20, 1937
|-
| Alabama
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Dixie Bibb Graves (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 10, 1938, after successor was elected.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | J. Lister Hill (D)
| January 11, 1938
|-
| New Jersey
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | A. Harry Moore (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 17, 1938, after being elected Governor of New Jersey. Successor was appointed to serve until the next election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | John G. Milton (D)
| January 18, 1938
|-
| Oregon
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Frederick Steiwer (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 31, 1938, due to poor health. Successor was appointed to serve until the next election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alfred E. Reames (D)
| February 1, 1938
|-
| New York
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Royal S. Copeland (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 17, 1938.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | James M. Mead (D)
| December 3, 1938
|-
| California
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | William G. McAdoo (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned November 8, 1938, after losing nomination for upcoming term. Successor was appointed to serve until the next election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Thomas M. Storke (D)
| November 9, 1938
|-
| New Jersey
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | John G. Milton (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Successor was elected November 8, 1938.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | William W. Barbour (R)
| November 8, 1938
|-
| Oregon
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alfred E. Reames (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Successor was elected November 8, 1938.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Alexander G. Barry (R)
| November 9, 1938
|-
| South Dakota
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Herbert E. Hitchcock (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Appointed during previous congress to fill term of Sen. Peter Norbeck. Unsuccessful candidate for full term. Successor was elected November 8, 1938.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Gladys Pyle (R)
| November 9, 1938
|-
| Tennessee
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | George L. Berry (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Unsuccessful candidate for full term. Successor was elected November 8, 1938. Although eligible and elected, did not "take his seat" as he preferred to remain as district attorney general. Nevertheless, his service begins when eligible and elected, not upon the taking of an oath.[1]
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Tom Stewart (D)
| November 8, 1938.
|}

House of Representatives

{{See also|List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives}}{{Ordinal US Congress Rep}}
|-
| {{ushr|Virginia|3|Virginia 3rd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Andrew Jackson Montague (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died January 24, 1937
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Dave E. Satterfield, Jr. (D)
| November 2, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Texas|10|Texas 10th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | James P. Buchanan (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 22, 1937
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
| April 10, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|California|10|California 10th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Henry E. Stubbs (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 28, 1937
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alfred J. Elliott (D)
| May 4, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|Pennsylvania 18th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Benjamin K. Focht (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died March 27, 1937
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Richard M. Simpson (R)
| May 11, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|New York|27|New York 27th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Philip A. Goodwin (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 6, 1937
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Lewis K. Rockefeller (R)
| November 2, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Massachusetts|7|Massachusetts 7th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | William P. Connery, Jr. (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 15, 1937
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Lawrence J. Connery (D)
| September 28, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|New York|17|New York 17th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Theodore A. Peyser (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died August 8, 1937
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Bruce F. Barton (R)
| November 2, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Ohio|4|Ohio 4th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Frank Le Blond Kloeb (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned August 19, 1937, after being appointed as a justice of United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Western Div.
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Walter H. Albaugh (R)
| November 8, 1938
|-
| {{ushr|New York|25|New York 25th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Charles D. Millard (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 29, 1937, after being elected surrogate of Westchester County, New York
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Ralph A. Gamble (R)
| November 2, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Massachusetts|11|Massachusetts 11th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | John P. Higgins (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 30, 1937, after being appointed chief justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Thomas A. Flaherty (D)
| December 14, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Oklahoma|5|Oklahoma 5th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Robert P. Hill (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died October 29, 1937
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Gomer Griffith Smith (D)
| December 10, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|Arkansas|2|Arkansas 2nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | John E. Miller (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned November 14, 1937, after being elected to the US Senate
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|33|Pennsylvania 33rd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Henry Ellenbogen (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 3, 1938, after being elected judge of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Alabama|2|Alabama 2nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | J. Lister Hill (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 11, 1938, after being elected to the US Senate
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | George M. Grant (D)
| June 14, 1938
|-
| {{ushr|New Jersey|9|New Jersey 9th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Edward A. Kenney (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died January 27, 1938
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|California|17|California 17th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Charles J. Colden (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died April 15, 1938
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Kentucky|8|Kentucky 8th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Fred M. Vinson (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned May 27, 1938, after being appointed associate justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Joe B. Bates (D)
| June 4, 1938
|-
| {{ushr|New Hampshire|1|New Hampshire 1st}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Arthur B. Jenks (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Lost contested election June 9, 1938
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alphonse Roy (D)
| June 9, 1938
|-
| {{ushr|South Carolina|6|South Carolina 6th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Allard H. Gasque (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 17, 1938
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Elizabeth Hawley Gasque (D)
| September 13, 1937
|-
| {{ushr|New York|1|New York 1st}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Robert L. Bacon (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died September 12, 1938
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Philippines|AL|Resident Commissioner of the Philippines}}
| Quintin Paredes (NAC)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 29, 1938
| Joaquín Miguel Elizalde (NAC)
| September 29, 1938
|-
| {{ushr|New York|15|New York 15th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | John J. Boylan (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died October 5, 1938
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Iowa|1|Iowa 1st}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Edward C. Eicher (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 2, 1938, after being appointed a commissioner to the Securities and Exchange Commission
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|New York|42|New York 42nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | James M. Mead (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 2, 1938, after being elected to the U.S. Senate
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Maryland|5|Maryland 5th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Stephen W. Gambrill (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died December 19, 1938
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the 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 (4 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.

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

Senate

  • Agriculture and Forestry
  • Aquatic Life (Special)
  • Appropriations
  • Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate
  • Banking and Currency
  • Campaign Expenditures Investigation (Special)
  • Civil Service
  • Civil Service Laws (Special)
  • Civil Service System (Special)
  • Claims
  • Commerce
  • Court Reorganization and Judicial Procedure (Special)
  • District of Columbia
  • Education and Labor
    • Investigation Violations of Free Speech and the Rights of Labor
  • Enrolled Bills
  • Executive Agencies of the Government (Select)
  • Expenditures in Executive Departments
  • Finance
  • Foreign Relations
  • Government Organization (Select)
  • Immigration
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • Indian Affairs
  • Interoceanic Canals
  • Interstate Commerce
  • Judiciary
  • Library
  • Lobbying Activities (Select)
  • Manufactures
  • Military Affairs
  • Mines and Mining
  • Mississippi Flood Control Project (Select)
  • Merchant Marine (Special)
  • Naval Affairs
  • Patents
  • Pensions
  • Post Office and Post Roads
  • Printing
  • Privileges and Elections
  • Public Buildings and Grounds
  • Public Lands and Surveys
  • Rules
  • Senatorial Campaign Expenditures (Special)
  • Taxation of Government Securities and Salaries (Special)
  • Territories and Insular Affairs
  • Unemployment and Relief (Select)
  • Whole
  • Wildlife Resources (Special)
  • Wool Production (Special)
{{col-break}}

House of Representatives

  • Accounts
  • Agriculture
  • Appropriations
  • Census
  • Civil Service
  • 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 Executive Departments
  • Flood Control
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • Indian Affairs
  • Insular Affairs
  • Interstate and Foreign Commerce
  • Invalid Pensions
  • Irrigation and Reclamation
  • Labor
  • Memorials
  • Merchant Marine and Fisheries
  • Military Affairs
  • Mines and Mining
  • Naval Affairs
  • Patents
  • Pensions
  • Post Office and Post Roads
  • Public Buildings and Grounds
  • Public Lands
  • Revision of Laws
  • Rivers and Harbors
  • Roads
  • Rules
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Territories
  • War Claims
  • Ways and Means
  • Whole
{{col-break}}

Joint committees

  • Conditions of Indian Tribes (Special)
  • Disposition of (Useless) Executive Papers
  • Forestry
  • Government Organization
  • Hawaii
  • The Library
  • To Investigate Phosphate Resource of the United States
  • Taxation
  • Tax Evasion and Avoidance
  • Tennessee Valley Authority
{{col-end}}

Caucuses

  • Democratic (House)
  • Democratic (Senate)

Employees

  • Architect of the Capitol: David Lynn[2]
    • Assistant Architect: Horace D. Rouzer[2]
  • Attending Physician of the United States Congress: George Calver
  • Librarian of Congress: Herbert Putnam
  • Public Printer of the United States: Augustus E. Giegengack

Senate

  • Chaplain: Reverend ZeBarney Thorne Phillips[2]
  • Parliamentarian: Charles L. Watkins[2]
  • Secretary: Edwin Alexander Halsey[2]
    • Chief Clerk: John C. Crockett[2]
    • Librarian: Ruskin McArdle[2]
  • Sergeant at Arms: Chesley W. Jurney[2]
    • Postmaster: Jack W. Gates[2]

House of Representatives

  • Chaplain: James Shera Montgomery[2] (Methodist)
  • Clerk: South Trimble[2]
    • Journal clerk: Louis Sirkey[2]
    • Reading Clerks: A.E. Chaffee, Patrick J. Haltigan[2]
    • Librarian: W. Perry Miller[2]
  • Doorkeeper: Joseph J. Sinnott[2]
  • Parliamentarian: Lewis Deschler[2]
  • Postmaster: Finis E. Scott[2]
  • Sergeant at Arms: Kenneth Romney[2]
  • Postmaster: Finis E. Scott[2]

See also

  • United States elections, 1936 (elections leading to this Congress)
    • United States presidential election, 1936
    • United States Senate elections, 1936
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1936
  • United States elections, 1938 (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
    • United States Senate elections, 1938
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1938

References

1. ^Tom Stewart won a special election November 8, 1938. Although eligible and elected, did not "take his seat" as he preferred to remain as district attorney general. Nevertheless, his service begins when eligible and elected, not upon the taking of an oath.
2. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Official Congressional Directory for the United States Congress. Washington: United States Government Printing Office. 1937. pp. 760.
  • {{cite book |title=House of Representatives Session Calendar for the 75th Congress |url= http://library.clerk.house.gov/reference-files/House_Calendar_75th_Congress.pdf#page=1 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 75th Congress, 1st Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758794;view=1up;seq=7 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 75th Congress, 1st Session (Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015073070115;view=1up;seq=7 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 75th Congress, 3rd Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758786;view=1up;seq=7 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 75th Congress, 3rd Session (Revision) |url= https://archive.org/stream/officialcongres00unit#page/n6/mode/1up }}
{{USCongresses}}

1 : 75th United States Congress

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