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词条 77th United States Congress
释义

  1. Major events

  2. Major legislation and resolutions

  3. Select committees

  4. Leadership

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

  5. Party summary

      Senate   House of Representatives 

  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 

  11. See also

  12. References

{{Use American English|date = March 2019}}{{Short description|1941–1943 U.S. Congress}}{{Use mdy dates|date = March 2019}}{{Infobox United States Congress
|number = 77th
|image = USCapitol1956.jpg
|imagename = United States Capitol
|imagedate = 1956
|start = January 3, 1941
|end = January 3, 1943
|vp = John N. Garner (D)
until January 20, 1941
Henry A. Wallace (D)
from January 20, 1941
|pro tem = Pat Harrison (D)
until June 22, 1941
Carter Glass (D)
from July 11, 1941
|speaker = Sam Rayburn (D)
|senators = 96
|reps = 435
|delegates = 4
|s-majority = Democratic
|h-majority = Democratic
|sessionnumber1 = 1st
|sessionstart1 = January 3, 1941
|sessionend1 = January 2, 1942
|sessionnumber2 = 2nd
|sessionstart2 = January 5, 1942
|sessionend2 = December 16, 1942
|previous = 76th
|next = 78th
}}

The Seventy-seventh 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, 1941, to January 3, 1943, during the ninth and tenth years of Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Sixteenth Census of the United States in 1940. Both chambers had a Democratic majority.

This was the first Congress to have more than one Senate President (the Vice President of the United States), John Garner and Henry Wallace, due to the passage of the 20th amendment in 1933.

{{TOCLimit|3}}

Major events

{{Main|1941 in the United States|1942 in the United States|1943 in the United States}}
  • January 20, 1941: President Franklin D. Roosevelt began his third term.
  • December 7, 1941: Attack on Pearl Harbor
  • December 8, 1941: Joint Session of Congress met to hear President Roosevelt deliver his "Day of Infamy" speech
  • December 26, 1941: Joint session of the United States Congress met in the Senate chamber for an address by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

Major legislation and resolutions

{{Main|List of United States federal legislation#77th United States Congress}}
  • March 11, 1941: Lend Lease Act, {{USPL|77|11}}, Sess. 1, ch. 11, {{USStat|55|31}}
  • August 18, 1941: Flood Control Act of 1941, {{USPL|77|228}}, Sess. 1, ch. 377, {{USStat|55|638}}
  • December 8, 1941: Resolution— War between United States and Japan, {{USPL|77|328}}, Sess. 1, ch. 561, {{USStat|55|795}}
  • December 11, 1941: Resolution— War between United States and Germany, {{USPL|77|331}}, Sess. 1, ch. 564, {{USStat|55|796}}
  • December 11, 1941: Resolution— War between United States and Italy, {{USPL|77|332}}, Sess. 1, ch. 565, {{USStat|55|797}}
  • January 30, 1942: Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, {{USPL|77|421}}, Sess. 2, ch. 26, {{USStat|56|23}}
  • June 5, 1942: Resolution— War between United States and Bulgaria, {{USPL|77|563}}, Sess. 2, ch. 323, {{USStat|56|307}}
  • June 5, 1942: Resolution— War between United States and Hungary, {{USPL|77|564}}, Sess. 2, ch. 324, {{USStat|56|307}}
  • June 5, 1942: Resolution— War between United States and Romania, {{USPL|77|565}}, Sess. 2, ch. 325, {{USStat|56|307}}
  • June 22, 1942: Resolution— United States Flag Code, including recognition of the Pledge of Allegiance, {{USPL|77|623}}, Sess. 2, ch. 435, {{USStat|56|377}}
  • October 2, 1942: Stabilization Act of 1942, {{USPL|77|729}}, Sess. 2, ch. 578, {{USStat|56|765}}

Select committees

  • Truman Committee (officially the United States Senate Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program)

Leadership

Senate

  • President: John Nance Garner (D), until January 20, 1941
    • Henry A. Wallace (D), from January 20, 1941
  • President pro tempore: Pat Harrison (D), until June 22, 1941
    • Carter Glass (D), from July 10, 1941

Majority (Democratic) leadership

  • Majority leader: Alben W. Barkley
  • Majority Whip: Lister Hill
  • Caucus Secretary: Joshua B. Lee

Minority (Republican) leadership

  • Minority leader: Charles L. McNary
  • Republican Conference Secretary: Wallace H. White, Jr.

House of Representatives

  • Speaker: Sam Rayburn (D)

Majority (Democratic) leadership

  • Majority leader: John William McCormack
  • Democratic Whip: Patrick J. Boland, until May 18, 1942
    • Robert Ramspeck
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: Richard M. Duncan
  • Democratic Campaign Committee Chairman: Patrick H. Drewry

Minority (Republican) leadership

  • Minority leader: Joseph William Martin, Jr.
  • Republican Whip: Harry Lane Englebright, until May 13, 1943
  • Republican Conference Chairman: Roy O. Woodruff

Party summary

Senate

{{US Congress party summary
| congress=77
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Farmer-Labor
| party3=Progressive
| partylink3= Wisconsin Progressive Party
| party4=Republican
| party5=Independent
| abb1=D
| abb2=FL
| abb3=P
| abb4=R
| abb5=I
| seats1_last=68
| seats2_last=1
| seats3_last=1
| seats4_last=25
| seats5_last=1
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=66
| seats2_begin=0
| seats3_begin=1
| seats4_begin=28
| seats5_begin=1
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=64
| seats2_end=0
| seats3_end=1
| seats4_end=30
| seats5_end=1
| seats_vacant_end=0
| seats1_next=58
| seats2_next=0
| seats3_next=1
| seats4_next=36
| seats5_next=0
| seats_vacant_next=1
}}

House of Representatives

{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=76
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Farmer-Labor
| party3=American Labor
| party4=Wisconsin Progressive
| party5=Republican
| abb1=D
| abb2=FL
| abb3=AL
| abb4=P
| abb5=R
| seats1_last=252
| seats2_last=1
| seats3_last=1
| seats4_last=3
| seats5_last=172
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=268
| seats2_begin=1
| seats3_begin=1
| seats4_begin=3
| seats5_begin=162
| seats_vacant_begin=1
| seats1_end=267
| seats2_end=1
| seats3_end=1
| seats4_end=3
| seats5_end=162
| seats_vacant_end=6
| seats1_next=222
| seats2_next=1
| seats3_next=1
| seats4_next=2
| seats5_next=209
| seats_vacant_next=0
}}

Members

Senate

Senators are 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 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1942; Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1944; and Class 1 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1946.

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

Alabama

  • 2. John H. Bankhead II (D)
  • 3. J. Lister Hill (D)

Arizona

  • 1. Ernest McFarland (D)
  • 3. Carl Hayden (D)

Arkansas

  • 2. John E. Miller (D), until March 31, 1941
    • G. Lloyd Spencer (D), from April 1, 1941
  • 3. Hattie Caraway (D)

California

  • 1. Hiram Johnson (R)
  • 3. Sheridan Downey (D)

Colorado

  • 2. Edwin C. Johnson (D)
  • 3. Alva B. Adams (D), until December 1, 1941
    • Eugene Donald Millikin (R), from December 20, 1941

Connecticut

  • 1. Francis T. Maloney (D)
  • 3. John A. Danaher (R)

Delaware

  • 1. James M. Tunnell (D)
  • 2. James H. Hughes (D)

Florida

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

Georgia

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

Idaho

  • 2. John W. Thomas (R)
  • 3. David Worth Clark (D)

Illinois

  • 2. Charles W. Brooks (R)
  • 3. Scott W. Lucas (D)

Indiana

  • 1. Raymond E. Willis (R)
  • 3. Frederick Van Nuys (D)

Iowa

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

Kansas

  • 2. Arthur Capper (R)
  • 3. Clyde M. Reed (R)

Kentucky

  • 2. Happy Chandler (D)
  • 3. Alben W. Barkley (D)

Louisiana

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

Maine

  • 1. Owen Brewster (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 (R)
  • 2. Joseph H. Ball (R)
    • Arthur E. Nelson (R)

Mississippi

  • 1. Theodore G. Bilbo (D)
  • 2. Pat Harrison (D), until June 22, 1941
    • James Eastland (D), June 30, 1941 – September 28, 1941
    • Wall Doxey (D), from September 29, 1941

Missouri

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

Montana

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

Nebraska

  • 1. Hugh A. Butler (R)
  • 2. George William Norris (I)
{{col-break}}

Nevada

  • 1. Berkeley L. Bunker (D), until December 7, 1942
    • James G. Scrugham (D), from December 7, 1942
  • 3. Pat McCarran (D)

New Hampshire

  • 2. Styles Bridges (R)
  • 3. Charles W. Tobey (R)

New Jersey

  • 1. William Warren Barbour (R)
  • 2. William H. Smathers (D)

New Mexico

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

New York

  • 1. James M. Mead (D)
  • 3. Robert F. Wagner (D)

North Carolina

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

North Dakota

  • 1. William Langer (R)
  • 3. Gerald Nye (R)

Ohio

  • 1. Harold Hitz Burton (R)
  • 3. Robert A. Taft (R)

Oklahoma

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

Oregon

  • 2. Charles L. McNary (R)
  • 3. Rufus C. Holman (R)

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), until July 17, 1941
    • Alva M. Lumpkin (D), July 22, 1941 – August 1, 1941
    • Roger C. Peace (D), August 5, 1941 – November 4, 1941
    • Burnet R. Maybank (D), from November 5, 1941
  • 3. Ellison D. Smith (D)

South Dakota

  • 2. William J. Bulow (D)
  • 3. John Chandler Gurney (R)

Tennessee

  • 1. Kenneth McKellar (D)
  • 2. Tom Stewart (D)

Texas

  • 1. Tom Connally (D)
  • 2. Morris Sheppard (D), until April 9, 1941
    • Andrew Jackson Houston (D), April 21, 1941, until June 26, 1941
    • W. Lee O'Daniel (D), from June 28, 1941

Utah

  • 1. Orrice Abram Murdock, Jr. (D)
  • 3. Elbert D. Thomas (D)

Vermont

  • 1. Warren Austin (R)
  • 3. George Aiken (R)

Virginia

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

Washington

  • 1. Monrad Wallgren (D)
  • 3. Homer Bone (D)

West Virginia

  • 1. Harley M. Kilgore (D)
  • 2. Matthew M. Neely (D), until January 12, 1941
    • Joseph Rosier (D), January 13, 1941 – November 17, 1942
    • Hugh Ike Shott (R), from November 18, 1942

Wisconsin

  • 1. Robert M. La Follette Jr. (P)
  • 3. Alexander Wiley (R)

Wyoming

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

House of Representatives

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

Alabama

  • {{ushr|Alabama|1|1}}. Frank W. Boykin (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|2|2}}. George M. Grant (D)
  • {{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}}. Walter W. Bankhead (D), until February 1, 1941
    • Carter Manasco (D), from June 24, 1941
  • {{ushr|Alabama|8|8}}. John Sparkman (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|9|9}}. Luther Patrick (D)

Arizona

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

Arkansas

  • {{ushr|Arkansas|1|1}}. Ezekiel C. Gathings (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|2|2}}. Wilbur Mills (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|3|3}}. Clyde T. Ellis (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|4|4}}. William Fadjo Cravens (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|5|5}}. David D. Terry (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|6|6}}. William F. Norrell (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|7|7}}. Oren Harris (D)

California

  • {{ushr|California|1|1}}. Clarence F. Lea (D)
  • {{ushr|California|2|2}}. Harry Lane Englebright (R)
  • {{ushr|California|3|3}}. Frank H. Buck (D), until September 17, 1942
  • {{ushr|California|4|4}}. Thomas Rolph (R)
  • {{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}}. Jack Z. Anderson (R)
  • {{ushr|California|9|9}}. Bertrand W. Gearhart (R)
  • {{ushr|California|10|10}}. Alfred J. Elliott (D)
  • {{ushr|California|11|11}}. John Carl Hinshaw (R)
  • {{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}}. Leland M. Ford (R)
  • {{ushr|California|17|17}}. Lee E. Geyer (D), until October 11, 1941
    • Cecil R. King (D), from August 25, 1942
  • {{ushr|California|18|18}}. William Ward Johnson (R)
  • {{ushr|California|19|19}}. Harry R. Sheppard (D)
  • {{ushr|California|20|20}}. Edouard Izac (D)

Colorado

  • {{ushr|Colorado|1|1}}. Lawrence Lewis (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|2|2}}. William S. Hill (R)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|3|3}}. John Chenoweth (R)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|4|4}}. Edward T. Taylor (D), until September 3, 1941
    • Robert F. Rockwell (R), from December 9, 1941

Connecticut

  • {{ushr|Connecticut|AL|At-large}}. Lucien J. Maciora (D)
  • {{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}}. Le Roy D. Downs (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|5|5}}. J. Joseph Smith (D), until November 4, 1941
    • Joseph E. Talbot (R), from January 20, 1942

Delaware

  • {{ushr|Delaware|AL|At-large}}. Philip A. Traynor (D)

Florida

  • {{ushr|Florida|1|1}}. J. Hardin Peterson (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|2|2}}. Robert A. Green (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|3|3}}. Robert L. F. Sikes (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|4|4}}. Pat Cannon (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}}. Albert Sidney Camp (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}}. John S. Gibson (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}}. Henry Dworshak (R)

Illinois

  • {{ushr|Illinois|AL|At-large}}. Stephen A. Day (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|AL|At-large}}. William Stratton (R)
  • {{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), until December 6, 1942
  • {{ushr|Illinois|5|5}}. Adolph J. Sabath (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|6|6}}. A. F. Maciejewski (D), until December 8, 1942
  • {{ushr|Illinois|7|7}}. Leonard W. Schuetz (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|8|8}}. Leo Kocialkowski (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|9|9}}. Charles S. Dewey (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|10|10}}. George A. Paddock (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}}. Anton J. Johnson (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|15|15}}. Robert B. Chiperfield (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|16|16}}. Everett Dirksen (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|17|17}}. Leslie Cornelius Arends (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|18|18}}. Jessie Sumner (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|19|19}}. William H. Wheat (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|20|20}}. James M. Barnes (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|21|21}}. George Evan Howell (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|22|22}}. Edwin M. Schaefer (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|23|23}}. Laurence F. Arnold (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|24|24}}. James V. Heidinger (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|25|25}}. C. W. Bishop (R)

Indiana

  • {{ushr|Indiana|1|1}}. William T. Schulte (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|2|2}}. Charles A. Halleck (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|3|3}}. Robert A. Grant (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|4|4}}. George W. Gillie (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|5|5}}. Forest Harness (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|6|6}}. Noble J. Johnson (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|7|7}}. Gerald W. Landis (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|8|8}}. John W. Boehne, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|9|9}}. Earl Wilson (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|10|10}}. Raymond S. Springer (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|11|11}}. William H. Larrabee (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|12|12}}. Louis Ludlow (D)

Iowa

  • {{ushr|Iowa|1|1}}. Thomas E. Martin (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|2|2}}. William S. Jacobsen (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|3|3}}. John W. Gwynne (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|4|4}}. Henry O. Talle (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|5|5}}. Karl M. LeCompte (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|6|6}}. Paul H. Cunningham (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|7|7}}. Ben F. Jensen (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|8|8}}. Fred C. Gilchrist (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|9|9}}. Vincent F. Harrington (D), until September 5, 1942
    • Harry E. Narey (R), from November 3, 1942

Kansas

  • {{ushr|Kansas|1|1}}. William P. Lambertson (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|2|2}}. U. S. Guyer (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|3|3}}. Thomas Daniel Winter (R)
  • {{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 Jones 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}}. Joe B. Bates (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|9|9}}. John M. Robsion (R)

Louisiana

  • {{ushr|Louisiana|1|1}}. Felix Edward Hébert (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|2|2}}. Hale Boggs (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|3|3}}. James R. Domengeaux (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. Overton Brooks (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|5|5}}. Newt V. Mills (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|6|6}}. Jared Y. Sanders, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|7|7}}. Vance Plauché (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|8|8}}. A. Leonard Allen (D)

Maine

  • {{ushr|Maine|1|1}}. James C. Oliver (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|2|2}}. Margaret Chase Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|3|3}}. Frank Fellows (R)

Maryland

  • {{ushr|Maryland|1|1}}. David Jenkins Ward (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|2|2}}. William Purington Cole, Jr. (D), until October 26, 1942
  • {{ushr|Maryland|3|3}}. Thomas D'Alesandro, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|4|4}}. John Ambrose Meyer (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|5|5}}. Lansdale Sasscer (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|6|6}}. William D. Byron (D), until February 27, 1941
    • Katharine Byron (D), from May 27, 1941

Massachusetts

  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|1|1}}. Allen T. Treadway (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|2|2}}. Charles R. 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}}. Lawrence J. Connery (D), until October 19, 1941
    • Thomas J. Lane (D), from December 30, 1941
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|8|8}}. Arthur D. Healey (D), until August 3, 1942
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|9|9}}. Thomas H. Eliot (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|10|10}}. George H. Tinkham (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|11|11}}. Thomas A. Flaherty (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|12|12}}. John William McCormack (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|13|13}}. Richard B. Wigglesworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|14|14}}. Joseph William Martin, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|15|15}}. Charles L. Gifford (R)

Michigan

  • {{ushr|Michigan|1|1}}. Rudolph G. Tenerowicz (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|2|2}}. Earl C. Michener (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|3|3}}. Paul W. Shafer (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|4|4}}. Clare Hoffman (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|5|5}}. Bartel J. Jonkman (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|6|6}}. William W. Blackney (R)
  • {{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}}. Fred Bradley (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|12|12}}. Frank Eugene 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 Anthony Dondero (R)

Minnesota

  • {{ushr|Minnesota|1|1}}. August H. Andresen (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|2|2}}. Joseph P. O'Hara (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|3|3}}. Richard Pillsbury Gale (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|4|4}}. Melvin Maas (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|5|5}}. Oscar Youngdahl (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|6|6}}. Harold Knutson (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|7|7}}. Herman Carl Andersen (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|8|8}}. William Pittenger (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|9|9}}. Rich T. Buckler (FL)

Mississippi

  • {{ushr|Mississippi|1|1}}. John E. Rankin (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|2|2}}. Wall Doxey (D), until September 28, 1941
    • Jamie L. Whitten (D), from November 4, 1941
  • {{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}}. Joe Shannon (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|6|6}}. Philip A. Bennett (R), until December 7, 1942
  • {{ushr|Missouri|7|7}}. Dewey J. 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}}. John B. Sullivan (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|12|12}}. Walter C. Ploeser (R)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|13|13}}. John J. Cochran (D)

Montana

  • {{ushr|Montana|1|1}}. Jeannette Rankin (R)
  • {{ushr|Montana|2|2}}. James F. O'Connor (D)

Nebraska

  • {{ushr|Nebraska|1|1}}. Oren S. Copeland (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|2|2}}. Charles F. McLaughlin (D)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|3|3}}. Karl Stefan (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|4|4}}. Carl Curtis (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|5|5}}. Harry B. Coffee (D)

Nevada

  • {{ushr|Nevada|AL|At-large}}. James G. Scrugham (D), until December 7, 1942

New Hampshire

  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|1|1}}. Arthur B. Jenks (R)
  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|2|2}}. Foster Waterman Stearns (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}}. Gordon Canfield (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|9|9}}. Frank C. Osmers, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|10|10}}. Fred A. Hartley, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|11|11}}. Albert L. Vreeland (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|12|12}}. Robert Kean (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|13|13}}. Mary Teresa Norton (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|14|14}}. Edward J. Hart (D)

New Mexico

  • {{ushr|New Mexico|AL|At-large}}. Clinton Presba Anderson (D)

New York

  • {{ushr|New York|1|1}}. Leonard W. Hall (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|2|2}}. William Bernard 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}}. James J. Heffernan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|6|6}}. Andrew Lawrence 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 James 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}}. Louis Capozzoli (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|14|14}}. Morris Michael Edelstein (D), until June 4, 1941
    • Arthur George Klein (D), from July 29, 1941
  • {{ushr|New York|15|15}}. Michael J. Kennedy (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|16|16}}. William T. Pheiffer (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|17|17}}. Kenneth F. Simpson (R), until January 25, 1941
    • Joseph C. Baldwin (R), from March 11, 1941
  • {{ushr|New York|18|18}}. Martin J. Kennedy (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|19|19}}. Sol Bloom (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|20|20}}. Vito Marcantonio (AL)
  • {{ushr|New York|21|21}}. Joseph A. Gavagan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|22|22}}. Walter A. Lynch (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|23|23}}. Charles A. Buckley (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|24|24}}. James M. Fitzpatrick (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|25|25}}. Ralph A. Gamble (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|26|26}}. Hamilton Fish III (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|27|27}}. Lewis K. Rockefeller (R)
  • {{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}}. Clarence E. Kilburn (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|32|32}}. Francis D. Culkin (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|33|33}}. Fred J. Douglas (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|34|34}}. Edwin Arthur Hall (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}}. Joseph J. O'Brien (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|39|39}}. James Wolcott 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}}. Pius L. Schwert (D), until March 11, 1941
    • John C. Butler (R), from April 22, 1941
  • {{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 Love Goodwin O'Day (D)

North Carolina

  • {{ushr|North Carolina|1|1}}. Herbert Covington Bonner (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|2|2}}. John H. Kerr (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|3|3}}. Graham Arthur Barden (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|4|4}}. Harold D. Cooley (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|5|5}}. Alonzo Dillard Folger (D), until April 30, 1941
    • John Hamlin Folger (D), from June 14, 1941
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|6|6}}. Carl T. Durham (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|7|7}}. J. Bayard Clark (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|8|8}}. William O. Burgin (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}}. Charles R. Robertson (R)
  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-large}}. Usher L. Burdick (Nonpartisan Republican)

Ohio

  • {{ushr|Ohio|AL|At-large}}. George H. Bender (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|AL|At-large}}. Stephen M. Young (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|1|1}}. Charles H. Elston (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|2|2}}. William E. Hess (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|3|3}}. Greg J. Holbrock (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|4|4}}. Robert Franklin Jones (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|5|5}}. Cliff Clevenger (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|6|6}}. Jacob E. Davis (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|7|7}}. Clarence J. Brown (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|8|8}}. Frederick Cleveland Smith (R)
  • {{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}}. John M. Vorys (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|13|13}}. Albert David Baumhart, Jr. (R), until September 2, 1942
  • {{ushr|Ohio|14|14}}. Dow W. Harter (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|15|15}}. Robert T. Secrest (D), until August 3, 1942
  • {{ushr|Ohio|16|16}}. William R. Thom (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|17|17}}. J. Harry McGregor (R)
  • {{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}}. Frances P. Bolton (R)

Oklahoma

  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|AL|At-large}}. Will Rogers (D)
  • {{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}}. A. S. Mike Monroney (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|6|6}}. Jed Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|7|7}}. Sam C. Massingale (D), until January 17, 1941
    • Victor Wickersham (D), from April 1, 1941
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|8|8}}. Ross Rizley (R)

Oregon

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

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}}. John E. Sheridan (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|5}}. Francis R. Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|6}}. Francis J. Myers (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|7}}. Hugh Scott (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|8}}. James Wolfenden (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|9}}. Charles L. Gerlach (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|10}}. J. Roland Kinzer (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|11}}. Patrick J. Boland (D), until May 18, 1942
    • Veronica Grace Boland (D), from November 3, 1942
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|12}}. J. Harold Flannery (D), until January 3, 1942
    • Thomas B. Miller (R), from May 19, 1942
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|13}}. Ivor D. Fenton (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|14}}. Guy L. Moser (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|15}}. Albert G. Rutherford (R), until August 10, 1941
    • Wilson D. Gillette (R), from November 4, 1941
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|16}}. Robert F. Rich (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|17}}. J. William Ditter (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|18}}. Richard M. Simpson (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|19}}. John C. Kunkel (R)
  • {{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}}. James E. Van Zandt (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|24}}. J. Buell Snyder (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|25}}. Charles I. Faddis (D), until December 4, 1942
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|26}}. Louis E. Graham (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|27}}. Harve Tibbott (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|28}}. Augustine B. Kelley (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|29}}. Robert L. Rodgers (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|30}}. Thomas E. Scanlon (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|31|31}}. Samuel A. Weiss (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|32|32}}. Herman P. Eberharter (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|33|33}}. Joseph A. McArdle (D), until January 5, 1942
    • Elmer J. Holland (D), from May 19, 1942
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|34|34}}. James A. Wright (D)

Rhode Island

  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|1|1}}. Aime Forand (D)
  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|2|2}}. John E. Fogarty (D)

South Carolina

  • {{ushr|South Carolina|1|1}}. L. Mendel Rivers (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|2|2}}. Hampton P. Fulmer (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|3|3}}. Butler B. Hare (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|4|4}}. Joseph R. Bryson (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|5|5}}. James P. Richards (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|6|6}}. John L. McMillan (D)

South Dakota

  • {{ushr|South Dakota|1|1}}. Karl Earl Mundt (R)
  • {{ushr|South Dakota|2|2}}. Francis H. Case (R)

Tennessee

  • {{ushr|Tennessee|1|1}}. B. Carroll Reece (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. John Jennings, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|3|3}}. Estes Kefauver (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|4|4}}. Albert Gore, Sr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. Percy Priest (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|6|6}}. W. Wirt Courtney (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|7|7}}. Herron C. Pearson (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|8|8}}. Jere Cooper (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|9|9}}. Clifford Davis (D)

Texas

  • {{ushr|Texas|1|1}}. Wright Patman (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|2|2}}. Martin Dies, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|3|3}}. Lindley Beckworth (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|4|4}}. Sam Rayburn (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|5|5}}. Hatton W. Sumners (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|6|6}}. Luther Alexander 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}}. Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|11|11}}. William R. Poage (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|12|12}}. Fritz G. Lanham (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|13|13}}. Ed Gossett (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}}. Sam M. Russell (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|18|18}}. Eugene Worley (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|19|19}}. George H. Mahon (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|20|20}}. Paul J. Kilday (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|21|21}}. Charles L. South (D)

Utah

  • {{ushr|Utah|1|1}}. Walter K. Granger (D)
  • {{ushr|Utah|2|2}}. J. W. Robinson (D)

Vermont

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

Virginia

  • {{ushr|Virginia|1|1}}. S. Otis Bland (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|2|2}}. Colgate Darden (D), until March 1, 1941
    • Winder R. Harris (D), from April 8, 1941
  • {{ushr|Virginia|3|3}}. Dave E. Satterfield, Jr. (D)
  • {{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}}. Absalom 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 Magnuson (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|2|2}}. Henry M. Jackson (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|3|3}}. Martin F. Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|4|4}}. Knute Hill (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|5|5}}. Charles H. Leavy (D), until August 1, 1942
  • {{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}}. Stephen Bolles (R), until July 8, 1941
    • Lawrence H. Smith (R), from August 29, 1941
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|2|2}}. Harry Sauthoff (P)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|3|3}}. William H. Stevenson (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|4|4}}. Thaddeus Wasielewski (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|5|5}}. Lewis D. Thill (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|6|6}}. Frank Bateman Keefe (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|7|7}}. Reid F. Murray (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|8|8}}. Joshua L. Johns (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|9|9}}. Merlin Hull (P)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|10|10}}. Bernard J. Gehrmann (P)

Wyoming

  • {{ushr|Wyoming|AL|At-large}}. John J. McIntyre (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}}. Joaquín Miguel Elizalde (Ind.)
  • {{ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Bolívar Pagán (Socialist)
{{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}}
|-
| West Virginia
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Matthew M. Neely (D)
| Resigned January 12, 1941, after being elected Governor of West Virginia.
Successor was appointed to serve until a special election, which he subsequently lost. In addition, successor took oath of office after the Senate resolved a challenge to the appointment.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Joseph Rosier (D)
| January 13, 1941
|-
| Arkansas
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | John E. Miller (D)
| Resigned March 31, 1941, after being appointed judge for the US District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.
Successor was appointed to finish the term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | G. Lloyd Spencer (D)
| April 1, 1941
|-
| Texas
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Morris Sheppard (D)
| Died April 9, 1941.
Successor was appointed to serve until a special election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Andrew Jackson Houston (D)
| April 21, 1941
|-
| Mississippi
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Pat Harrison (D)
| Died June 22, 1941.
Successor was appointed to serve until a special election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | James Eastland (D)
| June 30, 1941
|-
| Texas
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Andrew Jackson Houston (D)
| Died June 26, 1941.
Successor was elected to finish term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | W. Lee O'Daniel (D)
| June 28, 1941
|-
| South Carolina
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | James F. Byrnes (D)
| Resigned July 17, 1941, after being appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.
Successor was appointed to serve until a special election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alva M. Lumpkin (D)
| July 22, 1941
|-
| South Carolina
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alva M. Lumpkin (D)
| Died August 1, 1941.
Successor was appointed to serve until a special election.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Roger C. Peace (D)
| August 5, 1941
|-
| Mississippi
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | James Eastland (D)
| Appointee did not seek election to finish term.
Successor was elected September 28, 1941, to finish term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Wall Doxey (D)
| September 29, 1941
|-
| South Carolina
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Roger C. Peace (D)
| Appointee did not seek election to finish term.
Successor was elected November 4, 1941, to finish term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Burnet R. Maybank (D)
| November 5, 1941
|-
| Colorado
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alva B. Adams (D)
| Died December 1, 1941.
Successor was appointed to serve until the November 3, 1942, special election, which he won.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Eugene Millikin (R)
| December 20, 1941
|-
| West Virginia
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Joseph Rosier (D)
| Appointee lost election November 17, 1942, to finish the term.
Successor was elected to finish term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Hugh Shott (R)
| November 18, 1942
|-
| Nevada
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Berkeley L. Bunker (D)
| Appointee lost election December 7, 1942, to finish the term.
Successor was elected to finish term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | James G. Scrugham (D)
| December 7, 1942
|}

House of Representatives

{{See also|List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives}}{{Ordinal US Congress Rep}}
|-
| {{ushr|Oklahoma|7|Oklahoma 7th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Sam C. Massingale (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died January 17, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Victor Wickersham (D)
| April 1, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|New York|17|New York 17th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Kenneth F. Simpson (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died January 25, 1941
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Joseph C. Baldwin (R)
| March 11, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Alabama|7|Alabama 7th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Walter W. Bankhead (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned February 1, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Carter Manasco (D)
| June 24, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Maryland|6|Maryland 6th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | William D. Byron (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 27, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Katharine Byron (D)
| May 27, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Virginia|2|Virginia 2nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Colgate Darden (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned March 1, 1941, to run for Governor of Virginia
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Winder R. Harris (D)
| April 8, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|New York|42|New York 42nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Pius L. Schwert (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died March 11, 1941
| {{party shading/Republican}} | John C. Butler (R)
| April 22, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|North Carolina|5|North Carolina 5th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Alonzo D. Folger (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died April 30, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | John H. Folger (D)
| June 14, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|New York|14|New York 14th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Morris M. Edelstein (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 4, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Arthur G. Klein (D)
| July 29, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Wisconsin|1|Wisconsin 1st}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Stephen Bolles (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died July 8, 1941
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Lawrence H. Smith (R)
| August 29, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|Pennsylvania 15th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Albert G. Rutherford (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died August 10, 1941
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Wilson D. Gillette (R)
| November 4, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Colorado|4|Colorado 4th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Edward T. Taylor (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died September 3, 1941
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Robert F. Rockwell (R)
| December 9, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Mississippi|2|Mississippi 2nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Wall Doxey (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 28, 1941, after being elected to the US Senate
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Jamie L. Whitten (D)
| November 4, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|California|17|California 17th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Lee E. Geyer (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died October 11, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Cecil R. King (D)
| August 25, 1942
|-
| {{ushr|Massachusetts|7|Massachusetts 7th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Lawrence J. Connery (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died October 19, 1941
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Thomas J. Lane (D)
| December 30, 1941
|-
| {{ushr|Connecticut|5|Connecticut 5th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | J. Joseph Smith (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned November 4, 1941, after being appointed judge for the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Joseph E. Talbot (R)
| January 20, 1942
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|Pennsylvania 12th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | J. Harold Flannery (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 3, 1942, after becoming judge of common pleas for Luzerne County, PA
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Thomas B. Miller (R)
| May 19, 1942
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|33|Pennsylvania 33rd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Joseph A. McArdle (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 5, 1942, after being elected to the Pittsburgh City Council
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Elmer J. Holland (D)
| May 19, 1942
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|Pennsylvania 11th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Patrick J. Boland (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died May 18, 1942
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Veronica G. Boland (D)
| November 3, 1942
|-
| {{ushr|Washington|5|Washington 5th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Arthur D. Healey (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned August 1, 1942, after being appointed judge for the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Massachusetts|8|Massachusetts 8th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Charles H. Leavy (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned August 3, 1942, after being appointed judge for the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Ohio|15|Ohio 15th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Robert T. Secrest (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned August 3, 1942, after accepting a commission in the U.S. Navy
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Ohio|13|Ohio 13th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Albert D. Baumhart, Jr. (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 2, 1942, after accepting a commission in the U.S. Navy
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Iowa|9|Iowa 9th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Vincent F. Harrington (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 5, 1942, after accepting a commission as major in the United States Army
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Harry E. Narey (R)
| November 3, 1942
|-
| {{ushr|California|3|California 3rd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Frank H. Buck (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died September 17, 1942
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Maryland|2|Maryland 2nd}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | William Purington Cole, Jr. (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned October 26, 1942, after being appointed judge for the U.S. Customs Court
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|Pennsylvania 25th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Charles I. Faddis (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 4, 1942, to enter the US Army
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Illinois|4|Illinois 4th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Harry P. Beam (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 6, 1942, after being elected judge for the municipal court of Chicago
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Illinois|6|Illinois 6th}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | A. F. Maciejewski (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 6, 1942
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Missouri|6|Missouri 6th}}
| {{party shading/Republican}} | Philip A. Bennett (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died December 7, 1942
| colspan=2 | Vacant until the next Congress
|-
| {{ushr|Nevada|AL|Nevada At-large}}
| {{party shading/Democratic}} | James G. Scrugham (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 7, 1942, after being elected to the U.S. Senate
| 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
  • Agricultural Labor Shortages in the West (Special)
  • Appropriations
  • Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate
  • Banking and Currency
  • Civil Service
  • Civil Service Laws (Special)
  • Claims
  • Commerce
  • District of Columbia
  • Education and Labor
  • Enrolled Bills
  • Expenditures in Executive Departments
  • Finance
  • Foreign Relations
  • Fiscal Affairs of the Government (Special)
  • Fuel Situation in the Middle West (Special)
  • Fuels in the Areas West of the Mississippi (Special)
  • Gasoline and Fuel Oil Shortages (Special)
  • Immigration
  • Immigration and Naturalization
  • Indian Affairs
  • Interoceanic Canals
  • Interstate Commerce
  • Investigate the National Defense Program (Special)
  • Judiciary
  • Library
  • Manufactures
  • Military Affairs
  • Mines and Mining
  • Naval Affairs
  • Old-Age Pension System (Select)
  • Patents
  • Pensions
  • Post Office and Post Roads
  • Printing
  • Privileges and Elections
  • Public Buildings and Grounds
  • Public Lands and Surveys
  • Rules
  • Senatorial Campaign Expenditures (Special)
  • Small Business Enterprises (Special)
  • Territories and Insular Affairs
  • Whole
  • Wildlife Resources (Special)
  • Wool Production (Special)
{{col-break}}

House of Representatives

  • Accounts
  • Agriculture
  • Air Accidents (Select)
  • Appropriations
  • Banking and Currency
  • 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
  • Small Business (Select)
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Territories
  • War Claims
  • Ways and Means
  • Whole
{{col-end}}

Joint committees

  • Conditions of Indian Tribes (Special)
  • Disposition of (Useless) Executive Papers
  • Eradication of the Mediterranean Fruit Fly
  • Forestry
  • The Library
  • Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures
  • Taxation
  • To Investigate Phosphate Resource of the United States

Caucuses

  • Democratic (House)
  • Democratic (Senate)

Employees

  • Architect of the Capitol: David Lynn
  • Attending Physician of the United States Congress: George Calver
  • Comptroller General of the United States: Lindsay C. Warren
  • Librarian of Congress: Archibald MacLeish
  • Public Printer of the United States: Augustus E. Giegengack

Senate

  • Secretary: Edwin A. Halsey
  • Sergeant at Arms: Chesley W. Jurney
  • Parliamentarian: Charles Watkins
  • Chaplain: ZeBarney Thorne Phillips (until October 9, 1942), Frederick Brown Harris (after October 10, 1942)

House

  • Clerk: South Trimble of Kentucky
  • Sergeant at Arms: Kenneth Romney
  • Parliamentarian: Lewis Deschler
  • Reading Clerks: Irving Swanson
  • Doorkeeper of the House: Joseph J. Sinnott
  • Postmaster: Finis E. Scott
  • Chaplain: James Shera Montgomery (Methodist)

See also

  • United States elections, 1940 (elections leading to this Congress)
    • United States presidential election, 1940
    • United States Senate elections, 1940
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1940
  • United States elections, 1942 (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
    • United States Senate elections, 1942
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1942

References

  • {{cite book |title=House of Representatives Session Calendar for the 77th Congress |url= http://library.clerk.house.gov/reference-files/House_Calendar_77th_Congress.pdf#page=1 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 77th Congress, 1st Session |url= http://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE8156546 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 77th Congress, 1st Session (Revision) |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022759222;view=1up;seq=7 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 77th Congress, 2nd Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022758935;view=1up;seq=7 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 77th Congress, 2nd Session (Revision) |url= https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015022759099;view=1up;seq=7 }}
{{USCongresses}}

1 : 77th United States Congress

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