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词条 87th United States Congress
释义

  1. Major events

  2. Major legislation

  3. Constitutional amendments

  4. Party summary

      Senate   House of Representatives  

  5. Leadership

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

  6. Caucuses

  7. Members

      Senate    Alabama    Alaska    Arizona    Arkansas    California    Colorado    Connecticut    Delaware    Florida    Georgia    Hawaii    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    Alaska    Arizona    Arkansas    California    Colorado    Connecticut    Delaware    Florida    Georgia    Hawaii    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  

  8. Changes in membership

     Senate  House of Representatives 

  9. Committees

     Senate  House of Representatives  Joint committees 

  10. Employees and legislative agency directors

     Legislative branch agency directors  Senate  House of Representatives 

  11. See also

  12. References

  13. External links

{{Use American English|date = March 2019}}{{Short description|1961–1963 U.S. Congress}}{{Use mdy dates|date = March 2019}}{{Infobox United States Congress
|number = 87th
|image = USCapitol1962.jpg
|imagename = United States Capitol
|imagedate = 1962
|start = January 3, 1961
|end = January 3, 1963
|vp = Richard Nixon (R)
until January 20, 1961
Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
from January 20, 1961
|pro tem = Carl Hayden (D)
|speaker = Sam Rayburn (D)
John W. McCormack (D)
|senators = 100
|reps = 437
|delegates =
|s-majority = Democratic
|h-majority = Democratic
|sessionnumber1 = 1st
|sessionstart1 = January 3, 1961
|sessionend1 = September 27, 1961
|sessionnumber2 = 2nd
|sessionstart2 = January 10, 1962
|sessionend2 = October 13, 1962
|previous = 86th
|next = 88th
}}

The Eighty-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, D.C. from January 3, 1961, to January 3, 1963, during the final weeks of the administration of U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower and the first two years of the administration of U.S. President John Kennedy. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Seventeenth Census of the United States in 1950, along with 2 seats temporarily added in 1959 (one member each from recently admitted states of Alaska and Hawaii). Both chambers had a Democratic majority.

{{TOC limit|2}}

Major events

{{Main|1961 in the United States|1962 in the United States|1963 in the United States}}
  • January 3, 1961: President Eisenhower severed diplomatic and consular relations with Cuba.
  • January 20, 1961: Inauguration of President John F. Kennedy.
  • April 17, 1961: Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba began; it fails by April 19.
  • May 4, 1961: Freedom Riders began interstate bus rides to test the new U.S. Supreme Court integration decision.
  • May 5, 1961: Alan Shepard became the first American in space aboard Mercury-Redstone 3.
  • May 25, 1961: President Kennedy announced his goal to put a man on the Moon before the end of the decade
  • November 20: 1961: Funeral of Speaker Sam Rayburn, who died on November 16
  • February 3, 1962: Embargo against Cuba was announced
  • February 20, 1962: John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth
  • March 26, 1962: Supreme Court ruled that federal courts could order state legislatures to reapportion seats (Baker v. Carr)
  • October 1, 1962: James Meredith registered as the first black student at the University of Mississippi, escorted by Federal Marshals.
  • October 14, 1962 - October 28, 1962: Cuban Missile Crisis

Major legislation

{{Main|List of United States federal legislation}}
  • May 1, 1961: Area Redevelopment Act, {{USPL|87|27}}, {{USStat|75|47}}
  • August 30, 1961 : Oil Pollution Act of 1961, {{USPL|87|167}}, {{USStat|75|402}}
  • September 4, 1961: The Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, {{USPL|87|195}}, {{USStat|75|424}}
  • September 13, 1961: Interstate Wire Act of 1961, {{USPL|87|216}}, {{USStat|75|491}}
  • September 21, 1961: Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act of 1961, {{USPL|87|256}}, {{USStat|75|527}}
  • September 22, 1961: Peace Corps Act of 1961, {{USPL|87|293}}, {{USStat|75|612}}
  • September 26, 1961: Arms Control and Disarmament Act of 1961, {{USPL|87|297}}, {{USStat|75|631}}
  • October 15, 1961: Community Health Services and Facilities Act, {{USPL|87|395}}, {{USStat|75|824}}
  • March 15, 1962: Manpower Development and Training Act, {{USPL|87|415}}, {{USStat|76|23}}
  • June 28, 1962: Migration and Refugee Assistance Act, {{USPL|87|510}}, {{USStat|76|121}}
  • August 13, 1962: Communications Satellite Act, {{USPL|87|624}}, {{USStat|76|419}}
  • October 11, 1962: Trade Expansion Act, {{USPL|87|794}}, {{USStat|76|872}}
  • October 23, 1962: Bribery Act, {{USPL|87|849}}, {{USStat|76|1119}}
  • October 23, 1962: Vaccination Assistance Act of 1962, {{USPL|87|868}}, {{USStat|76|1155}}
  • October 23, 1962: River and Harbor Act of 1962,[1] {{USPL|87|874}}, {{USStat|76|1173}}

Constitutional amendments

  • March 29, 1961: Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution, extending the right to vote in the presidential election to citizens residing in the District of Columbia by granting the District electors in the Electoral College, as if it were a state, was ratified by the requisite number of states (then 38) to become part of the Constitution
  • August 27, 1962: Approved an amendment to the United States Constitution prohibiting both Congress and the states from conditioning the right to vote in federal elections on payment of a poll tax or other types of tax, and submitted it to the state legislatures for ratification
    • Amendment was later ratified on January 23, 1964, becoming the Twenty-fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution

Party summary

Senate

{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=87
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Republican
| abb1=D
| abb2=R
| seats1_last=65
| seats2_last=35
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=65
| seats2_begin=35
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=62
| seats2_end=37
| seats_vacant_end=1
| seats1_next=64
| seats2_next=34
| seats_vacant_next=2
}}

House of Representatives

{{USCongress Party summary
| congress=87
| party1=Democratic
| party2=Republican
| party3=Independent
| abb1=D
| abb2=R
| abb3=I
| seats1_last=283
| seats2_last=153
| seats3_last=1
| seats_vacant_last=0
| seats1_begin=264
| seats2_begin=173
| seats3_begin=0
| seats_vacant_begin=0
| seats1_end=261
| seats2_end=173
| seats3_end=0
| seats_vacant_end=3
| seats1_next=258
| seats2_next=176
| seats3_next=1
| seats_vacant_next=0
}}{{multiple image|caption_align=center|header_align=center
| header = Senate President
| image1 = VP-Nixon.png
| width1 = 203
| alt1 = Richard Nixon
| caption1 =Richard Nixon (R)
Until January 20, 1961
| image2= Watching flight of Astronaut Shepard on television. Attorney General Kennedy, McGeorge Bundy, Vice President Johnson crop.jpg
| width2 = 175
| alt2 = Lyndon B. Johnson
| caption2 = Lyndon Johnson (D)
From January 20, 1961
}}{{multiple image
| caption_align=center
| header_align=center
| header = House Speaker
| image1 = Samuel Taliaferro Rayburn.jpg
| width1 = 195
| alt1 = Sam Rayburn
| caption1 =Sam Rayburn (D)
Until November 16, 1961
(1st session)
| image2= Spiker John McCormack.jpg
| width2 = 175
| alt2 = John William McCormack
| caption2 = John McCormack (D)
From January 10, 1962
(2nd session)
}}

Leadership

Senate

  • President: Richard Nixon (R), until January 20, 1961
    • Lyndon Johnson (D), from January 20, 1961
  • President pro tempore: Carl Hayden (D)

Majority (Democratic) leadership

  • Majority Leader: Mike Mansfield
  • Majority Whip: Hubert Humphrey
  • Caucus Secretary: George Smathers

Minority (Republican) leadership

  • Minority Leader: Everett Dirksen
  • Minority Whip: Thomas Kuchel
  • Republican Conference Chairman: Leverett Saltonstall
  • Republican Conference Secretary: Milton Young
  • National Senatorial Committee Chair: Barry Goldwater
  • Policy Committee Chairman: Styles Bridges (until November 26, 1961)
    • Bourke B. Hickenlooper (from January 3, 1962)

House of Representatives

  • Speaker: Sam Rayburn (D), until November 16, 1961
    • John W. McCormack (D), from January 10, 1962

Majority (Democratic) leadership

  • Majority Leader: John William McCormack until January 10, 1962
    • Carl Albert, from January 10, 1962
  • Majority Whip: Carl Albert
    • Hale Boggs, from January 10, 1962
  • Democratic Caucus Chairman: Francis E. Walter
  • Caucus Secretary: Leonor Sullivan
  • Democratic Campaign Committee Chairman: Michael J. Kirwan

Minority (Republican) leadership

  • Minority Leader: Charles A. Halleck
  • Minority Whip: Leslie C. Arends
  • Conference Chair: Charles B. Hoeven
  • Policy Committee Chairman: John W. Byrnes

Caucuses

  • House Democratic Caucus
  • Senate Democratic Caucus

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 1962; Class 1 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1964; and Class 2 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1966.

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

Alabama

  • 2. John J. Sparkman (D)
  • 3. Joseph Lister Hill (D)

Alaska

  • 2. Bob Bartlett (D)
  • 3. Ernest Gruening (D)

Arizona

  • 1. Barry Goldwater (R)
  • 3. Carl Hayden (D)

Arkansas

  • 2. John Little McClellan (D)
  • 3. J. William Fulbright (D)

California

  • 1. Clair Engle (D)
  • 3. Thomas H. Kuchel (R)

Colorado

  • 2. Gordon L. Allott (R)
  • 3. John A. Carroll (D)

Connecticut

  • 1. Thomas J. Dodd (D)
  • 3. Prescott Bush (R)

Delaware

  • 1. John J. Williams (R)
  • 2. J. Caleb Boggs (R)

Florida

  • 1. Spessard Holland (D)
  • 3. George Smathers (D)

Georgia

  • 2. Richard Russell Jr. (D)
  • 3. Herman Talmadge (D)

Hawaii

  • 1. Hiram Fong (R)
  • 2. Oren E. Long (D)

Idaho

  • 2. Henry Dworshak (R), until July 23, 1962
    • Leonard B. Jordan (R), from August 6, 1962
  • 3. Frank F. Church (D)

Illinois

  • 2. Paul Douglas (D)
  • 3. Everett Dirksen (R)

Indiana

  • 1. Vance Hartke (D)
  • 3. Homer E. Capehart (R)

Iowa

  • 2. Jack R. Miller (R)
  • 3. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R)

Kansas

  • 2. Andrew F. Schoeppel (R), until January 21, 1962
    • James B. Pearson (R), from January 31, 1962
  • 3. Frank Carlson (R)

Kentucky

  • 2. John Sherman Cooper (R)
  • 3. Thruston B. Morton (R)

Louisiana

  • 2. Allen Joseph Ellender (D)
  • 3. Russell B. Long (D)

Maine

  • 1. Edmund Muskie (D)
  • 2. Margaret Chase Smith (R)

Maryland

  • 1. James Glenn Beall (R)
  • 3. John M. Butler (R)

Massachusetts

  • 1. Benjamin A. Smith II (D), until November 6, 1962
    • Ted Kennedy (D), from November 7, 1962
  • 2. Leverett Saltonstall (R)

Michigan

  • 1. Philip A. Hart (D)
  • 2. Patrick V. McNamara (D)

Minnesota

  • 1. Eugene McCarthy (DFL)
  • 2. Hubert Humphrey (DFL)

Mississippi

  • 1. John C. Stennis (D)
  • 2. James O. Eastland (D)

Missouri

  • 1. Stuart Symington (D)
  • 3. Edward V. Long (D)

Montana

  • 1. Michael J. Mansfield (D)
  • 2. Lee Metcalf (D)
{{col-break}}

Nebraska

  • 1. Roman Hruska (R)
  • 2. Carl Curtis (R)

Nevada

  • 1. Howard W. Cannon (D)
  • 3. Alan Bible (D)

New Hampshire

  • 2. Styles Bridges (R), until November 26, 1961
    • Maurice J. Murphy, Jr. (R), from January 10, 1962 - November 6, 1962
    • Thomas J. McIntyre (D), from November 7, 1962
  • 3. Norris Cotton (R)

New Jersey

  • 2. Clifford P. Case (R)
  • 1. Harrison A. Williams, Jr. (D)

New Mexico

  • 1. Dennis Wyatt Chavez (D), until November 18, 1962
    • Edwin L. Mechem (R), from November 30, 1962
  • 2. Clinton Presba Anderson (D)

New York

  • 1. Kenneth Keating (R)
  • 3. Jacob K. Javits (R)

North Carolina

  • 2. B. Everett Jordan (D)
  • 3. Sam Ervin (D)

North Dakota

  • 1. Quentin N. Burdick (D)
  • 3. Milton Young (R)

Ohio

  • 1. Stephen M. Young (D)
  • 3. Frank J. Lausche (D)

Oklahoma

  • 2. Robert S. Kerr (D), until January 1, 1963
  • 3. A. S. Mike Monroney (D)

Oregon

  • 2. Maurine Brown Neuberger (D)
  • 3. Wayne L. Morse (D)

Pennsylvania

  • 1. Hugh D. Scott, Jr. (R)
  • 3. Joseph S. Clark (D)

Rhode Island

  • 1. John O. Pastore (D)
  • 2. Claiborne Pell (D)

South Carolina

  • 2. Strom Thurmond (D)
  • 3. Olin D. Johnston (D)

South Dakota

  • 2. Karl E. Mundt (R)
  • 3. Francis H. Case (R), until June 23, 1962
    • Joseph H. Bottum (R), from July 9, 1962

Tennessee

  • 2. C. Estes Kefauver (D)
  • 1. Albert A. Gore Sr. (D)

Texas

  • 1. Ralph Yarborough (D)
  • 2. William A. Blakley (D), until June 14, 1961
    • John Tower (R), from June 15, 1961

Utah

  • 1. Frank Moss (D)
  • 3. Wallace F. Bennett (R)

Vermont

  • 1. Winston L. Prouty (R)
  • 3. George Aiken (R)

Virginia

  • 1. Harry Flood Byrd (D)
  • 2. Absalom Willis Robertson (D)

Washington

  • 1. Henry M. Jackson (D)
  • 3. Warren G. Magnuson (D)

West Virginia

  • 2. Jennings Randolph (D)
  • 1. Robert Byrd (D)

Wisconsin

  • 1. William Proxmire (D)
  • 3. Alexander Wiley (R)

Wyoming

  • 1. Gale W. McGee (D)
  • 2. John J. Hickey (D), until November 6, 1962
    • Milward L. Simpson (R), from November 6, 1962
{{col-break}}{{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}}. George M. Grant (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|3|3}}. George W. Andrews (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|4|4}}. Kenneth A. Roberts (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|5|5}}. Albert Rains (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|6|6}}. Armistead I. Selden, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|7|7}}. Carl Elliott (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|8|8}}. Robert E. Jones, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Alabama|9|9}}. George Huddleston, Jr. (D)

Alaska

  • {{ushr|Alaska|AL|At-Large}}. Ralph Julian Rivers (D)

Arizona

  • {{ushr|Arizona|1|1}}. John Jacob Rhodes (R)
  • {{ushr|Arizona|2|2}}. Stewart Lee Udall (D), until January 18, 1961
    • Mo Udall (D), from May 2, 1961

Arkansas

  • {{ushr|Arkansas|1|1}}. Ezekiel C. Gathings (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|2|2}}. Wilbur D. Mills (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|3|3}}. James William Trimble (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|4|4}}. Oren Harris (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|5|5}}. Dale Alford (D)
  • {{ushr|Arkansas|6|6}}. William F. Norrell (D), until February 15, 1961
    • Catherine Dorris Norrell (D), from April 18, 1961

California

  • {{ushr|California|1|1}}. Clement Woodnutt Miller (D), until October 7, 1962
  • {{ushr|California|2|2}}. Harold T. Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|California|3|3}}. John E. Moss (D)
  • {{ushr|California|4|4}}. William S. Mailliard (R)
  • {{ushr|California|5|5}}. John F. Shelley (D)
  • {{ushr|California|6|6}}. John F. Baldwin, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|California|7|7}}. Jeffery Cohelan (D)
  • {{ushr|California|8|8}}. George P. Miller (D)
  • {{ushr|California|9|9}}. Jesse A. Younger (R)
  • {{ushr|California|10|10}}. Charles S. Gubser (R)
  • {{ushr|California|11|11}}. John J. McFall (D)
  • {{ushr|California|12|12}}. Bernice F. Sisk (D)
  • {{ushr|California|13|13}}. Charles M. Teague (R)
  • {{ushr|California|14|14}}. Harlan Hagen (D)
  • {{ushr|California|15|15}}. Gordon L. McDonough (R)
  • {{ushr|California|16|16}}. Alphonzo E. Bell, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|California|17|17}}. Cecil R. King (D)
  • {{ushr|California|18|18}}. Craig Hosmer (R)
  • {{ushr|California|19|19}}. Chet Holifield (D)
  • {{ushr|California|20|20}}. H. Allen Smith (R)
  • {{ushr|California|21|21}}. Edgar W. Hiestand (R)
  • {{ushr|California|22|22}}. James C. Corman (D)
  • {{ushr|California|23|23}}. Clyde Doyle (D)
  • {{ushr|California|24|24}}. Glenard P. Lipscomb (R)
  • {{ushr|California|25|25}}. John H. Rousselot (R)
  • {{ushr|California|26|26}}. James Roosevelt (D)
  • {{ushr|California|27|27}}. Harry R. Sheppard (D)
  • {{ushr|California|28|28}}. James B. Utt (R)
  • {{ushr|California|29|29}}. Dalip Singh Saund (D)
  • {{ushr|California|30|30}}. Bob Wilson (R)

Colorado

  • {{ushr|Colorado|1|1}}. Byron G. Rogers (D)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|2|2}}. Peter H. Dominick (R)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|3|3}}. J. Edgar Chenoweth (R)
  • {{ushr|Colorado|4|4}}. Wayne N. Aspinall (D)

Connecticut

  • {{ushr|Connecticut|1|1}}. Emilio Q. Daddario (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|2|2}}. Horace Seely-Brown, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|3|3}}. Robert N. Giaimo (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|4|4}}. Abner W. Sibal (R)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|5|5}}. John S. Monagan (D)
  • {{ushr|Connecticut|AL|At-Large}}. Frank Kowalski (D)

Delaware

  • {{ushr|Delaware|AL|At-Large}}. Harris McDowell (D)

Florida

  • {{ushr|Florida|1|1}}. William C. Cramer (R)
  • {{ushr|Florida|2|2}}. Charles Edward Bennett (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|3|3}}. Bob Sikes (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|4|4}}. Dante Fascell (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|5|5}}. Syd Herlong (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|6|6}}. Paul Rogers (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|7|7}}. James A. Haley (D)
  • {{ushr|Florida|8|8}}. Donald Ray Matthews (D)

Georgia

  • {{ushr|Georgia|1|1}}. G. Elliott Hagan (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|2|2}}. J. L. Pilcher (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|3|3}}. Tic Forrester (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|4|4}}. John J. Flynt, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|5|5}}. James C. Davis (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|6|6}}. Carl Vinson (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|7|7}}. John W. Davis (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|8|8}}. Iris Blitch (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|9|9}}. Phillip M. Landrum (D)
  • {{ushr|Georgia|10|10}}. Robert G. Stephens, Jr. (D)

Hawaii

  • {{ushr|Hawaii|AL|At-Large}}. Daniel Inouye (D)

Idaho

  • {{ushr|Idaho|1|1}}. Gracie Pfost (D)
  • {{ushr|Idaho|2|2}}. Ralph R. Harding (D)

Illinois

  • {{ushr|Illinois|1|1}}. William L. Dawson (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|2|2}}. Barratt O'Hara (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|3|3}}. William T. Murphy (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|4|4}}. Edward J. Derwinski (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|5|5}}. John C. Kluczynski (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|6|6}}. Thomas Joseph O'Brien (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|7|7}}. Roland V. Libonati (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|8|8}}. Dan Rostenkowski (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|9|9}}. Sidney R. Yates (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|10|10}}. Harold R. Collier (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|11|11}}. Roman C. Pucinski (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|12|12}}. Edward R. Finnegan (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|13|13}}. Marguerite S. Church (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|14|14}}. Elmer J. Hoffman (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|15|15}}. Noah M. Mason (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|16|16}}. John B. Anderson (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|17|17}}. Leslie C. Arends (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|18|18}}. Robert H. Michel (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|19|19}}. Robert B. Chiperfield (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|20|20}}. Paul Findley (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|21|21}}. Peter F. Mack, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|22|22}}. William L. Springer (R)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|23|23}}. George E. Shipley (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|24|24}}. Melvin Price (D)
  • {{ushr|Illinois|25|25}}. Kenneth J. Gray (D)

Indiana

  • {{ushr|Indiana|1|1}}. Ray J. Madden (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|2|2}}. Charles A. Halleck (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|3|3}}. John Brademas (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|4|4}}. E. Ross Adair (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|5|5}}. J. Edward Roush (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|6|6}}. Richard L. Roudebush (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|7|7}}. William G. Bray (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|8|8}}. Winfield K. Denton (D)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|9|9}}. Earl Wilson (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|10|10}}. Ralph Harvey (R)
  • {{ushr|Indiana|11|11}}. Donald C. Bruce (R)

Iowa

  • {{ushr|Iowa|1|1}}. Fred Schwengel (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|2|2}}. James E. Bromwell (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|3|3}}. Harold R. Gross (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|4|4}}. John Kyl (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|5|5}}. Neal Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|6|6}}. Merwin Coad (D)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|7|7}}. Ben F. Jensen (R)
  • {{ushr|Iowa|8|8}}. Charles B. Hoeven (R)

Kansas

  • {{ushr|Kansas|1|1}}. William Henry Avery (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|2|2}}. Robert Fred Ellsworth (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|3|3}}. Walter Lewis McVey, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|4|4}}. Garner E. Shriver (R)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|5|5}}. James Floyd Breeding (D)
  • {{ushr|Kansas|6|6}}. Bob Dole (R)

Kentucky

  • {{ushr|Kentucky|1|1}}. Frank A. Stubblefield (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|2|2}}. William Huston Natcher (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|3|3}}. Frank W. Burke (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|4|4}}. Frank Chelf (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|5|5}}. Brent Spence (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|6|6}}. John C. Watts (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|7|7}}. Carl D. Perkins (D)
  • {{ushr|Kentucky|8|8}}. Eugene Siler (R)

Louisiana

  • {{ushr|Louisiana|1|1}}. F. Edward Hébert (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|2|2}}. Hale Boggs (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|3|3}}. Edwin E. Willis (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|4|4}}. Overton Brooks (D), until September 16, 1961
    • Joe Waggonner (D), from December 19, 1961
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|5|5}}. Otto E. Passman (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|6|6}}. James H. Morrison (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|7|7}}. Theo A. Thompson (D)
  • {{ushr|Louisiana|8|8}}. Harold B. McSween (D)

Maine

  • {{ushr|Maine|1|1}}. Peter A. Garland (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|2|2}}. Stanley R. Tupper (R)
  • {{ushr|Maine|3|3}}. Clifford G. McIntire (R)

Maryland

  • {{ushr|Maryland|1|1}}. Thomas F. Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|2|2}}. Daniel B. Brewster (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|3|3}}. Edward Garmatz (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|4|4}}. George Hyde Fallon (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|5|5}}. Richard Lankford (D)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|6|6}}. Charles Mathias, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Maryland|7|7}}. Samuel Friedel (D)

Massachusetts

  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|1|1}}. Silvio Conte (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|2|2}}. Edward Boland (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|3|3}}. Philip Philbin (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|4|4}}. Harold Donohue (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|5|5}}. F. Bradford Morse (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|6|6}}. William H. Bates (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|7|7}}. Thomas J. Lane (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|8|8}}. Torbert H. Macdonald (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|9|9}}. Hastings Keith (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|10|10}}. Laurence Curtis (R)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|11|11}}. Tip O'Neill (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|12|12}}. John W. McCormack (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|13|13}}. James A. Burke (D)
  • {{ushr|Massachusetts|14|14}}. Joseph W. Martin, Jr. (R)

Michigan

  • {{ushr|Michigan|1|1}}. Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (D), until September 18, 1961
    • Lucien N. Nedzi (D), from November 7, 1961
  • {{ushr|Michigan|2|2}}. George Meader (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|3|3}}. August E. Johansen (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|4|4}}. Clare E. Hoffman (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|5|5}}. Gerald Ford (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|6|6}}. Charles Chamberlain (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|7|7}}. James G. O'Hara (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|8|8}}. R. James Harvey (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|9|9}}. Robert P. Griffin (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|10|10}}. Elford Cederberg (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|11|11}}. Victor A. Knox (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|12|12}}. John B. Bennett (R)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|13|13}}. Charles C. Diggs, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|14|14}}. Louis C. Rabaut (D), until November 12, 1961
    • Harold M. Ryan (D), from February 13, 1962
  • {{ushr|Michigan|15|15}}. John Dingell (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|16|16}}. John Lesinski, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|17|17}}. Martha W. Griffiths (D)
  • {{ushr|Michigan|18|18}}. William S. Broomfield (R)

Minnesota

  • {{ushr|Minnesota|1|1}}. Al Quie (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|2|2}}. Ancher Nelsen (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|3|3}}. Clark MacGregor (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|4|4}}. Joseph Karth (DFL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|5|5}}. Walter Judd (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|6|6}}. Fred Marshall (DFL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|7|7}}. H. Carl Andersen (R)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|8|8}}. John Blatnik (DFL)
  • {{ushr|Minnesota|9|9}}. Odin Langen (R)

Mississippi

  • {{ushr|Mississippi|1|1}}. Thomas G. Abernethy (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|2|2}}. Jamie L. Whitten (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|3|3}}. Frank E. Smith (D), until November 14, 1962
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|4|4}}. John B. Williams (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|5|5}}. W. Arthur Winstead (D)
  • {{ushr|Mississippi|6|6}}. William M. Colmer (D)

Missouri

  • {{ushr|Missouri|1|1}}. Frank M. Karsten (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|2|2}}. Thomas B. Curtis (R)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|3|3}}. Leonor Sullivan (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|4|4}}. William J. Randall (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|5|5}}. Richard Bolling (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|6|6}}. William Raleigh Hull, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|7|7}}. Durward Gorham Hall (R)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|8|8}}. Richard H. Ichord II (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|9|9}}. Clarence Cannon (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|10|10}}. Paul C. Jones (D)
  • {{ushr|Missouri|11|11}}. Morgan M. Moulder (D)

Montana

  • {{ushr|Montana|1|1}}. Arnold Olsen (D)
  • {{ushr|Montana|2|2}}. James Franklin Battin (R)

Nebraska

  • {{ushr|Nebraska|1|1}}. Phillip Hart Weaver (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|2|2}}. Glenn Cunningham (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|3|3}}. Ralph F. Beermann (R)
  • {{ushr|Nebraska|4|4}}. David T. Martin (R)
{{col-break}}

Nevada

  • {{ushr|Nevada|AL|At-Large}}. Walter S. Baring, Jr. (D)

New Hampshire

  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|1|1}}. Chester Earl Merrow (R)
  • {{ushr|New Hampshire|2|2}}. Perkins Bass (R)

New Jersey

  • {{ushr|New Jersey|1|1}}. William T. Cahill (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|2|2}}. Milton W. Glenn (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|3|3}}. James C. Auchincloss (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|4|4}}. Frank Thompson, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|5|5}}. Peter Frelinghuysen, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|6|6}}. Florence P. Dwyer (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|7|7}}. William B. Widnall (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|8|8}}. Charles S. Joelson (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|9|9}}. Frank C. Osmers, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|10|10}}. Peter W. Rodino, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|11|11}}. Hugh J. Addonizio (D), until June 30, 1962
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|12|12}}. George M. Wallhauser (R)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|13|13}}. Cornelius E. Gallagher (D)
  • {{ushr|New Jersey|14|14}}. Dominick V. Daniels (D)

New Mexico

  • {{ushr|New Mexico|AL|At-Large}}. Thomas G. Morris (D)
  • {{ushr|New Mexico|AL|At-Large}}. Joseph Montoya (D)

New York

  • {{ushr|New York|1|1}}. Otis G. Pike (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|2|2}}. Steven B. Derounian (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|3|3}}. Frank J. Becker (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|4|4}}. Seymour Halpern (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|5|5}}. Joseph P. Addabbo (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|6|6}}. Lester Holtzman (D), until December 31, 1961
    • Benjamin S. Rosenthal (D), from February 20, 1962
  • {{ushr|New York|7|7}}. James J. Delaney (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|8|8}}. Victor L. Anfuso (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|9|9}}. Eugene J. Keogh (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|10|10}}. Edna F. Kelly (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|11|11}}. Emanuel Celler (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|12|12}}. Hugh L. Carey (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|13|13}}. Abraham J. Multer (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|14|14}}. John J. Rooney (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|15|15}}. John H. Ray (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|16|16}}. Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|17|17}}. John V. Lindsay (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|18|18}}. Alfred E. Santangelo (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|19|19}}. Leonard Farbstein (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|20|20}}. William Fitts Ryan (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|21|21}}. Herbert Zelenko (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|22|22}}. James C. Healey (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|23|23}}. Jacob H. Gilbert (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|24|24}}. Charles A. Buckley (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|25|25}}. Paul A. Fino (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|26|26}}. Edwin B. Dooley (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|27|27}}. Robert R. Barry (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|28|28}}. Katharine St. George (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|29|29}}. J. Ernest Wharton (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|30|30}}. Leo W. O'Brien (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|31|31}}. Carleton J. King (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|32|32}}. Samuel S. Stratton (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|33|33}}. Clarence E. Kilburn (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|34|34}}. Alexander Pirnie (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|35|35}}. R. Walter Riehlman (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|36|36}}. John Taber (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|37|37}}. Howard W. Robison (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|38|38}}. Jessica M. Weis (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|39|39}}. Harold C. Ostertag (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|40|40}}. William E. Miller (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|41|41}}. Thaddeus J. Dulski (D)
  • {{ushr|New York|42|42}}. John R. Pillion (R)
  • {{ushr|New York|43|43}}. Charles E. Goodell (R)

North Carolina

  • {{ushr|North Carolina|1|1}}. Herbert C. Bonner (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|2|2}}. Lawrence H. Fountain (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|3|3}}. David N. Henderson (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|4|4}}. Harold D. Cooley (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|5|5}}. Ralph James Scott (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|6|6}}. Horace R. Kornegay (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|7|7}}. Alton Asa Lennon (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|8|8}}. A. Paul Kitchin (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|9|9}}. Hugh Quincy Alexander (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|10|10}}. Charles R. Jonas (R)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|11|11}}. Basil L. Whitener (D)
  • {{ushr|North Carolina|12|12}}. Roy A. Taylor (D)

North Dakota

  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-Large}}. Don L. Short (R)
  • {{ushr|North Dakota|AL|At-Large}}. Hjalmar Carl Nygaard (R)

Ohio

  • {{ushr|Ohio|1|1}}. Gordon H. Scherer (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|2|2}}. Donald D. Clancy (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|3|3}}. Paul F. Schenck (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|4|4}}. William M. McCulloch (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|5|5}}. Delbert Latta (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|6|6}}. William H. Harsha (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|7|7}}. Clarence J. Brown (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|8|8}}. Jackson E. Betts (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|9|9}}. Thomas L. Ashley (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|10|10}}. Walter H. Moeller (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|11|11}}. Robert E. Cook (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|12|12}}. Samuel L. Devine (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|13|13}}. Charles A. Mosher (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|14|14}}. William H. Ayres (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|15|15}}. Tom Van Horn Moorehead (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|16|16}}. Frank T. Bow (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|17|17}}. John M. Ashbrook (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|18|18}}. Wayne L. Hays (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|19|19}}. Michael J. Kirwan (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|20|20}}. Michael A. Feighan (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|21|21}}. Charles A. Vanik (D)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|22|22}}. Frances P. Bolton (R)
  • {{ushr|Ohio|23|23}}. William E. Minshall, Jr. (R)

Oklahoma

  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|1|1}}. Page Belcher (R)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|2|2}}. Ed Edmondson (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|3|3}}. Carl Albert (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|4|4}}. Tom Steed (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|5|5}}. John Jarman (D)
  • {{ushr|Oklahoma|6|6}}. Victor Wickersham (D)

Oregon

  • {{ushr|Oregon|1|1}}. A. Walter Norblad (R)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|2|2}}. Al Ullman (D)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|3|3}}. Edith Green (D)
  • {{ushr|Oregon|4|4}}. Edwin Russell Durno (R)

Pennsylvania

  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|1}}. William A. Barrett (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|2}}. Kathryn E. Granahan (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|3}}. James A. Byrne (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|4}}. Robert N.C. Nix, Sr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|5}}. William J. Green, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|6}}. Herman Toll (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|7}}. William H. Milliken, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|8}}. Willard S. Curtin (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|9}}. Paul B. Dague (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|10}}. William Scranton (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|11}}. Daniel J. Flood (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|12}}. Ivor D. Fenton (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|13}}. Richard S. Schweiker (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|14}}. George M. Rhodes (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|15}}. Francis E. Walter (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|16}}. Walter M. Mumma (R), until February 25, 1961
    • John C. Kunkel (R), from May 16, 1961
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|17}}. Herman T. Schneebeli (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|18}}. J. Irving Whalley (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|19}}. George Atlee Goodling (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|20}}. James E. Van Zandt (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|21}}. John H. Dent (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|22}}. John P. Saylor (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|23}}. Leon H. Gavin (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|24}}. Carroll D. Kearns (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|25}}. Frank M. Clark (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|26}}. Thomas E. Morgan (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|27}}. James G. Fulton (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|28}}. William S. Moorhead (D)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|29}}. Robert J. Corbett (R)
  • {{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|30}}. Elmer J. Holland (D)

Rhode Island

  • {{ushr|Rhode Island|1|1}}. Fernand St. Germain (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}}. John J. Riley (D), until January 1, 1962
    • Corinne Boyd Riley (D), from April 10, 1962
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|3|3}}. W.J. Bryan Dorn (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|4|4}}. Robert T. Ashmore (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|5|5}}. Robert W. Hemphill (D)
  • {{ushr|South Carolina|6|6}}. John L. McMillan (D)

South Dakota

  • {{ushr|South Dakota|1|1}}. Ben Reifel (R)
  • {{ushr|South Dakota|2|2}}. E. Y. Berry (R)

Tennessee

  • {{ushr|Tennessee|1|1}}. B. Carroll Reece (R), until March 19, 1961
    • Louise G. Reece (R), from May 16, 1961
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|2|2}}. Howard Baker, Sr. (R)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|3|3}}. James B. Frazier Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|4|4}}. Joe L. Evins (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|5|5}}. J. Carlton Loser (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|6|6}}. Ross Bass (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|7|7}}. Tom J. Murray (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|8|8}}. Fats Everett (D)
  • {{ushr|Tennessee|9|9}}. Clifford Davis (D)

Texas

  • {{ushr|Texas|1|1}}. Wright Patman (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|2|2}}. Jack Brooks (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|3|3}}. Lindley Beckworth (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|4|4}}. Sam Rayburn (D), until November 16, 1961
    • Ray Roberts (D), from January 30, 1962
  • {{ushr|Texas|5|5}}. Bruce R. Alger (R)
  • {{ushr|Texas|6|6}}. Olin E. Teague (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|7|7}}. John V. Dowdy (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|8|8}}. Albert Thomas (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|9|9}}. Clark W. Thompson (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|10|10}}. W. Homer Thornberry (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|11|11}}. William R. Poage (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|12|12}}. James C. Wright, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|13|13}}. Frank N. Ikard (D), until December 15, 1961
    • Graham B. Purcell, Jr. (D), from January 27, 1962
  • {{ushr|Texas|14|14}}. John Andrew Young (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|15|15}}. Joe M. Kilgore (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|16|16}}. J. T. Rutherford (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|17|17}}. Omar Burleson (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|18|18}}. Walter E. Rogers (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|19|19}}. George H. Mahon (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|20|20}}. Paul J. Kilday (D), until September 24, 1961
    • Henry B. González (D), from November 4, 1961
  • {{ushr|Texas|21|21}}. O. Clark Fisher (D)
  • {{ushr|Texas|22|22}}. Robert R. Casey (D)

Utah

  • {{ushr|Utah|1|1}}. M. Blaine Peterson (D)
  • {{ushr|Utah|2|2}}. David S. King (D)

Vermont

  • {{ushr|Vermont|AL|At-Large}}. Robert T. Stafford (R)

Virginia

  • {{ushr|Virginia|1|1}}. Thomas N. Downing (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|2|2}}. Porter Hardy, Jr. (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|3|3}}. J. Vaughan Gary (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|4|4}}. Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|5|5}}. William M. Tuck (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|6|6}}. Richard Harding Poff (R)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|7|7}}. Burr Harrison (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|8|8}}. Howard W. Smith (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|9|9}}. William Pat Jennings (D)
  • {{ushr|Virginia|10|10}}. Joel T. Broyhill (R)

Washington

  • {{ushr|Washington|1|1}}. Thomas Minor Pelly (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|2|2}}. Alfred Westland (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|3|3}}. Julia Butler Hansen (D)
  • {{ushr|Washington|4|4}}. Catherine Dean Barnes May (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|5|5}}. Walt Horan (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|6|6}}. Thor C. Tollefson (R)
  • {{ushr|Washington|7|7}}. Donald Hammer Magnuson (D)

West Virginia

  • {{ushr|West Virginia|1|1}}. Arch A. Moore, Jr. (R)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|2|2}}. Harley O. Staggers (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|3|3}}. Cleveland M. Bailey (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|4|4}}. Ken Hechler (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|5|5}}. Elizabeth Kee (D)
  • {{ushr|West Virginia|6|6}}. John M. Slack, Jr. (D)

Wisconsin

  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|1|1}}. Henry C. Schadeberg (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|2|2}}. Robert Kastenmeier (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|3|3}}. Vernon Wallace Thomson (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|4|4}}. Clement J. Zablocki (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|5|5}}. Henry S. Reuss (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|6|6}}. William K. Van Pelt (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|7|7}}. Melvin R. Laird (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|8|8}}. John W. Byrnes (R)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|9|9}}. Lester Johnson (D)
  • {{ushr|Wisconsin|10|10}}. Alvin E. O'Konski (R)

Wyoming

  • {{ushr|Wyoming|AL|At-Large}}. William Henry Harrison (R)

Non-voting members

  • {{ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Antonio Fernós Isern (Resident Commissioner) (PPD)
{{col-break}}{{col-end}}

Changes in membership

Senate

{{see also|List of special elections to the United States Senate}}{{Ordinal US Congress Senate}}
|-
| Texas
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | William A. Blakley (D)
| Lost special election.
Successor elected June 14, 1961.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | John Tower (R)
| June 15, 1961
|-
| New Hampshire
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Styles Bridges (R)
| Died November 26, 1961.
Successor appointed January 10, 1962.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Maurice J. Murphy, Jr. (R)
| January 10, 1962
|-
| Kansas
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Andrew F. Schoeppel (R)
| Died January 21, 1962.
Successor appointed January 31, 1962, and then elected November 6, 1962.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | James B. Pearson (R)
| January 31, 1962
|-
| South Dakota
(3)
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Francis H. Case (R)
| Died June 23, 1962.
Successor appointed July 9, 1962 to finish the term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Joseph H. Bottum (R)
| July 9, 1962
|-
| Idaho
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Henry Dworshak (R)
| Died July 23, 1962.
Successor appointed August 6, 1962, and then elected November 6, 1962.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Leonard B. Jordan (R)
| August 6, 1962
|-
| Wyoming
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | John J. Hickey (D)
| Lost special election.
Successor elected November 6, 1962.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Milward L. Simpson (R)
| November 6, 1962
|-
| Massachusetts
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Benjamin A. Smith II (D)
| Successor elected November 6, 1962.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Ted Kennedy (D)
| November 7, 1962
|-
| New Hampshire
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Maurice J. Murphy, Jr. (R)
| Lost special election.
Successor elected November 6, 1962.
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Thomas J. McIntyre (D)
| November 7, 1962
|-
| New Mexico
(1)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Dennis Chavez (D)
| Died November 18, 1962.
Successor appointed November 30, 1962 to continue the term.
| nowrap {{party shading/Republican}} | Edwin L. Mechem (R)
| November 30, 1962
|-
| Oklahoma
(2)
| nowrap {{party shading/Democratic}} | Robert S. Kerr (D)
| Died January 1, 1963.
| Vacant
| Not filled this term
|}

House of Representatives

{{See also|List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives}}{{Ordinal US Congress Rep}}
|-
| {{ushr|Arizona|2|Arizona 2nd}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Stewart Udall (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 18, 1961, after being appointed United States Secretary of the Interior
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Mo Udall (D)
| May 2, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Arkansas|6|Arkansas 6th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| William F. Norrell (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 15, 1961
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Catherine Dorris Norrell (D)
| April 18, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|Pennsylvania 16th}}
| {{Party shading/Republican}} nowrap| Walter M. Mumma (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 25, 1961
| {{Party shading/Republican}} nowrap | John C. Kunkel (R)
| May 16, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Tennessee|1|Tennessee 1st}}
| {{Party shading/Republican}} nowrap| B. Carroll Reece (R)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died March 19, 1961
| {{Party shading/Republican}} nowrap | Louise Goff Reece (R)
| May 16, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Louisiana|4|Louisiana 4th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Overton Brooks (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died September 16, 1961
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Joe Waggonner (D)
| December 19, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Michigan|1|Michigan 1st}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 18, 1961, after being appointed judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Lucien N. Nedzi (D)
| November 7, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Texas|20|Texas 20th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Paul J. Kilday (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 24, 1961, after being appointed judge of United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Henry B. Gonzalez (D)
| November 4, 1961
|-
| {{ushr|Michigan|14|Michigan 14th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Louis C. Rabaut (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died November 12, 1961
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Harold M. Ryan (D)
| February 13, 1962
|-
| {{ushr|Texas|4|Texas 4th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Sam Rayburn (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died November 16, 1961
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Ray Roberts (D)
| January 30, 1962
|-
| {{ushr|Texas|13|Texas 13th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Frank N. Ikard (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 15, 1961
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Graham B. Purcell, Jr. (D)
| January 27, 1962
|-
| {{ushr|New York|6|New York 6th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Lester Holtzman (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 31, 1961, after being appointed judge of the New York Supreme Court
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Benjamin S. Rosenthal (D)
| February 20, 1962
|-
| {{ushr|South Carolina|2|South Carolina 2nd}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| John J. Riley (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died January 1, 1962
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap | Corinne Boyd Riley (D)
| April 10, 1962
|-
| {{ushr|New Jersey|11|New Jersey 11th}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Hugh J. Addonizio (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned June 30, 1962, after being elected Mayor of Newark
| rowspan=3 |Vacant
| rowspan=3 |Not filled this term
|-
| {{ushr|California|1|California 1st}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Clement W. Miller (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Died October 7, 1962
|-
| {{ushr|Mississippi|3|Mississippi 3rd}}
| {{Party shading/Democratic}} nowrap| Frank E. Smith (D)
| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned November 14, 1962
|}

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 (2 links), in the directory after the pages of terms of service, you will see the committees of the Senate, House (Standing with Subcommittees, Select and Special) and Joint and after the committee pages, you will see the House/Senate committee assignments in the directory, on the committees section of the House and Senate in the Official Congressional Directory, the committee's members on the first row on the left side shows the chairman of the committee and on the right side shows the ranking member of the committee.

Senate

  • Aeronautical and Space Sciences
  • Agriculture and Forestry
  • Appropriations
  • Banking and Currency
  • Commerce
  • District of Columbia
  • Finance
  • Foreign Relations
  • Government Operations
  • Interior and Insular Affairs
  • Interstate and Foreign Commerce
  • Judiciary
  • Labor and Public Welfare
  • National Fuels Study (Special)
  • National Water Resources (Select)
  • Post Office and Civil Service
  • Public Works
  • Small Business (Select)
  • Subcommittee on Internal Security
  • Whole

House of Representatives

  • Agriculture
  • Appropriations
  • Banking and Currency
  • District of Columbia
  • Education and Labor
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Government Operations
  • House Administration
  • Interior and Insular Affairs
  • Merchant Marine and Fisheries
  • Post Office and Civil Service
  • Public Works
  • Rules
  • Science and Astronautics
  • Small Business (Select)
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Un-American Activities
  • Veterans' Affairs
  • Ways and Means
  • Whole

Joint committees

  • Atomic Energy
  • Conditions of Indian Tribes (Special)
  • Construction of a Building for a Museum of History and Technology for the Smithsonian
  • Defense Production
  • Economic
  • Immigration and Nationality Policy
  • Legislative Budget
  • The Library
  • Navajo-Hopi Indian Administration
  • Printing
  • Reduction of Nonessential Federal Expenditures
  • Taxation

Employees and legislative agency directors

Legislative branch agency directors

  • Architect of the Capitol: J. George Stewart
  • Attending Physician of the United States Congress: George Calver
  • Comptroller General of the United States: Joseph Campbell
  • Librarian of Congress: Lawrence Quincy Mumford
  • Public Printer of the United States: Raymond Blattenberger (until 1961), James L. Harrison (starting 1961)

Senate

  • Chaplain: Frederick Brown Harris (Methodist)
  • Parliamentarian: Charles Watkins
  • Secretary: Felton McLellan Johnston
  • Sergeant at Arms: Joseph C. Duke

House of Representatives

  • Chaplain: Bernard Braskamp (Presbyterian)
  • Clerk: Ralph R. Roberts
  • Doorkeeper: William Mosley "Fishbait" Miller
  • Parliamentarian: Lewis Deschler
  • Postmaster: H. H. Morris
  • Reading Clerk: Joe Bartlett (R) and N/A (D)
  • Sergeant at Arms: Zeake W. Johnson, Jr.

See also

  • United States elections, 1960 (elections leading to this Congress)
    • United States presidential election, 1960
    • United States Senate elections, 1960
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1960
  • United States elections, 1962 (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
    • United States Senate elections, 1962
    • United States House of Representatives elections, 1962

References

1. ^http://www.fws.gov/habitatconservation/Omnibus/R&HA1962.pdf
  • {{cite book|title=The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress|last=Martis|first=Kenneth C.|year=1989|publisher=Macmillan Publishing Company| location=New York}}
  • {{cite book|title=The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts|last=Martis|first=Kenneth C.|year=1982|publisher=Macmillan Publishing Company|location= New York}}

External links

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060601025644/http://www.gpoaccess.gov/serialset/cdocuments/hd108-222/index.html Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress]
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060601013451/http://clerk.house.gov/histHigh/Congressional_History/index.html U.S. House of Representatives: Congressional History]
  • [https://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/reference/two_column_table/stats_and_lists.htm U.S. Senate: Statistics and Lists]
  • {{cite book |title=House of Representatives Session Calendar for the 87th Congress |url= http://library.clerk.house.gov/reference-files/House_Calendar_87th_Congress.pdf#page=1 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 87th Congress, 1st Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.31158004294806;view=1up;seq=5 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Official Congressional Directory for the 87th Congress, 2nd Session |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015005291961;view=1up;seq=5 }}
  • {{cite book |title=Pocket Congressional Directory for the 87th Congress |url= http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=msu.31293012373852 }}
{{USCongresses}}

1 : 87th United States Congress

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