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83rd United States Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1953–1955 U.S. Congress

83rd United States Congress
82nd ←
→ 84th

January 3, 1953 – January 3, 1955
Members96 senators
435 representatives
3 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityRepublican
(with tie-breakingVP,
then with
tie-breaking VP & caucus)
Senate PresidentAlben W. Barkley (D)[a]
(until January 20, 1953)
Richard Nixon (R)
(from January 20, 1953)
House majorityRepublican
House SpeakerJoseph W. Martin Jr. (R)
Sessions
1st: January 3, 1953 – August 3, 1953
2nd: January 6, 1954 – December 2, 1954

The83rd United States Congress was a meeting of thelegislative branch of thefederal government of theUnited States inWashington, D.C. from January 3, 1953, until January 3, 1955, during the last two weeks of theTruman administration, with the remainder spanning the first two years ofDwight Eisenhower's presidency. It was composed of theSenate and theHouse of Representatives. Theapportionment of seats in the House was based on the1950 U.S. census.

TheRepublicans gained the majority in both chambers, winning back full control of Congress for the first time since the80th Congress in 1947, and withDwight Eisenhower being sworn in aspresident on January 20, 1953, this gave the Republicans an overall federal governmenttrifecta for the first time since the71st Congress in 1929, and the last time until they briefly did so during the107th Congress in 2001.

Major events

[edit]
Main articles:1953 in the United States,1954 in the United States, and1955 in the United States

Major legislation

[edit]
President Eisenhower signs theAtomic Energy Act of 1954.
Main article:List of United States federal legislation § 83rd United States Congress

Party summary

[edit]

Until the last week of the first session of Congress, Republicans had a 48-47-1 tied-plurality in the Senate which Republican Vice PresidentRichard Nixon broke in the GOP’s favor. At the start of the second session, to account for whenever the Senate became tied 47-47-1 or when the Democrats held the plurality the Republican-turned-Independent,Wayne Morse, caucused with the GOP which gave them a tie-breaking majority, allowing continuity in GOP control of the Senate and the overall trifecta of government. Thus Republican leaderWilliam Knowland remained Senate Majority Leader, Democratic leaderLyndon B. Johnson remained Senate Minority Leader, and the GOP remained continuously in control of the Senate committees. Wayne Morse would begin caucusing with Democrats at the start of the next Congress in 1955 to give them Senate control.

Senate

[edit]
AffiliationParty
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
DemocraticIndependentRepublicanVacant
End ofprevious Congress4748951
Begin4714896
June 26, 1953[b]46951
July 10, 1953[b]4796
July 24, 1953[c]47951
July 31, 1953[d]4746942
August 14, 1953[c]4747951
November 10, 1953[d]4896
January 6, 1954[e]481[e]4796
April 12, 1954[f]481[e]46951
April 16, 1954[f]481[e]4796
May 12, 1954[g]47951
June 5, 1954[g]4896
June 19, 1954[h]47951
June 24, 1954[h]4896
July 1, 1954[i]47951
July 3, 1954[i]4896
September 1, 1954[j]46951
September 6, 1954[j]4796
September 28, 1954[k]46951
September 6, 1954[k]4996
November 2, 1954[h]4748
November 2, 1954[k]4847
December 15, 1954[d]4748
December 23, 1954[j]46951
December 24, 1954[j]4796
December 31, 1954[f]47951
January 1, 1955[f]4896
Final voting share49%1%50%
Beginning of thenext Congress4814796

House of Representatives

[edit]

Republican majority in the House becomes a plurality after the end of the last congressional session.

Party
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
TotalVacant
DemocraticIndependentRepublican
End ofprevious Congress22811984278
Begin21112214332
End2122134269
Beginning ofnext Congress23102034341

Leadership

[edit]

Senate

[edit]

Majority (Republican) leadership

[edit]

Minority (Democratic) leadership

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]

Majority (Republican) leadership

[edit]

Minority (Democratic) leadership

[edit]

Caucuses

[edit]

Members

[edit]

Senate

[edit]
Main article:List of United States senators in the 83rd Congress

Senators are popularly elected statewide every six years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Within each state, senators are listed in order of seniority. Preceding the names in the list below areSenate class numbers, which indicate the cycle of their election, In this Congress, Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, facing re-election in 1954; Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, facing re-election in 1956; and Class 1 meant their term began in this Congress, facing re-election in 1958.

2.John J. Sparkman (D)
3.J. Lister Hill (D)
1.Barry Goldwater (R)
3.Carl Hayden (D)
2.John L. McClellan (D)
3.J. William Fulbright (D)
1.William Knowland (R)
3.Thomas Kuchel (R)
2.Edwin C. Johnson (D)
3.Eugene Millikin (R)
1.William A. Purtell (R)
3.Prescott Bush (R)
1.John J. Williams (R)
2.J. Allen Frear Jr. (D)
1.Spessard Holland (D)
3.George Smathers (D)
2.Richard Russell Jr. (D)
3.Walter F. George (D)
2.Henry Dworshak (R)
3.Herman Welker (R)
2.Paul Douglas (D)
3.Everett M. Dirksen (R)
1.William E. Jenner (R)
3.Homer E. Capehart (R)
2.Guy M. Gillette (D)
3.Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R)
2.Andrew Frank Schoeppel (R)
3.Frank Carlson (R)
2.John Sherman Cooper (R)
3.Earle Clements (D)
2.Allen J. Ellender (D)
3.Russell B. Long (D)
1.Frederick G. Payne (R)
2.Margaret Chase Smith (R)
1.James Glenn Beall (R)
3.John Marshall Butler (R)
1.John F. Kennedy (D)
2.Leverett Saltonstall (R)
1.Charles E. Potter (R)
2.Homer S. Ferguson (R)
1.Edward John Thye (R)
2.Hubert Humphrey (DFL)[l]
1.John C. Stennis (D)
2.James Eastland (D)
1.Stuart Symington (D)
3.Thomas C. Hennings Jr. (D)
1.Mike Mansfield (D)
2.James E. Murray (D)
1.Hugh A. Butler (R), until July 1, 1954
Samuel W. Reynolds (R), July 3, 1954 – November 7, 1954
Roman Hruska (R), from November 8, 1954
2.Dwight Griswold (R), until April 12, 1954
Eva Bowring (R), April 16, 1954 – November 7, 1954
Hazel Abel (R), November 8, 1954 – December 31, 1954
Carl Curtis (R), from January 1, 1955


1.George W. Malone (R)
3.Patrick A. McCarran (D), until September 28, 1954
Ernest S. Brown (R), October 1, 1954 – December 1, 1954
Alan Bible (D), from December 2, 1954
2.Styles Bridges (R)
3.Charles W. Tobey (R), until July 24, 1953
Robert W. Upton (R), August 14, 1953 – November 7, 1954
Norris Cotton (R), from November 8, 1954
1.Howard Alexander Smith (R)
2.Robert C. Hendrickson (R)
1.Dennis Chávez (D)
2.Clinton P. Anderson (D)
1.Irving Ives (R)
3.Herbert H. Lehman (D)
2.Willis Smith (D), until June 26, 1953
Alton Lennon (D), July 10, 1953 – November 28, 1954
W. Kerr Scott (D), from November 29, 1954
3.Clyde R. Hoey (D), until May 12, 1954
Sam Ervin (D), from June 5, 1954
1.William Langer (R-NPL)
3.Milton Young (R)
1.John W. Bricker (R)
3.Robert A. Taft (R), until July 31, 1953
Thomas A. Burke (D), November 10, 1953 – December 2, 1954
George H. Bender (R), from December 16, 1954
2.Robert S. Kerr (D)
3.A. S. Mike Monroney (D)
2.Guy Cordon (R)
3.Wayne Morse (I)
1.Edward Martin (R)
3.James H. Duff (R)
1.John Pastore (D)
2.Theodore F. Green (D)
2.Burnet R. Maybank (D), until September 1, 1954
Charles E. Daniel (D), September 6, 1954 – December 23, 1954
Strom Thurmond (D), from December 24, 1954
3.Olin D. Johnston (D)
2.Karl E. Mundt (R)
3.Francis Case (R)
1.Albert Gore Sr. (D)
2.Estes Kefauver (D)
1.Price Daniel (D)
2.Lyndon B. Johnson (D)
1.Arthur Vivian Watkins (R)
3.Wallace F. Bennett (R)
1.Ralph Flanders (R)
3.George Aiken (R)
1.Harry F. Byrd (D)
2.A. Willis Robertson (D)
1.Henry M. Jackson (D)
3.Warren G. Magnuson (D)
1.Harley M. Kilgore (D)
2.Matthew M. Neely (D)
1.Joseph McCarthy (R)
3.Alexander Wiley (R)
1.Frank A. Barrett (R)
2.Lester C. Hunt (D), until June 19, 1954
Edward D. Crippa (R), June 24, 1954 – November 28, 1954
Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D), from November 29, 1954
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 83rd Congress in January 1953
  2 Democrats
  1 Democrat and 1 Republican
  2 Republicans
   1 Independent and 1 Republican

House of Representatives

[edit]
Main article:List of United States representatives in the 83rd Congress
1.Frank W. Boykin (D)
2.George M. Grant (D)
3.George W. Andrews (D)
4.Kenneth A. Roberts (D)
5.Albert Rains (D)
6.Armistead I. Selden Jr. (D)
7.Carl Elliott (D)
8.Robert E. Jones Jr. (D)
9.Laurie C. Battle (D)
1.John Jacob Rhodes (R)
2.Harold Patten (D)
1.Ezekiel C. Gathings (D)
2.Wilbur Mills (D)
3.James William Trimble (D)
4.Oren Harris (D)
5.Brooks Hays (D)
6.William F. Norrell (D)
1.Hubert B. Scudder (R)
2.Clair Engle (D)
3.John E. Moss (D)
4.William S. Mailliard (R)
5.John F. Shelley (D)
6.Robert Condon (D)
7.John J. Allen Jr. (R)
8.George P. Miller (D)
9.J. Arthur Younger (R)
10.Charles Gubser (R)
11.J. Leroy Johnson (R)
12.Allan O. Hunter (R)
13.Ernest K. Bramblett (R)
14.Harlan Hagen (D)
15.Gordon L. McDonough (R)
16.Donald L. Jackson (R)
17.Cecil R. King (D)
18.Craig Hosmer (R)
19.Chester E. Holifield (D)
20.John Carl Hinshaw (R)
21.Edgar W. Hiestand (R)
22.Joseph F. Holt (R)
23.Clyde Doyle (D)
24.Norris Poulson (R), until June 11, 1953
Glenard P. Lipscomb (R), from November 10, 1953
25.Patrick J. Hillings (R)
26.Sam Yorty (D)
27.Harry R. Sheppard (D)
28.James B. Utt (R)
29.John R. Phillips (R)
30.Bob Wilson (R)
1.Byron G. Rogers (D)
2.William S. Hill (R)
3.John Chenoweth (R)
4.Wayne N. Aspinall (D)
1.Thomas J. Dodd (D)
2.Horace Seely-Brown Jr. (R)
3.Albert W. Cretella (R)
4.Albert P. Morano (R)
5.James T. Patterson (R)
At-large.Antoni Sadlak (R)
At-large.Herbert Warburton (R)
1.Courtney W. Campbell (D)
2.Charles E. Bennett (D)
3.Robert L. F. Sikes (D)
4.Bill Lantaff (D)
5.Syd Herlong (D)
6.Dwight L. Rogers (D), until December 1, 1954
7.James A. Haley (D)
8.Donald Ray Matthews (D)
1.Prince Hulon Preston Jr. (D)
2.J. L. Pilcher (D), from February 4, 1953
3.Tic Forrester (D)
4.Albert Sidney Camp (D), until July 24, 1954
John Flynt (D), from November 2, 1954
5.James C. Davis (D)
6.Carl Vinson (D)
7.Henderson Lovelace Lanham (D)
8.William McDonald Wheeler (D)
9.Phillip M. Landrum (D)
10.Paul Brown (D)
1.Gracie Pfost (D)
2.Hamer H. Budge (R)
1.William L. Dawson (D)
2.Barratt O'Hara (D)
3.Fred E. Busbey (R)
4.William E. McVey (R)
5.John C. Kluczynski (D)
6.Thomas J. O'Brien (D)
7.James Bowler (D), from July 7, 1953
8.Thomas S. Gordon (D)
9.Sidney R. Yates (D)
10.Richard W. Hoffman (R)
11.Timothy P. Sheehan (R)
12.Edgar A. Jonas (R)
13.Marguerite S. Church (R)
14.Chauncey W. Reed (R)
15.Noah M. Mason (R)
16.Leo E. Allen (R)
17.Leslie C. Arends (R)
18.Harold H. Velde (R)
19.Robert B. Chiperfield (R)
20.Sid Simpson (R)
21.Peter F. Mack Jr. (D)
22.William L. Springer (R)
23.Charles W. Vursell (R)
24.Melvin Price (D)
25.C. W. Bishop (R)
1.Ray Madden (D)
2.Charles A. Halleck (R)
3.Shepard J. Crumpacker Jr. (R)
4.E. Ross Adair (R)
5.John V. Beamer (R)
6.Cecil M. Harden (R)
7.William G. Bray (R)
8.D. Bailey Merrill (R)
9.Earl Wilson (R)
10.Ralph Harvey (R)
11.Charles B. Brownson (R)
1.Thomas E. Martin (R)
2.Henry O. Talle (R)
3.H. R. Gross (R)
4.Karl M. LeCompte (R)
5.Paul H. Cunningham (R)
6.James I. Dolliver (R)
7.Ben F. Jensen (R)
8.Charles B. Hoeven (R)
1.Howard Shultz Miller (D)
2.Errett P. Scrivner (R)
3.Myron V. George (R)
4.Edward Herbert Rees (R)
5.Clifford R. Hope (R)
6.Wint Smith (R)
1.Noble J. Gregory (D)
2.Garrett Withers (D), until April 30, 1953
William Natcher (D), from August 1, 1953
3.John M. Robsion Jr. (R)
4.Frank Chelf (D)
5.Brent Spence (D)
6.John C. Watts (D)
7.Carl D. Perkins (D)
8.James S. Golden (R)
1.F. Edward Hébert (D)
2.Hale Boggs (D)
3.Edwin E. Willis (D)
4.Overton Brooks (D)
5.Otto Passman (D)
6.James H. Morrison (D)
7.T. Ashton Thompson (D)
8.George S. Long (D)
1.Robert Hale (R)
2.Charles P. Nelson (R)
3.Clifford McIntire (R)
1.Edward Tylor Miller (R)
2.James Devereux (R)
3.Edward Garmatz (D)
4.George Hyde Fallon (D)
5.Frank Small Jr. (R)
6.DeWitt Hyde (R)
7.Samuel Friedel (D)
1.John W. Heselton (R)
2.Edward Boland (D)
3.Philip J. Philbin (D)
4.Harold Donohue (D)
5.Edith Nourse Rogers (R)
6.William H. Bates (R)
7.Thomas J. Lane (D)
8.Angier Goodwin (R)
9.Donald W. Nicholson (R)
10.Laurence Curtis (R)
11.Tip O'Neill (D)
12.John W. McCormack (D)
13.Richard B. Wigglesworth (R)
14.Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R)
1.Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (D)
2.George Meader (R)
3.Paul W. Shafer (R), until August 17, 1954
4.Clare E. Hoffman (R)
5.Gerald Ford (R)
6.Kit Clardy (R)
7.Jesse P. Wolcott (R)
8.Alvin Morell Bentley (R)
9.Ruth Thompson (R)
10.Elford Albin Cederberg (R)
11.Victor A. Knox (R)
12.John B. Bennett (R)
13.George D. O'Brien (D)
14.Louis C. Rabaut (D)
15.John D. Dingell Sr. (D)
16.John Lesinski Jr. (D)
17.Charles G. Oakman (R)
18.George A. Dondero (R)
1.August H. Andresen (R)
2.Joseph P. O'Hara (R)
3.Roy Wier (DFL)[l]
4.Eugene McCarthy (DFL)[l]
5.Walter Judd (R)
6.Fred Marshall (DFL)[l]
7.Herman Carl Andersen (R)
8.John Blatnik (DFL)[l]
9.Harold Hagen (R)
1.Thomas Abernethy (D)
2.Jamie L. Whitten (D)
3.Frank Ellis Smith (D)
4.John Bell Williams (D)
5.W. Arthur Winstead (D)
6.William M. Colmer (D)
1.Frank M. Karsten (D)
2.Thomas B. Curtis (R)
3.Leonor Sullivan (D)
4.Jeffrey Paul Hillelson (R)
5.Richard Walker Bolling (D)
6.William Clay Cole (R)
7.Dewey Short (R)
8.A. S. J. Carnahan (D)
9.Clarence Cannon (D)
10.Paul C. Jones (D)
11.Morgan M. Moulder (D)
1.Lee Metcalf (D)
2.Wesley A. D'Ewart (R)
1.Carl Curtis (R), until December 31, 1954
2.Roman Hruska (R), until November 8, 1954
3.Robert Dinsmore Harrison (R)
4.Arthur L. Miller (R)


At-large.Clarence Clifton Young (R)
1.Chester Earl Merrow (R)
2.Norris Cotton (R), until November 7, 1954
1.Charles A. Wolverton (R)
2.T. Millet Hand (R)
3.James C. Auchincloss (R)
4.Charles R. Howell (D)
5.Peter Frelinghuysen Jr. (R)
6.Clifford P. Case (R), until August 16, 1953
Harrison A. Williams (D), from November 3, 1953
7.William B. Widnall (R)
8.Gordon Canfield (R)
9.Frank C. Osmers Jr. (R)
10.Peter W. Rodino (D)
11.Hugh Joseph Addonizio (D)
12.Robert Kean (R)
13.Alfred Dennis Sieminski (D)
14.Edward J. Hart (D)
At-large.John J. Dempsey (D)
At-large.Antonio M. Fernández (D)
1.Stuyvesant Wainwright (R)
2.Steven Derounian (R)
3.Frank J. Becker (R)
4.Henry J. Latham (R)
5.Albert H. Bosch (R)
6.Lester Holtzman (D)
7.James J. Delaney (D)
8.Louis B. Heller (D), until July 21, 1954
9.Eugene J. Keogh (D)
10.Edna F. Kelly (D)
11.Emanuel Celler (D)
12.Francis E. Dorn (R)
13.Abraham J. Multer (D)
14.John J. Rooney (D)
15.John H. Ray (R)
16.Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (D)
17.Frederic René Coudert Jr. (R)
18.James G. Donovan (D)
19.Arthur George Klein (D)
20.Franklin Delano Roosevelt Jr. (D)
21.Jacob Javits (R), until December 31, 1954
22.Sidney A. Fine (D)
23.Isidore Dollinger (D)
24.Charles A. Buckley (D)
25.Paul A. Fino (R)
26.Ralph A. Gamble (R)
27.Ralph W. Gwinn (R)
28.Katharine St. George (R)
29.J. Ernest Wharton (R)
30.Leo W. O'Brien (D)
31.Dean P. Taylor (R)
32.Bernard W. Kearney (R)
33.Clarence E. Kilburn (R)
34.William R. Williams (R)
35.R. Walter Riehlman (R)
36.John Taber (R)
37.W. Sterling Cole (R)
38.Kenneth Keating (R)
39.Harold C. Ostertag (R)
40.William E. Miller (R)
41.Edmund P. Radwan (R)
42.John R. Pillion (R)
43.Daniel A. Reed (R)
1.Herbert Covington Bonner (D)
2.Lawrence H. Fountain (D)
3.Graham A. Barden (D)
4.Harold D. Cooley (D)
5.Richard Thurmond Chatham (D)
6.Carl T. Durham (D)
7.Frank Ertel Carlyle (D)
8.Charles B. Deane (D)
9.Hugh Quincy Alexander (D)
10.Charles R. Jonas (R)
11.Woodrow W. Jones (D)
12.George A. Shuford (D)
At-large.Otto Krueger (R)
At-large.Usher L. Burdick (R-NPL)
1.Gordon H. Scherer (R)
2.William E. Hess (R)
3.Paul F. Schenck (R)
4.William Moore McCulloch (R)
5.Cliff Clevenger (R)
6.James G. Polk (D)
7.Clarence J. Brown (R)
8.Jackson Edward Betts (R)
9.Frazier Reams (I)
10.Thomas A. Jenkins (R)
11.Oliver P. Bolton (R)
12.John M. Vorys (R)
13.Alvin F. Weichel (R)
14.William Hanes Ayres (R)
15.Robert T. Secrest (D), until September 26, 1954
16.Frank T. Bow (R)
17.J. Harry McGregor (R)
18.Wayne Hays (D)
19.Michael J. Kirwan (D)
20.Michael A. Feighan (D)
21.Robert Crosser (D)
22.Frances P. Bolton (R)
23.George H. Bender (R), until December 15, 1954
1.Page Belcher (R)
2.Ed Edmondson (D)
3.Carl Albert (D)
4.Tom Steed (D)
5.John Jarman (D)
6.Victor Wickersham (D)
1.A. Walter Norblad (R)
2.Sam Coon (R)
3.Homer D. Angell (R)
4.Harris Ellsworth (R)
1.William A. Barrett (D)
2.William T. Granahan (D)
3.James A. Byrne (D)
4.Earl Chudoff (D)
5.William J. Green Jr. (D)
6.Hugh Scott (R)
7.Benjamin F. James (R)
8.Karl C. King (R)
9.Paul B. Dague (R)
10.Joseph L. Carrigg (R)
11.Edward Bonin (R)
12.Ivor D. Fenton (R)
13.Samuel K. McConnell Jr. (R)
14.George M. Rhodes (D)
15.Francis E. Walter (D)
16.Walter M. Mumma (R)
17.Alvin Bush (R)
18.Richard M. Simpson (R)
19.S. Walter Stauffer (R)
20.James E. Van Zandt (R)
21.Augustine B. Kelley (D)
22.John P. Saylor (R)
23.Leon H. Gavin (R)
24.Carroll D. Kearns (R)
25.Louis E. Graham (R)
26.Thomas E. Morgan (D)
27.James G. Fulton (R)
28.Herman P. Eberharter (D)
29.Robert J. Corbett (R)
30.Vera Buchanan (D)
1.Aime Forand (D)
2.John E. Fogarty (D)
1.L. Mendel Rivers (D)
2.John J. Riley (D)
3.William Jennings Bryan Dorn (D)
4.Joseph R. Bryson (D), until March 10, 1953
Robert T. Ashmore (D), from June 2, 1953
5.James P. Richards (D)
6.John L. McMillan (D)
1.Harold Lovre (R)
2.Ellis Yarnal Berry (R)
1.B. Carroll Reece (R)
2.Howard Baker Sr. (R)
3.James B. Frazier Jr. (D)
4.Joe L. Evins (D)
5.Percy Priest (D)
6.James Patrick Sutton (D)
7.Tom J. Murray (D)
8.Jere Cooper (D)
9.Clifford Davis (D)
1.Wright Patman (D)
2.Jack Brooks (D)
3.Brady P. Gentry (D)
4.Sam Rayburn (D)
5.Joseph Franklin Wilson (D)
6.Olin E. Teague (D)
7.John Dowdy (D)
8.Albert Thomas (D)
9.Clark W. Thompson (D)
10.Homer Thornberry (D)
11.William R. Poage (D)
12.Wingate H. Lucas (D)
13.Frank N. Ikard (D)
14.John E. Lyle Jr. (D)
15.Lloyd Bentsen (D)
16.Kenneth M. Regan (D)
17.Omar Burleson (D)
18.Walter E. Rogers (D)
19.George H. Mahon (D)
20.Paul J. Kilday (D)
21.O. C. Fisher (D)
At-large.Martin Dies Jr. (D)
1.Douglas R. Stringfellow (R)
2.William A. Dawson (R)
At-large.Winston L. Prouty (R)
1.Edward J. Robeson Jr. (D)
2.Porter Hardy Jr. (D)
3.J. Vaughan Gary (D)
4.Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D)
5.Thomas B. Stanley (D), until February 3, 1953
William M. Tuck (D), from April 14, 1953
6.Richard Harding Poff (R)
7.Burr Harrison (D)
8.Howard W. Smith (D)
9.William C. Wampler (R)
10.Joel Broyhill (R)
1.Thomas Pelly (R)
2.Jack Westland (R)
3.Russell V. Mack (R)
4.Hal Holmes (R)
5.Walt Horan (R)
6.Thor C. Tollefson (R)
At-large.Donald H. Magnuson (D)
1.Bob Mollohan (D)
2.Harley Orrin Staggers (D)
3.Cleveland M. Bailey (D)
4.Will E. Neal (R)
5.Elizabeth Kee (D)
6.Robert Byrd (D)
1.Lawrence H. Smith (R)
2.Glenn Robert Davis (R)
3.Gardner R. Withrow (R)
4.Clement J. Zablocki (D)
5.Charles J. Kersten (R)
6.William Van Pelt (R)
7.Melvin Laird (R)
8.John W. Byrnes (R)
9.Merlin Hull (R), until May 17, 1953
Lester Johnson (D), from October 13, 1953
10.Alvin O'Konski (R)
At-large.William Henry Harrison III (R)

Non-voting members

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Alaska Territory.Bob Bartlett (D)
Hawaii Territory.Joseph Rider Farrington (R), until June 19, 1954
Mary Elizabeth Pruett Farrington (R), from July 31, 1954
Puerto Rico.Antonio Fernós-Isern (PPD)
House seats by party holding plurality in state
  80+% Democratic
  80+% Republican
  60+% to 80% Democratic
  60+% to 80% Republican
  Up to 60% Democratic
  Up to 60% Republican

Changes in membership

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

Senate

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See also:List of special elections to the United States Senate
Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated byReason for changeSuccessorDate of successor's
formal installation[m]
North Carolina
(2)
Willis Smith (D)Died June 26, 1953.
Successor appointed July 10, 1953.
Alton Lennon (D)July 10, 1953
New Hampshire
(3)
Charles W. Tobey (R)Died July 24, 1953.
Successor appointed August 14, 1953.
Robert W. Upton (R)August 14, 1953
Ohio
(3)
Robert A. Taft (R)Died July 31, 1953.
Successor appointed November 10, 1953.
Thomas A. Burke (D)November 10, 1953
Nebraska
(2)
Dwight Griswold (R)Died April 12, 1954.
Successor appointed April 16, 1954.
Eva Bowring (R)April 16, 1954
North Carolina
(3)
Clyde R. Hoey (D)Died May 12, 1954.
Successor appointed May 12, 1954 and then elected November 2, 1954.
Sam Ervin (D)June 5, 1954
Wyoming
(2)
Lester C. Hunt (D)Died June 19, 1954.
Successor appointed June 24, 1954.
Edward D. Crippa (R)June 24, 1954
Nebraska
(1)
Hugh A. Butler (R)Died July 1, 1954.
Successor appointed July 3, 1954.
Samuel W. Reynolds (R)July 3, 1954
South Carolina
(2)
Burnet R. Maybank (D)Died September 1, 1954.
Successor appointed September 6, 1954.
Charles E. Daniel (D)September 6, 1954
Nevada
(3)
Pat McCarran (D)Died September 28, 1954.
Successor appointed October 1, 1954.
Ernest S. Brown (R)October 1, 1954
Nebraska
(1)
Samuel W. Reynolds (R)Did not run in the special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
Roman Hruska (R)November 8, 1954
Nebraska
(2)
Eva Bowring (R)Did not run in the special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
Hazel Abel (R)November 8, 1954
New Hampshire
(3)
Robert W. Upton (R)Lost special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
Norris Cotton (R)November 8, 1954
North Carolina
(2)
Alton Lennon (D)Lost special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
W. Kerr Scott (D)November 29, 1954
Wyoming
(2)
Edward D. Crippa (R)Did not run in the special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D)November 29, 1954
Nevada
(3)
Ernest S. Brown (R)Lost special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
Alan Bible (D)December 2, 1954
Ohio
(3)
Thomas A. Burke (D)Lost special election to fill seat.
Successor elected November 2, 1954.
George H. Bender (R)December 16, 1954
South Carolina
(2)
Charles E. Daniel (D)Resigned December 23, 1954.
Successor appointed December 24, 1954.
Strom Thurmond (D)December 24, 1954
Nebraska
(2)
Hazel Abel (R)Resigned December 31, 1954.
Successor was appointed January 1, 1955.
Carl Curtis (R)January 1, 1955

House of Representatives

[edit]
See also:List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives
House changes
DistrictVacated byReason for changeSuccessorDate of successor's
formal installation[m]
Georgia 2ndVacantRep.Edward E. Cox died during previous congressJ. L. Pilcher (D)February 4, 1953
Illinois 7thVacantRep.Adolph J. Sabath died during previous congressJames Bowler (D)July 7, 1953
Virginia 5thThomas B. Stanley (D)Resigned February 3, 1953, to run forGovernor of VirginiaWilliam M. Tuck (D)April 14, 1953
South Carolina 4thJoseph R. Bryson (D)Died March 10, 1953Robert T. Ashmore (D)June 2, 1953
Kentucky 2ndGarrett Withers (D)Died April 30, 1953William Natcher (D)August 1, 1953
Wisconsin 9thMerlin Hull (R)Died May 17, 1953Lester Johnson (D)October 13, 1953
California 24thNorris Poulson (R)Resigned June 11, 1953, after being electedMayor of Los AngelesGlenard P. Lipscomb (R)November 10, 1953
New Jersey 6thClifford P. Case (R)Resigned August 16, 1953Harrison A. Williams (D)November 3, 1953
Hawaii Territory at-largeJoseph Rider Farrington (R)Died June 19, 1954Mary Elizabeth Pruett Farrington (R)August 4, 1954
New York 8thLouis B. Heller (D)Resigned July 21, 1954, after being appointed judge of the Court of Special Sessions of New York CityVacantNot filled this term
Georgia 4thAlbert Sidney Camp (D)Died July 24, 1954John Flynt (D)November 2, 1954
Michigan 3rdPaul W. Shafer (R)Died August 17, 1954VacantNot filled this term
Ohio 15thRobert T. Secrest (D)Resigned September 26, 1954
New Hampshire 2ndNorris Cotton (R)Resigned November 7, 1954, after being elected to theU.S. Senate
Nebraska 2ndRoman Hruska (R)Resigned November 8, 1954, after being elected to theU.S. Senate
Florida 6thDwight L. Rogers (D)Died December 1, 1954
Ohio 23rdGeorge H. Bender (R)Resigned December 15, 1954, after being elected to theU.S. Senate
Nebraska 1stCarl Curtis (R)Resigned December 31, 1954, after being elected to theU.S. Senate
New York 21stJacob Javits (R)Resigned December 31, 1954, after being electedNew York attorney General

Committees

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Lists of committees and their party leaders for members of the House and Senate committees can be found through the Official Congressional Directory at the bottom of this article. The directory after the pages of terms of service lists committees of the Senate, House (Standing with Subcommittees, Select and Special) and Joint and, after that, House/Senate committee assignments. 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

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]

Joint committees

[edit]

Employees

[edit]

Legislative branch agency directors

[edit]

Senate

[edit]

House of Representatives

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^U.S. Vice PresidentAlben W. Barkley's term as President of the Senate ended at noon January 20, 1953, whenRichard Nixon's term began.
  2. ^abInNorth Carolina, Class 2 senatorWillis Smith (D) died June 26, 1953, andAlton Lennon (D), was appointed July 10, 1953, to continue the term. Lennon lost the special election andW. Kerr Scott (D) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term.
  3. ^abInNew Hampshire,Charles W. Tobey (R) died July 24, 1953, andRobert W. Upton (R), was appointed August 14, 1953, to continue the term. Upton lost the special election andNorris Cotton (R) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term, but was ineligible until resigning from the House November 8, 1954.
  4. ^abcInOhio,Robert A. Taft (R) died July 31, 1953, andThomas A. Burke (D), was appointed November 10, 1953, to continue the term. Burke lost the special election andGeorge H. Bender (R) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term, but was ineligible until resigning from the House December 15, 1954.
  5. ^abcdIndependent Wayne Morse begins caucusing with Republicans at the start of the second session of Congress.
  6. ^abcdInNebraska, Class 2 senatorDwight Griswold (R) died April 12, 1954, andEva Bowring (R), was appointed April 16, 1954, to continue the term. Bowring did not run in the special election andHazel Abel (R) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term. Abel resigned December 31, 1954 and her successor to the next term,Carl Curtis (R), was appointed January 1, 1955.
  7. ^abInNorth Carolina, Class 3 senatorClyde R. Hoey (D) died May 12, 1954, andSam Ervin (D), was appointed June 5, 1954, to continue the term. Ervin would then beelected in November 1954 to finish the term.
  8. ^abcInWyoming,Lester C. Hunt (D) died June 19, 1954, andEdward D. Crippa (R), was appointed June 24, 1954, to continue the term. did not run in the special election andJoseph C. O'Mahoney (D) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term.
  9. ^abInNebraska, Class 1 senatorHugh A. Butler (R) died July 1, 1954, andSamuel W. Reynolds (R), was appointed July 3, 1954, to continue the term. Reynolds did not run in the special election andRoman Hruska (R) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term.
  10. ^abcdInSouth Carolina,Burnet R. Maybank (D) died September 1, 1954, andCharles E. Daniel (D), was appointed September 6, 1954, to finish the term. Daniel resigned December 23, 1954 and his successor to the next term,Strom Thurmond (D), was appointed December 24, 1954.
  11. ^abcInNevada,Pat McCarran (D) died September 28, 1954, andErnest S. Brown (R), was appointed September 6, 1954, to continue the term. Brown lost the special election andAlan Bible (D) waselected November 2, 1954 to finish the term.
  12. ^abcde TheMinnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) is the Minnesota affiliate of theU.S. Democratic Party and are counted as Democrats.
  13. ^ab When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

References

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  1. ^"Eisenhower Presidential Library".www.eisenhower.archives.gov. Archived fromthe original on April 1, 2015. RetrievedDecember 10, 2017.
  2. ^"1954 Shooting | US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives".history.house.gov. RetrievedDecember 10, 2017.
  3. ^Network, The Learning (March 2012)."March 1, 1954 | Puerto Rican Nationalists Open Fire on House of Representatives".The Learning Network. RetrievedDecember 10, 2017.
  4. ^"U.S. Senate: The Censure Case of Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin (1954)".www.senate.gov. RetrievedDecember 10, 2017.

External links

[edit]
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