Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Iowa's 9th congressional district

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former congressional district

Iowa's 9th congressional district
Obsolete district
Created1870
Eliminated1940
Years active1873–1943

Iowa's 9th congressional district existed from 1873 to 1943. The district was configured four times, first as part of a nine-district plan, then twice in eleven-district plans, then again in a nine-district plan. In the nine-district plans, the Ninth District encompassed the northwestern corner of Iowa, but in the eleven-district plans it encompassedCouncil Bluffs and nine surrounding counties.

Phase one: 1873–1883

[edit]

Based on the 1870 census, Iowa'sU.S. House delegation increased from six to nine members, requiring theIowa General Assembly to reapportion the districts. Because the northwestern area of the state was relatively less populous, its congressional district (the ninth) was by far the largest, encompassing more than a quarter of the state's 99 counties, and running from theMinnesota border on the north and theMissouri River on the west toStory County, location of the state's geographic center. In this phase, the Ninth District includedHamilton, Story,Boone,Webster,Humboldt,Kossuth,Emmet,Palo Alto,Pocahontas,Calhoun,Greene,Carroll,Sac,Buena Vista,Clay,Dickinson,Osceola,O'Brien,Cherokee,Ida,Crawford,Monona,Woodbury,Plymouth,Sioux, andLyon counties. It included the growing cities of Sioux City, Fort Dodge, and Ames. During this period, the district was represented by RepublicansJackson Orr of Boone County,S. Addison Oliver of Monona County, andCyrus Carpenter of Webster County.

Phase two: 1883 to 1887

[edit]

The 1880 census caused Iowa to receive two more seats in the House, requiring reapportionment of the state into eleven districts.[1] The former Ninth District in northwestern Iowa was generally divided to create the new11th and10th districts.[1] When southwest and south-central Iowa were divided among four districts rather than three, the new Ninth District was created. It included Crawford County (of the old Ninth District) andHarrison,Shelby,Audubon,Pottawattamie,Cass,Mills,Montgomery, andFremont counties (of the old Eighth District).[1] It included Council Bluffs in Pottawattamie County, across the Missouri River fromOmaha, Nebraska and the historical starting point of thetranscontinental railroad.

Only two elections were held under this configuration. Voters elected DemocratWilliam Henry Mills Pusey, then replaced him with RepublicanJoseph Lyman, both of Council Bluffs.

Phase three: 1887 to 1933

[edit]

The Iowa General Assembly soon readjusted the boundaries of the eleven-district map, allegedly to increase the number of Republican victories.[2][3] Those boundaries would remain in place for 45 years.[4] Fremont County was shifted from the Ninth into theEighth District,[2] thereby setting the stage for the stunning 1886 upset of incumbent Eighth District Republican CongressmanWilliam Peters Hepburn by Fremont County's Independent Republican,Albert R. Anderson. Crawford County was added to the Tenth District, and two counties fromIowa's 7th congressional district (Guthrie andAdair) were added to the Ninth.[2]

Lyman retained his seat after reapportionment, and he was followed byJoseph Rea Reed,Thomas Bowman,Alva L. Hager,Smith McPherson,Walter I. Smith,William R. Green,Earl W. Vincent, andCharles Swanson. All were Republican lawyers except Bowman, a Democratic newspaperman. All were from Council Bluffs except Hager (from Adair County), McPherson (from Montgomery County), Green (from Audubon County), and Vincent (from Guthrie County).

The General Assembly's 45-year failure to reapportion congressional districts resulted in malapportionment, which was particularly severe in certain districts in Iowa. Residents of three other southern Iowa districts (the1st,6th, and8th) gained in per capita influence as the districts' population growth slowed or reversed.[5] The 9th district did not decline in political influence as much as districts that were oversized for too long (like the 10th and 11th) and districts with Iowa's largest cities (like the2nd,3rd and7th). Instead, it was one of three Iowa districts that, by 1920, deviated less than a ten percent from the ideal "one person, one vote" population.[5]

Phase four: 1933 to 1943

[edit]

The 1930 census reflected that Iowa, like other ruralGreat Plains states, had not grown as much as states such asCalifornia, causing Iowa to lose seats in Congress for the first time. It lost two seats, forcing the Republican-dominated 1931 General Assembly to adopt a nine-district plan. As in 1872, the Ninth District included Sioux City and the northwestern corner of Iowa, but this time it included only thirteen counties (Dickinson, Clay, Buena Vista, Sac, Ida, Cherokee, O'Brien, Osceola, Lyon, Sioux, Plymouth, Woodbury, and Monona).[6]

The first election under the nine-district plan, in 1932, coincided with theFranklin D. Roosevelt landslide, causing a northwestern Iowa Democrat (Guy M. Gillette of Cherokee County) to win a congressional race for only the second time ever. When Gillette ran for the U.S. Senate he was succeeded by another Democrat,Vincent Harrington of Sioux City. When Harrington could not complete the term he won in 1940 after he resigned to join the U.S. Army Air Corps in 1942, Republican Dickinson County JudgeHarry E. Narey served the final six weeks of his term.

The district was eliminated after the 1940 census. All of the district was renamed the 8th district with the exception of Monona County, which was placed in the 7th district.

List of members representing the district

[edit]
Member
(District Residence (County))
PartyYearsCong
ress
Electoral history
District created March 4, 1873

Jackson Orr
(Boone)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1873 –
March 3, 1875
43rdRedistricted from the6th district andre-elected in 1872.
Retired.

S. Addison Oliver
(Onawa)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1875 –
March 3, 1879
44th
45th
Elected in 1874.
Re-elected in 1876.
Retired.

Cyrus C. Carpenter
(Fort Dodge)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1879 –
March 3, 1883
46th
47th
Elected in 1878.
Re-elected in 1880.
Retired.

William H. M. Pusey
(Council Bluffs)
DemocraticMarch 4, 1883 –
March 3, 1885
48thElected in 1882.
Lost re-election.

Joseph Lyman
(Council Bluffs)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1885 –
March 3, 1889
49th
50th
Elected in 1884.
Re-elected in 1886.
Retired.

Joseph R. Reed
(Council Bluffs)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1889 –
March 3, 1891
51stElected in 1888.
Lost re-election.

Thomas Bowman
(Council Bluffs)
DemocraticMarch 4, 1891 –
March 3, 1893
52ndElected in 1890.
Retired.

Alva L. Hager
(Greenfield)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1893 –
March 3, 1899
53rd
54th
55th
Elected in 1892.
Re-elected in 1894.
Re-elected in 1896.
Lost renomination.

Smith McPherson
(Red Oak)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1899 –
June 6, 1900
56thElected in 1898.
Resigned when appointed judge for theUS District Court for the Southern District of Iowa.
VacantJune 6, 1900 –
December 3, 1900

Walter I. Smith
(Council Bluffs)
RepublicanDecember 3, 1900 –
March 15, 1911
56th
57th
58th
59th
60th
61st
62nd
Elected to finish McPherson's term.
Re-elected in 1900.
Re-elected in 1902.
Re-elected in 1904.
Re-elected in 1906.
Re-elected in 1908.
Re-elected in 1910.
Resigned when appointed judge of theUS Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
VacantMarch 15, 1911 –
June 5, 1911
62nd

William R. Green
(Council Bluffs)
RepublicanJune 5, 1911 –
March 31, 1928
62nd
63rd
64th
65th
66th
67th
68th
69th
70th
Elected to finish Smith's term.
Re-elected in 1912.
Re-elected in 1914.
Re-elected in 1916.
Re-elected in 1918.
Re-elected in 1920.
Re-elected in 1922.
Re-elected in 1924.
Re-elected in 1926.
Resigned when appointed a judge of theUS Court of Claims.
VacantMarch 31, 1928 –
June 4, 1928
70th

Earl W. Vincent
(Guthrie Center)
RepublicanJune 4, 1928 –
March 3, 1929
Elected to finish Green's term.
Lost renomination.

Charles E. Swanson
(Council Bluffs)
RepublicanMarch 4, 1929 –
March 3, 1933
71st
72nd
Elected in 1928.
Re-elected in 1930.
Redistricted to the7th district and lost re-election.

Guy Gillette
(Cherokee)
DemocraticMarch 4, 1933 –
November 3, 1936
73rd
74th
Elected in 1932.
Re-elected in 1934.
Retired torun for U.S. senator and resigned when elected.
VacantNovember 3, 1936 –
January 3, 1937
74th

Vincent F. Harrington
(Sioux City)
DemocraticJanuary 3, 1937 –
September 5, 1942
75th
76th
77th
Elected in 1936.
Re-elected in 1938.
Re-elected in 1940.
Resigned to accept commission in theUS Army.
VacantSeptember 5, 1942 –
November 3, 1942
77th
Harry E. Narey
(Spirit Lake)
RepublicanNovember 3, 1942 –
January 3, 1943
Elected to finish Woodbury's term.
Retired.
District eliminated January 3, 1943

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Congressional Map of the State of Iowa - Official Census 1885" (Iowa Official Register 1886Archived 2006-05-19 at theWayback Machine at pp. 12-13).
  2. ^abc"The Congressional Districts," Waterloo Courier, 1886-04-14.
  3. ^Editorial from Davenport Democrat, reprinted in "Iowa Press Pointers," Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette, 1886-04-13 at p. 2.
  4. ^Iowa Official Register 1929-30Archived 2013-11-12 at theWayback Machine at p. 3.
  5. ^abEditorial, "A Brilliant Idea," Waterloo Evening Courier, 1921-01-26 at 6.
  6. ^Iowa Official Register 1933-34Archived 2011-07-25 at theWayback Machine at p. 6.
Current districts
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
  • The at-large and 5th–11th districts are obsolete.
See also
Iowa's past and presentrepresentatives,senators, anddelegations
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Iowa%27s_9th_congressional_district&oldid=1169765027"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp