Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Iowa's 11th Senate district

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromIowa Senate District 11)
American legislative district

Iowa's 11th
State Senate district

Map of the district
Senator
 Julian Garrett
R

The11th District of theIowa Senate is located in centralIowa, and is currently composed ofWarren County and parts ofMarion County.[1]

Current elected officials

[edit]

Julian Garrett is the senator currently representing the 11th District.[2]

The area of the 11th District contains twoIowa House of Representatives districts:

The district is also located inIowa's 1st congressional district, which is represented by U.S. RepresentativeMariannette Miller-Meeks.[3]

List of Representatives

[edit]

Source:[4]

RepresentativePartyDatesResidenceNotes
Thomas HughesDemocrat1846-1847Johnson County
Freeman AlgerDemocrat1848-1851Muscatine County
George W. LucasDemocrat1852-1855Fremont County
Samuel DaleDemocrat1856-1859Taylor County
John JohnsonDemocrat1860-1861Ottumwa, Iowa
Jacob DixonRepublican1862-1863Ottumwa, Iowa
Daniel P. StubbsRepublican1864-1867Fairfield, Iowa
Theron WoolsonRepublican1868-1869Henry County
John P. WestRepublican1870-1875Henry County
John WoolsonRepublican1876-1877Mount Pleasant, Iowa
Moses McCoidRepublican1878Fairfield, IowaMcCoid was elected to theUS House of Representatives forIowa's 1st congressional district in 1878.
Sanford BolingRepublican1880-1883Fairfield, Iowa
Francis DuncanRepublican1844-1887Columbus Junction, Iowa
James BarnettIndependent1888-1891Indianola, Iowa
James JamisonRepublican1892-1895Osceola, Iowa
William BerryDemocrat1896-1899Warren County
William TallmanRepublican1900-1903Osceola, Iowa
James JamisonRepublican1904-1908Osceola, Iowa
Aaron ProudfootRepublican1909-1912Warren County
LeMerton CristRepublican1913-1916Osceola, Iowa
Aaron ProudfootRepublican1917-1920Warren County
Lloyd ThurstonRepublican1921-1924Osceola, IowaThurston was elected to theUS House of Representatives forIowa's 5th congressional district in 1924.
Charles KernRepublican1925-1928Warren County
Wesley LoweRepublican1929-1932Clarke County
William S. BeardsleyRepublican1933-1940Warren County
Floyd JonesRepublican1941-1948Osceola, Iowa
Loyd Van PattenRepublican1949-1952Warren County
George BellmanRepublican1953-1956Warren County
J. Louis FisherRepublican1957-1964Osceola, Iowa
Bass Van GilstDemocrat1965-1966Mahaska County
Stanley HeaberlinDemocrat1967-1968Pleasantville, Iowa
Charles LavertyRepublican1969-1970Indianola, Iowa
Charles SullivanRepublican1971Woodbury CountySenator Sullivan died in office in 1971.
George GrossDemocrat1971-1972Sioux City, Iowa
Gene KennedyDemocrat1973-1974Dubuque County
Richard NorpelDemocrat1975-1976Jackson County
Stephen BiseniusRepublican1977-1982Dubuque County
John JensenRepublican1983-2002Bremer County
William DotzlerDemocrat2003-2012Waterloo, Iowa
Hubert HouserRepublican2013-2014Pottawattamie County
Tom ShipleyRepublican2015-2022Nodaway, Iowa
Julian GarrettRepublican2023-presentWarren County

Historical district boundaries

[edit]
MapDescriptionYears effectiveNotes
Benton County

Cedar County
Linn County

1846-1849From 1846 to 1857, district numbering was not utilized by the Iowa State Legislature. This convention was added with the passing of the 1857 Iowa Constitution. Numbering of districts pre-1857 is done as a matter of historic convenience.[5]
Benton County

Cedar County
Linn County
Tama County

1850-1851
Adams County

Fremont County
Mills County
Montgomery County
Page County
Ringgold County
Taylor County
Union County

1852-1859
Wapello County1860-1863
Jefferson County1864-1867
Henry County1868-1877
Jefferson County1878-1883
Louisa County

Washington County

1884-1887
Clarke County

Warren County

1888-1962
Keokuk County

Mahaska County

1963-1966
Marion County

Warren County

1967-1970
Woodbury County (partial)1971-1972In 1970, the Iowa Legislature passed an amendment to the Iowa Constitution setting forth the rules for legislative redistricting in order to abide by the rules established by theReynolds v. Sims Supreme Court case. The first reapportionment map created by the Republican controlled legislature was deemed unconstitutional, but was still used for the 1970 election.[6]
Delaware County (partial)

Dubuque County (partial)
Jackson County (partial)
Jones County (partial)

1973-1982
Black Hawk County (partial)

Bremer County
Butler County
Grundy County

1983-1992
Black Hawk County (partial)

Bremer County
Butler County
Grundy County

1993-2002
Black Hawk County (partial)2003-2012
Adams County

Cass County (partial)

Pottawattamie County (partial)

Union County

2013-2022
Marion County (partial)

Warren County

2023-present

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"District 11 Map"(PDF).
  2. ^Agency, Iowa Legislative Services."Iowa Legislature - Legislator List". RetrievedJuly 15, 2016.
  3. ^"Iowa Congressional Districts"(PDF). Iowa Legislative Services Agency. RetrievedJuly 15, 2016.
  4. ^"Historic Legislator List".
  5. ^"1846 Iowa Constitution"(PDF).
  6. ^"Reapportionment in Iowa".
Senate
House of Representatives


Stub icon

ThisIowa-related article is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Iowa%27s_11th_Senate_district&oldid=1294181498"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp