33rd United States Congress

1853-1855 U.S. Congress

33rd United States Congress
32nd ←
→ 34th
United States Capitol (1846)

March 4, 1853 – March 4, 1855
Members62 senators
234 representatives
7 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityDemocratic
Senate PresidentWilliam R. King (Democrat)
(until April 18, 1853)
Vacant
(from April 18, 1853)
House majorityDemocratic
House SpeakerLinn Boyd (Democrat)
Sessions
Special: March 4, 1853 – April 11, 1853
1st: December 5, 1853 – August 7, 1854
2nd: December 4, 1854 – March 4, 1855

The 33rd United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, consisting of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, D.C. from March 4, 1853, to March 4, 1855, during the first two years of Franklin Pierce's presidency. During this session, the Kansas–Nebraska Act was passed, an act that soon led to the creation of the Republican Party. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1850 United States census. Both chambers had a Democratic majority.

Major events

Gadsden Purchase (in yellow)
  • March 4, 1853: Franklin Pierce became 14th President of the United States
  • April 18, 1853: Vice President William R. King died
  • July 8, 1853: Commodore Matthew C. Perry arrived in Edo Bay with a request for a trade treaty
  • December 30, 1853: Gadsden Purchase: The United States bought land from Mexico to facilitate railroad building in the Southwest
  • March 20, 1854: Republican Party founded

Major legislation

Treaties

Territories organized

Party summary

Senate

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Know
Nothing
(A)
Democratic
(D)
Free
Soil
(F)
Whig
(W)
Other
(O)
End of previous congress 0 35 3 23 0 61 1
Begin 1 35 2 19 0 57 5
End 37 5 17 602
Final voting share 1.7% 61.7% 8.3% 28.3% 0.0%
Beginning of next congress 2 35 2 9 7 55 7

House of Representatives

For the beginning of this congress, the size of the House was increased from 233 seats to 234 seats, following the 1850 United States Census (See 9 Stat. 433).

Affiliation Party
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
Total
Democratic
(D)
Independent Democratic
(ID)
Free Soil
(FS)
Whig
(W)
Independent Party (United States)
(I)
Other Vacant
End of previous Congress 125 3 4 86 0 14 232 1
Begin 157 1 4 71 1 0 234 0
End 155 3 74
Final voting share 66.7% 0.4% 0.9% 31.6% 0.4% 0.1%
Beginning of next Congress 79 (Opposition coalition)
154
233 1

Leadership

President of the Senate
William R. King

Senate

House of Representatives

Members

This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed by class, and representatives are listed by district.

Senate

Senators were elected by the state legislatures 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 1 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring re-election in 1856; Class 2 meant their term began with this Congress, requiring re-election in 1858; and Class 3 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring re-election in 1854. The United States consisted of 31 states during this Congress.

Skip to House of Representatives, below

Alabama

2. Clement C. Clay Jr. (D), from November 29, 1853
3. Benjamin Fitzpatrick (D)

Arkansas

2. William K. Sebastian (D)
3. Solon Borland (D), until April 11, 1853
Robert W. Johnson (D), from July 6, 1853

California

1. John B. Weller (D)
3. William M. Gwin (D)

Connecticut

1. Isaac Toucey (D)
3. Truman Smith (W), until May 24, 1854
Francis Gillette (FS), from May 24, 1854

Delaware

1. James A. Bayard Jr. (D)
2. John M. Clayton (W)

Florida

1. Stephen Mallory (D)
3. Jackson Morton (W)

Georgia

2. Robert Toombs (D)
3. William C. Dawson (W)

Illinois

2. Stephen A. Douglas (D)
3. James Shields (D)

Indiana

1. Jesse D. Bright (D)
3. John Pettit (D)

Iowa

2. George Wallace Jones (D)
3. Augustus C. Dodge (D), until February 22, 1855

Kentucky

2. John B. Thompson (A)
3. Archibald Dixon (W)

Louisiana

2. Judah P. Benjamin (W)
3. Pierre Soulé (D), until April 11, 1853
John Slidell (D), from December 5, 1853

Maine

1. Hannibal Hamlin (D)
2. William Pitt Fessenden (W), from February 10, 1854

Maryland

1. Thomas Pratt (W)
3. James A. Pearce (W)

Massachusetts

1. Charles Sumner (FS)
2. Edward Everett (W), until June 1, 1854
Julius Rockwell (W), from June 3, 1854, until January 31, 1855
Henry Wilson (FS), from January 31, 1855

Michigan

1. Lewis Cass (D)
2. Charles E. Stuart (D)

Mississippi

1. Stephen Adams (D)
2. Albert G. Brown (D), from January 7, 1854

Missouri

1. Henry S. Geyer (W)
3. David R. Atchison (D)

New Hampshire

2. Charles G. Atherton (D), until November 15, 1853
Jared W. Williams (D), from November 29, 1853, until July 15, 1854
3. Moses Norris Jr. (D), until January 11, 1855
John S. Wells (D), from January 16, 1855

New Jersey

1. John R. Thomson (D)
2. William Wright (D)

New York

1. Hamilton Fish (W)
3. William H. Seward (W)

North Carolina

2. David S. Reid (D), from December 6, 1854
3. George E. Badger (W)

Ohio

1. Benjamin Wade (W)
3. Salmon P. Chase (FS)

Pennsylvania

1. Richard Brodhead (D)
3. James Cooper (W)

Rhode Island

1. Charles T. James (D)
2. Philip Allen (D), from July 20, 1853

South Carolina

2. Josiah J. Evans (D)
3. Andrew Butler (D)

Tennessee

1. James C. Jones (W)
2. John Bell (W)

Texas

1. Thomas J. Rusk (D)
2. Samuel Houston (D)

Vermont

1. Solomon Foot (W)
3. Samuel S. Phelps (W), until March 16, 1854
Lawrence Brainerd (FS), from October 14, 1854

Virginia

1. James M. Mason (D)
2. Robert M. T. Hunter (D)

Wisconsin

1. Henry Dodge (D)
3. Isaac P. Walker (D)
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 33rd Congress in March 1853. The gray stripes represent Know-Nothings. The green stripes represent Free Soil.
  2 Democrats
  1 Democrat and 1 Whig
  2 Whigs
Senate President pro tempore
David R. Atchison
Senate President pro tempore
Jesse D. Bright

House of Representatives

The names of members of the House of Representatives are preceded by their district numbers.

Alabama

1. Philip Phillips (D)
2. James Abercrombie (W)
3. Sampson W. Harris (D)
4. William R. Smith (D)
5. George S. Houston (D)
6. Williamson R. W. Cobb (D)
7. James F. Dowdell (D)

Arkansas

1. Alfred B. Greenwood (D)
2. Edward A. Warren (D)

California

Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Milton Latham (D)
At-large. James A. McDougall (D)

Connecticut

1. James T. Pratt (D)
2. Colin M. Ingersoll (D)
3. Nathan Belcher (D)
4. Origen S. Seymour (D)

Delaware

At-large. George Read Riddle (D)

Florida

At-large. Augustus Maxwell (D)

Georgia

1. James L. Seward (D)
2. Alfred H. Colquitt (D)
3. David J. Bailey (D)
4. William B. W. Dent (D)
5. Elijah W. Chastain (D)
6. Junius Hillyer (D)
7. David A. Reese (W)
8. Alexander Stephens (W)

Illinois

1. Elihu B. Washburne (W)
2. John Wentworth (D)
3. Jesse O. Norton (W)
4. James Knox (W)
5. William A. Richardson (D)
6. Richard Yates (W)
7. James C. Allen (D)
8. William H. Bissell (ID)
9. Willis Allen (D)

Indiana

1. Smith Miller (D)
2. William H. English (D)
3. Cyrus L. Dunham (D)
4. James H. Lane (D)
5. Samuel W. Parker (W)
6. Thomas A. Hendricks (D)
7. John G. Davis (D)
8. Daniel Mace (D)
9. Norman Eddy (D)
10. Ebenezer M. Chamberlain (D)
11. Andrew J. Harlan (D)

Iowa

1. Bernhart Henn (D)
2. John P. Cook (W)

Kentucky

1. Linn Boyd (D)
2. Benjamin E. Grey (W)
3. Presley Ewing (W), until September 27, 1854
Francis Bristow (W), from December 4, 1854
4. James Chrisman (D)
5. Clement S. Hill (W)
6. John M. Elliott (D)
7. William Preston (W)
8. John C. Breckinridge (D)
9. Leander Cox (W)
10. Richard H. Stanton (D)

Louisiana

1. William Dunbar (D)
2. Theodore G. Hunt (W)
3. John Perkins Jr. (D)
4. Roland Jones (D)

Maine

1. Moses MacDonald (D)
2. Samuel Mayall (D)
3. E. Wilder Farley (W)
4. Samuel P. Benson (W)
5. Israel Washburn Jr. (W)
6. Thomas J. D. Fuller (D)

Maryland

1. John R. Franklin (W)
2. Jacob Shower (D)
3. Joshua Van Sant (D)
4. Henry May (D)
5. William T. Hamilton (D)
6. Augustus R. Sollers (W)

Massachusetts

1. Zeno Scudder (W), until March 4, 1854
Thomas D. Eliot (W), from April 17, 1854
2. Samuel L. Crocker (W)
3. J. Wiley Edmands (W)
4. Samuel H. Walley (W)
5. William Appleton (W)
6. Charles W. Upham (W)
7. Nathaniel P. Banks (D)
8. Tappan Wentworth (W)
9. Alexander De Witt (FS)
10. Edward Dickinson (W)
11. John Z. Goodrich (W)

Michigan

1. David Stuart (D)
2. David A. Noble (D)
3. Samuel Clark (D)
4. Hestor L. Stevens (D)

Mississippi

1. Daniel B. Wright (D)
2. William T. S. Barry (D)
3. Otho R. Singleton (D)
4. Wiley P. Harris (D)
At-large. William Barksdale (D)

Missouri

1. Thomas H. Benton (D)
2. Alfred W. Lamb (D)
3. James J. Lindley (W)
4. Mordecai Oliver (W)
5. John G. Miller (W)
6. John S. Phelps (D)
7. Samuel Caruthers (W)

New Hampshire

1. George W. Kittredge (D)
2. George W. Morrison (D)
3. Harry Hibbard (D)

New Jersey

1. Nathan T. Stratton (D)
2. Charles Skelton (D)
3. Samuel Lilly (D)
4. George Vail (D)
5. Alexander C. M. Pennington (W)

New York

1. James Maurice (D)
2. Thomas W. Cumming (D)
3. Hiram Walbridge (D)
4. Michael Walsh (D)
5. William M. Tweed (D)
6. John Wheeler (D)
7. William A. Walker (D)
8. Francis B. Cutting (D)
9. Jared V. Peck (D)
10. William Murray (D)
11. Theodoric R. Westbrook (D)
12. Gilbert Dean (D), until July 3, 1854
Isaac Teller (W), from November 7, 1854
13. Russell Sage (W)
14. Rufus W. Peckham (D)
15. Charles Hughes (D)
16. George A. Simmons (W)
17. Bishop Perkins (D)
18. Peter Rowe (D)
19. George W. Chase (W)
20. Orsamus B. Matteson (W)
21. Henry Bennett (W)
22. Gerrit Smith (FS), until August 7, 1854
Henry C. Goodwin (W), from November 7, 1854
23. Caleb Lyon (I)
24. Daniel T. Jones (D)
25. Edwin B. Morgan (W)
26. Andrew Oliver (D)
27. John J. Taylor (D)
28. George Hastings (D)
29. Azariah Boody (W) until October 13, 1853
Davis Carpenter (W), from November 8, 1853
30. Benjamin Pringle (W)
31. Thomas T. Flagler (W)
32. Solomon G. Haven (W)
33. Reuben Fenton (D)

North Carolina

1. Henry M. Shaw (D)
2. Thomas H. Ruffin (D)
3. William S. Ashe (D)
4. Sion H. Rogers (W)
5. John Kerr Jr. (W)
6. Richard C. Puryear (W)
7. F. Burton Craige (D)
8. Thomas L. Clingman (D)

Ohio

1. David T. Disney (D)
2. John Scott Harrison (W)
3. Lewis D. Campbell (W)
4. Matthias H. Nichols (D)
5. Alfred P. Edgerton (D)
6. Andrew Ellison (D)
7. Aaron Harlan (W)
8. Moses B. Corwin (W)
9. Frederick W. Green (D)
10. John L. Taylor (W)
11. Thomas Ritchey (D)
12. Edson B. Olds (D)
13. William D. Lindsley (D)
14. Harvey H. Johnson (D)
15. William R. Sapp (W)
16. Edward Ball (W)
17. Wilson Shannon (D)
18. George Bliss (D)
19. Edward Wade (FS)
20. Joshua R. Giddings (FS)
21. Andrew Stuart (D)

Pennsylvania

1. Thomas B. Florence (D)
2. Joseph R. Chandler (W)
3. John Robbins Jr. (D)
4. William H. Witte (D)
5. John McNair (D)
6. William Everhart (W)
7. Samuel A. Bridges (D)
8. Henry A. Muhlenberg (D), until January 9, 1854
J. Glancey Jones (D), from February 4, 1854
9. Isaac E. Hiester (W)
10. Ner A. Middleswarth (W)
11. Christian M. Straub (D)
12. Hendrick B. Wright (D)
13. Asa Packer (D)
14. Galusha A. Grow (D)
15. James Gamble (D)
16. William H. Kurtz (D)
17. Samuel L. Russell (W)
18. John McCulloch (W)
19. Augustus Drum (D)
20. John L. Dawson (D)
21. David Ritchie (W)
22. Thomas M. Howe (W)
23. Michael C. Trout (D)
24. Carlton B. Curtis (D)
25. John Dick (W)

Rhode Island

1. Thomas Davis (D)
2. Benjamin B. Thurston (D)

South Carolina

1. John McQueen (D)
2. William Aiken Jr. (D)
3. Laurence M. Keitt (D)
4. Preston Brooks (D)
5. James L. Orr (D)
6. William W. Boyce (D)

Tennessee

1. Brookins Campbell (D), until December 25, 1853
Nathaniel G. Taylor (W), from March 30, 1854
2. William M. Churchwell (D)
3. Samuel A. Smith (D)
4. William Cullom (W)
5. Charles Ready (W)
6. George W. Jones (D)
7. Robert M. Bugg (W)
8. Felix K. Zollicoffer (W)
9. Emerson Etheridge (W)
10. Frederick P. Stanton (D)

Texas

1. George W. Smyth (D)
2. Peter H. Bell (D)

Vermont

1. James Meacham (W)
2. Andrew Tracy (W)
3. Alvah Sabin (W)

Virginia

1. Thomas H. Bayly (D)
2. John S. Millson (D)
3. John Caskie (D)
4. William Goode (D)
5. Thomas S. Bocock (D)
6. Paulus Powell (D)
7. William Smith (D)
8. Charles J. Faulkner Sr. (D)
9. John Letcher (D)
10. Zedekiah Kidwell (D)
11. John F. Snodgrass (D), until June 5, 1854
Charles S. Lewis (D), from December 4, 1854
12. Henry A. Edmundson (D)
13. LaFayette McMullen (D)

Wisconsin

1. Daniel Wells Jr. (D)
2. Ben C. Eastman (D)
3. John B. Macy (D)

Non-voting members

Kansas Territory. John W. Whitfield (D), from December 20, 1854
Minnesota Territory. Henry M. Rice (D)
Nebraska Territory. Napoleon B. Giddings (D), from January 5, 1855
New Mexico Territory. José Manuel Gallegos (D)
Oregon Territory. Joseph Lane (D)
Utah Territory. John M. Bernhisel
Washington Territory. Columbia Lancaster (D), from April 12, 1854
House seats by party holding plurality in state
  80.1-100% Democratic
  Up to 60% Whig
  60.1-80% Democratic
  60.1-80% Whig
  Up to 60% Democratic
  80.1-100% Whig
House Speaker
Linn Boyd

Changes in membership

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

Senate

  • Replacements: 7
  • Deaths: 2
  • Resignations: 4
  • Interim appointments: 1
  • Total seats with changes: 13
Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[b]
Rhode Island
(2)
Vacant Failure to elect.
Successor was elected July 20, 1853.
Philip Allen (D) July 20, 1853
Alabama
(2)
Vacant Failure to elect.
Successor elected November 29, 1853.
Clement C. Clay (D) November 29, 1853
Mississippi
(2)
Vacant Failure to elect.
Successor elected January 7, 1854.
Albert G. Brown (D) January 7, 1854
Maine
(2)
Vacant Failure to elect.
Successor was elected February 10, 1854.
William P. Fessenden (W) February 10, 1854
North Carolina
(2)
Vacant Failure to elect.
Successor was elected December 6, 1854.
David Reid (D) December 6, 1854
Arkansas
(3)
Solon Borland (D) Resigned April 11, 1853, after being appointed U.S. Minister to Nicaragua and other Central American Republics.
Successor appointed July 6, 1853.
Robert W. Johnson (D) July 6, 1853
Louisiana
(3)
Pierre Soulé (D) Resigned April 11, 1853, after being appointed U.S. Minister to Spain.
Successor elected December 5, 1853.
John Slidell (D) December 5, 1853
New Hampshire
(2)
Charles G. Atherton (D) Died November 15, 1853. Jared W. Williams (D) November 29, 1853
Vermont
(3)
Samuel S. Phelps (W) Senate declared not entitled to seat March 16, 1854.
Successor elected October 14, 1854.
Lawrence Brainerd (FS) October 14, 1854
Connecticut
(3)
Truman Smith (W) Resigned May 24, 1854.
Successor was elected May 24, 1854.
Francis Gillette (FS) May 24, 1854
Massachusetts
(2)
Edward Everett (W) Resigned June 1, 1854
Successor was appointed to serve until a new successor was elected.
Julius Rockwell (W) June 3, 1854
New Hampshire
(2)
Jared W. Williams (D) Resigned August 4, 1854. Vacant Not filled this term
New Hampshire
(3)
Moses Norris Jr. (D) Died January 11, 1855.
Successor appointed January 16, 1855, to finish the term.
John S. Wells (D) January 16, 1855
Massachusetts
(2)
Julius Rockwell (W) Successor elected January 31, 1855. Henry Wilson (FS) [c] January 31, 1855
Iowa
(3)
Augustus C. Dodge (D) Resigned February 22, 1855, after being appointed U.S. Minister to Spain. Vacant Not filled this term

House of Representatives

  • Replacements: 7
    • Democrats (D): 2 seat net loss
    • Whigs (W): 3 seat net gain
    • Free Soilers (FS): 1 seat net loss
  • Deaths: 4
  • Resignations: 4
  • Total seats with changes: 8
House changes
District Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[b]
Washington Territory at-large Vacant New seat established after Washington became a territory near the end of previous Congress. Seat was vacant until April 12, 1854. Columbia Lancaster (D) Seated April 12, 1854
New York 29th Azariah Boody (W) Resigned on October 13, 1853 Davis Carpenter (W) Seated November 8, 1853
Tennessee 1st Brookins Campbell (D) Died December 25, 1853 Nathaniel G. Taylor (W) Seated March 30, 1854
Pennsylvania 8th Henry A. Muhlenberg (D) Died January 9, 1854 J. Glancy Jones (D) Seated February 4, 1854
Massachusetts 1st Zeno Scudder (W) Resigned March 4, 1854 Thomas D. Eliot (W) Seated April 17, 1854
Kansas Territory at-large New seat New seat established after Kansas became a territory May 30, 1854. Seat was vacant until December 20, 1854. John W. Whitfield (D) Seated December 20, 1854
Nebraska Territory at-large New seat New seat established after Nebraska became a territory May 30, 1854. Seat was vacant until January 5, 1855. Napoleon B. Giddings (D) Seated December 5, 1855
Virginia 11th John F. Snodgrass (D) Died June 5, 1854 Charles S. Lewis (D) Seated December 4, 1854
New York 12th Gilbert Dean (D) Resigned July 3, 1854, after being appointed justice of the Supreme Court of New York Isaac Teller (W) Seated November 7, 1854
New York 22nd Gerrit Smith (W) Resigned August 7, 1854 Henry C. Goodwin (W) Seated November 7, 1854
Kentucky 3rd Presley Ewing (W) Died September 27, 1854 Francis Bristow (W) Seated December 4, 1854

Committees

List of committees and their party leaders.

Senate

House of Representatives

Joint committees

Caucuses

Employees

Legislative branch agency directors

Senate

House of Representatives

See also

Notes

  1. ^ By some reckonings, Wilson is a Know-Nothing/Free Soil joint candidate
  2. ^ a b When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.
  3. ^ By some reckonings, Wilson is a Know-Nothing/Free Soil joint candidate

References

  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.

External links

  • Statutes at Large, 1789–1875
  • Senate Journal, First Forty-three Sessions of Congress
  • House Journal, First Forty-three Sessions of Congress
  • Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
  • U.S. House of Representatives: House History
  • U.S. Senate: Statistics and Lists
  • Congressional Directory for the 33rd Congress, 1st Session.
  • Congressional Directory for the 33rd Congress, 2nd Session.
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United States congresses (and year convened)