71st United States Congress

1929–1931 U.S. Congress

71st United States Congress
70th ←
→ 72nd
United States Capitol (1906)

March 4, 1929 – March 4, 1931
Members96 senators
435 representatives
5 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityRepublican
Senate PresidentCharles Curtis (R)
House majorityRepublican
House SpeakerNicholas Longworth (R)
Sessions
Special: March 4, 1929 – March 5, 1929
1st: April 15, 1929 – November 22, 1929
2nd: December 2, 1929 – July 3, 1930
Special: July 7, 1930 – July 21, 1930
3rd: December 1, 1930 – March 3, 1931

The 71st United States Congress was a meeting of the legislature 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, 1929, to March 4, 1931, during the first two years of Herbert Hoover's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1910 United States census.

Both the House and Senate remained under Republican control, with increased majorities in each chamber. And with Herbert Hoover being sworn in as president on March 4, 1929, the Republicans maintained an overall federal government trifecta.[1][2]

The 71st Congress also featured the most special elections of any Congress with 27 in all.

Major events

  • March 4, 1929: Herbert C. Hoover became President of the United States
  • October 24, 1929 – October 29, 1929: Wall Street Crash of 1929: Three multi-digit percentage drops wipe out more than $30 billion from the New York Stock Exchange (3 times greater than the annual budget of the federal government).
  • October 25, 1929: Former U.S. Interior Secretary Albert B. Fall is convicted of bribery for his role in the Teapot Dome scandal, becoming the first Presidential cabinet member to go to prison for actions in office.

Major legislation

Party summary

The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress, and includes members from vacancies and newly admitted states, when they were first seated. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.

Senate

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic
(D)
Farmer–
Labor
(FL)
Republican
(R)
End of previous congress 45 1 49 95 1
Begin 39 1 54 94 2
End 42 53 960
Final voting share 43.8% 1.0% 55.2%
Beginning of next congress 46 1 48 95 1

House of Representatives

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic
(D)
Farmer–
Labor
(FL)
Republican
(R)
Other
End of previous congress 193 2 232 1[a] 428 7
Begin 164 1 268 0 433 2
End 166 265 4323
Final voting share 38.4% 0.2% 61.3% 0.0%
Beginning of next congress 216 1 217 0 434 1

Leadership

Senate

President of the Senate
Charles Curtis
President pro tempore of the Senate
George H. Moses

House of Representatives

Members

This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed in order of seniority, and representatives are listed by district.

Senate

Senators were elected 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 this Congress, requiring reelection in 1934; Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1930; and Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1932.

Alabama

2. J. Thomas Heflin (D)
3. Hugo Black (D)

Arizona

1. Henry F. Ashurst (D)
3. Carl Hayden (D)

Arkansas

2. Joseph Taylor Robinson (D)
3. Thaddeus H. Caraway (D)

California

1. Hiram W. Johnson (R)
3. Samuel M. Shortridge (R)

Colorado

2. Lawrence C. Phipps (R)
3. Charles W. Waterman (R)

Connecticut

1. Frederic C. Walcott (R)
3. Hiram Bingham III (R)

Delaware

1. John G. Townsend Jr. (R)
2. Daniel O. Hastings (R)

Florida

1. Park Trammell (D)
3. Duncan U. Fletcher (D)

Georgia

2. William J. Harris (D)
3. Walter F. George (D)

Idaho

2. William E. Borah (R)
3. John Thomas (R)

Illinois

2. Charles S. Deneen (R)
3. Otis F. Glenn (R)

Indiana

1. Arthur R. Robinson (R)
3. James E. Watson (R)

Iowa

2. Daniel F. Steck (D)
3. Smith W. Brookhart (R)

Kansas

2. Arthur Capper (R)
3. Henry Justin Allen (R), April 1, 1929 – November 30, 1930
George McGill (D), from December 1, 1930

Kentucky

2. Frederic M. Sackett (R), until January 9, 1930
John M. Robsion (R), January 11, 1930 – November 30, 1930
Ben M. Williamson (D), from December 1, 1930
3. Alben W. Barkley (D)

Louisiana

2. Joseph E. Ransdell (D)
3. Edwin S. Broussard (D)

Maine

1. Frederick Hale (R)
2. Arthur R. Gould (R)

Maryland

1. Phillips Lee Goldsborough (R)
3. Millard Tydings (D)

Massachusetts

1. David I. Walsh (D)
2. Frederick H. Gillett (R)

Michigan

1. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R)
2. James J. Couzens (R)

Minnesota

1. Henrik Shipstead (FL)
2. Thomas D. Schall (R)

Mississippi

1. Hubert D. Stephens (D)
2. Pat Harrison (D)

Missouri

1. Roscoe C. Patterson (R)
3. Harry B. Hawes (D)

Montana

1. Burton K. Wheeler (D)
2. Thomas J. Walsh (D)

Nebraska

1. Robert B. Howell (R)
2. George W. Norris (R)

Nevada

1. Key Pittman (D)
3. Tasker Oddie (R)

New Hampshire

2. Henry W. Keyes (R)
3. George H. Moses (R)

New Jersey

1. Hamilton Fish Kean (R)
2. Walter Evans Edge (R), until November 21, 1929
David Baird Jr. (R), November 30, 1929 – December 2, 1930
Dwight Morrow (R), from December 3, 1930

New Mexico

1. Bronson M. Cutting (R)
2. Sam G. Bratton (D)

New York

1. Royal S. Copeland (D)
3. Robert F. Wagner (D)

North Carolina

2. Furnifold M. Simmons (D)
3. Lee S. Overman (D), until December 12, 1930
Cameron A. Morrison (D), from December 13, 1930

North Dakota

1. Lynn Frazier (R-NPL)
3. Gerald Nye (R)

Ohio

1. Simeon D. Fess (R)
3. Theodore E. Burton (R), until October 28, 1929
Roscoe C. McCulloch (R), November 5, 1929 – November 30, 1930
Robert J. Bulkley (D), from December 1, 1930

Oklahoma

2. William B. Pine (R)
3. Elmer Thomas (D)

Oregon

2. Charles L. McNary (R)
3. Frederick Steiwer (R)

Pennsylvania

1. David A. Reed (R)
3. Vacant[3] until December 9, 1929
Joseph R. Grundy (R), December 11, 1929 – December 1, 1930
James J. Davis (R), from December 2, 1930

Rhode Island

1. Felix Hebert (R)
2. Jesse H. Metcalf (R)

South Carolina

2. Coleman L. Blease (D)
3. Ellison D. Smith (D)

South Dakota

2. William H. McMaster (R)
3. Peter Norbeck (R)

Tennessee

1. Kenneth McKellar (D)
2. Lawrence Tyson (D), until August 24, 1929
William Emerson Brock (D), from September 2, 1929

Texas

1. Tom T. Connally (D)
2. Morris Sheppard (D)

Utah

1. William H. King (D)
3. Reed Smoot (R)

Vermont

1. Frank L. Greene (R), until December 17, 1930
Frank C. Partridge (R), from December 23, 1930
3. Porter H. Dale (R)

Virginia

1. Claude A. Swanson (D)
2. Carter Glass (D)

Washington

1. Clarence Cleveland Dill (D)
3. Wesley Livsey Jones (R)

West Virginia

1. Henry D. Hatfield (R)
2. Guy D. Goff (R)

Wisconsin

1. Robert M. La Follette Jr. (R)
3. John J. Blaine (R)

Wyoming

1. John B. Kendrick (D)
2. Francis E. Warren (R), until November 24, 1929
Patrick Joseph Sullivan (R), December 5, 1929 – November 20, 1930
Robert D. Carey (R), from December 1, 1930
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 71st Congress in March 1929. One of Pennsylvania's seats remained vacant until December 1929. The green stripes denote Farmer-Labor Senator Henrik Shipstead.
  2 Democrats
  1 Democrat and 1 Republican
  2 Republicans
Senate Majority leader
James E. Watson
Senate Minority leader
Joseph T. Robinson

House of Representatives

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

Alabama

1. John McDuffie (D)
2. J. Lister Hill (D)
3. Henry B. Steagall (D)
4. Lamar Jeffers (D)
5. LaFayette L. Patterson (D)
6. William B. Oliver (D)
7. Miles C. Allgood (D)
8. Edward B. Almon (D)
9. George Huddleston (D)
10. William B. Bankhead (D)

Arizona

At-large. Lewis W. Douglas (D)

Arkansas

1. William J. Driver (D)
2. Pearl Peden Oldfield (D)
3. Claude A. Fuller (D)
4. Otis Wingo (D), until October 21, 1930
Effiegene L. Wingo (D), from November 4, 1930
5. Heartsill Ragon (D)
6. David D. Glover (D)
7. Tilman B. Parks (D)

California

1. Clarence F. Lea (D)
2. Harry L. Englebright (R)
3. Charles F. Curry (R), until October 10, 1930
4. Florence P. Kahn (R)
5. Richard J. Welch (R)
6. Albert E. Carter (R)
7. Henry E. Barbour (R)
8. Arthur M. Free (R)
9. William E. Evans (R)
10. Joe Crail (R)
11. Philip D. Swing (R)

Colorado

1. William R. Eaton (R)
2. Charles B. Timberlake (R)
3. Guy U. Hardy (R)
4. Edward T. Taylor (D)

Connecticut

1. E. Hart Fenn (R)
2. Richard P. Freeman (R)
3. John Q. Tilson (R)
4. Schuyler Merritt (R)
5. James P. Glynn (R), until March 6, 1930
Edward W. Goss (R), from November 4, 1930

Delaware

At-large. Robert G. Houston (R)

Florida

1. Herbert J. Drane (D)
2. Robert A. Green (D)
3. Tom A. Yon (D)
4. Ruth Bryan Owen (D)

Georgia

1. Charles G. Edwards (D)
2. Edward E. Cox (D)
3. Charles R. Crisp (D)
4. William C. Wright (D)
5. Leslie J. Steele (D), until July 24, 1929
Robert Ramspeck (D), from October 2, 1929
6. Samuel Rutherford (D)
7. Malcolm C. Tarver (D)
8. Charles H. Brand (D)
9. Thomas Montgomery Bell (D)
10. Carl Vinson (D)
11. William C. Lankford (D)
12. William W. Larsen (D)

Idaho

1. Burton L. French (R)
2. Addison T. Smith (R)

Illinois

1. Oscar S. De Priest (R)
2. Morton D. Hull (R)
3. Elliott W. Sproul (R)
4. Thomas A. Doyle (D)
5. Adolph J. Sabath (D)
6. James T. Igoe (D)
7. M. Alfred Michaelson (R)
8. Stanley H. Kunz (D)
9. Frederick A. Britten (R)
10. Carl R. Chindblom (R)
11. Frank R. Reid (R)
12. John T. Buckbee (R)
13. William R. Johnson (R)
14. John C. Allen (R)
15. Burnett M. Chiperfield (R), from November 4, 1930
16. William E. Hull (R)
17. Homer W. Hall (R)
18. William P. Holaday (R)
19. Charles Adkins (R)
20. Henry T. Rainey (D)
21. Frank M. Ramey (R)
22. Edward M. Irwin (R)
23. William W. Arnold (D)
24. Thomas S. Williams (R), until November 11, 1929
Claude V. Parsons (D), from November 4, 1930
25. Edward E. Denison (R)
At-large. Ruth Hanna McCormick (R)
At-large. Richard Yates Jr. (R)

Indiana

1. Harry E. Rowbottom (R)
2. Arthur H. Greenwood (D)
3. James W. Dunbar (R)
4. Harry C. Canfield (D)
5. Noble J. Johnson (R)
6. Richard N. Elliott (R)
7. Louis Ludlow (D)
8. Albert H. Vestal (R)
9. Fred S. Purnell (R)
10. William R. Wood (R)
11. Albert R. Hall (R)
12. David Hogg (R)
13. Andrew J. Hickey (R)

Iowa

1. William F. Kopp (R)
2. F. Dickinson Letts (R)
3. Thomas J. B. Robinson (R)
4. Gilbert N. Haugen (R)
5. Cyrenus Cole (R)
6. C. William Ramseyer (R)
7. Cassius C. Dowell (R)
8. Lloyd Thurston (R)
9. Charles E. Swanson (R)
10. Lester J. Dickinson (R)
11. Ed H. Campbell (R)

Kansas

1. William P. Lambertson (R)
2. Ulysses S. Guyer (R)
3. William H. Sproul (R)
4. Homer Hoch (R)
5. James G. Strong (R)
6. Charles I. Sparks (R)
7. Clifford R. Hope (R)
8. William A. Ayres (D)

Kentucky

1. William V. Gregory (D)
2. David Hayes Kincheloe (D), until October 5, 1930
John L. Dorsey Jr. (D), from November 4, 1930
3. Charles W. Roark (R), until April 5, 1929
John W. Moore (D), from June 1, 1929
4. John D. Craddock (R)
5. Maurice H. Thatcher (R)
6. J. Lincoln Newhall (R)
7. Robert E. L. Blackburn (R)
8. Lewis L. Walker (R)
9. Elva R. Kendall (R)
10. Katherine G. Langley (R)
11. John M. Robsion (R), until January 10, 1930
Charles Finley (R), from February 15, 1930

Louisiana

1. James O'Connor (D)
2. J. Zach Spearing (D)
3. Whitmell P. Martin (D), until April 6, 1929
Numa F. Montet (D), from August 6, 1929
4. John N. Sandlin (D)
5. Riley Joseph Wilson (D)
6. Bolivar E. Kemp (D)
7. René L. De Rouen (D)
8. James Benjamin Aswell (D)

Maine

1. Carroll L. Beedy (R)
2. Wallace H. White Jr. (R)
3. John E. Nelson (R)
4. Donald F. Snow (R)

Maryland

1. T. Alan Goldsborough (D)
2. Linwood L. Clark (R)
3. Vincent L. Palmisano (D)
4. J. Charles Linthicum (D)
5. Stephen W. Gambrill (D)
6. Frederick N. Zihlman (R)

Massachusetts

1. Allen T. Treadway (R)
2. William Kirk Kaynor (R), until December 20, 1929
William J. Granfield (D), from February 11, 1930
3. Frank H. Foss (R)
4. George R. Stobbs (R)
5. Edith Nourse Rogers (R)
6. A. Piatt Andrew Jr. (R)
7. William P. Connery Jr. (D)
8. Frederick W. Dallinger (R)
9. Charles L. Underhill (R)
10. John J. Douglass (D)
11. George H. Tinkham (R)
12. John W. McCormack (D)
13. Robert Luce (R)
14. Richard B. Wigglesworth (R)
15. Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R)
16. Charles L. Gifford (R)

Michigan

1. Robert H. Clancy (R)
2. Earl C. Michener (R)
3. Joseph L. Hooper (R)
4. John C. Ketcham (R)
5. Carl Mapes (R)
6. Grant M. Hudson (R)
7. Louis C. Cramton (R)
8. Bird J. Vincent (R)
9. James C. McLaughlin (R)
10. Roy O. Woodruff (R)
11. Frank P. Bohn (R)
12. W. Frank James (R)
13. Clarence J. McLeod (R)

Minnesota

1. Victor Christgau (R)
2. Frank Clague (R)
3. August H. Andresen (R)
4. Melvin Maas (R)
5. Walter H. Newton (R), until June 30, 1929
William I. Nolan (R), from July 17, 1929
6. Harold Knutson (R)
7. Ole J. Kvale (FL), until September 11, 1929
Paul J. Kvale (FL), from October 16, 1929
8. William Pittenger (R)
9. Conrad Selvig (R)
10. Godfrey G. Goodwin (R)

Mississippi

1. John E. Rankin (D)
2. Wall Doxey (D)
3. William M. Whittington (D)
4. T. Jefferson Busby (D)
5. Ross A. Collins (D)
6. Robert S. Hall (D)
7. Percy E. Quin (D)
8. James W. Collier (D)

Missouri

1. Milton A. Romjue (D)
2. Ralph F. Lozier (D)
3. Jacob L. Milligan (D)
4. David W. Hopkins (R)
5. Edgar C. Ellis (R)
6. Thomas J. Halsey (R)
7. John W. Palmer (R)
8. William L. Nelson (D)
9. Clarence Cannon (D)
10. Henry F. Niedringhaus (R)
11. John J. Cochran (D)
12. Leonidas C. Dyer (R)
13. Charles E. Kiefner (R)
14. Dewey Short (R)
15. Joe J. Manlove (R)
16. Rowland L. Johnston (R)

Montana

1. John M. Evans (D)
2. Scott Leavitt (R)

Nebraska

1. John H. Morehead (D)
2. Willis G. Sears (R)
3. Edgar Howard (D)
4. Charles Henry Sloan (R)
5. Fred G. Johnson (R)
6. Robert G. Simmons (R)

Nevada

At-large. Samuel S. Arentz (R)

New Hampshire

1. Fletcher Hale (R)
2. Edward Hills Wason (R)

New Jersey

1. Charles A. Wolverton (R)
2. Isaac Bacharach (R)
3. Harold G. Hoffman (R)
4. Charles A. Eaton (R)
5. Ernest R. Ackerman (R)
6. Randolph Perkins (R)
7. George N. Seger (R)
8. Fred A. Hartley Jr. (R)
9. Franklin W. Fort (R)
10. Frederick R. Lehlbach (R)
11. Oscar L. Auf der Heide (D)
12. Mary T. Norton (D)

New Mexico

At-large. Albert Gallatin Simms (R)

New York

1. Robert L. Bacon (R)
2. William F. Brunner (D)
3. George W. Lindsay (D)
4. Thomas H. Cullen (D)
5. Loring M. Black Jr. (D)
6. Andrew L. Somers (D)
7. John F. Quayle (D), until November 27, 1930
8. Patrick J. Carley (D)
9. David J. O'Connell (D), until December 29, 1930
Stephen A. Rudd (D), from February 17, 1931
10. Emanuel Celler (D)
11. Anning S. Prall (D)
12. Samuel Dickstein (D)
13. Christopher D. Sullivan (D)
14. William I. Sirovich (D)
15. John J. Boylan (D)
16. John J. O'Connor (D)
17. Ruth Baker Pratt (R)
18. John F. Carew (D), until December 28, 1929
Martin J. Kennedy (D), from April 11, 1930
19. Sol Bloom (D)
20. Fiorello H. LaGuardia (R)
21. Joseph A. Gavagan (D), from November 5, 1929
22. Anthony J. Griffin (D)
23. Frank Oliver (D)
24. James M. Fitzpatrick (D)
25. J. Mayhew Wainwright (R)
26. Hamilton Fish III (R)
27. Harcourt J. Pratt (R)
28. Parker Corning (D)
29. James S. Parker (R)
30. Frank Crowther (R)
31. Bertrand H. Snell (R)
32. Francis D. Culkin (R)
33. Frederick M. Davenport (R)
34. John D. Clarke (R)
35. Clarence E. Hancock (R)
36. John Taber (R)
37. Gale H. Stalker (R)
38. James L. Whitley (R)
39. Archie D. Sanders (R)
40. S. Wallace Dempsey (R)
41. Edmund F. Cooke (R)
42. James M. Mead (D)
43. Daniel A. Reed (R)

North Carolina

1. Lindsay C. Warren (D)
2. John H. Kerr (D)
3. Charles L. Abernethy (D)
4. Edward W. Pou (D)
5. Charles M. Stedman (D), until September 23, 1930
Franklin W. Hancock Jr. (D), from November 4, 1930
6. J. Bayard Clark (D)
7. William C. Hammer (D), until September 26, 1930
Hinton James (D), from November 4, 1930
8. Robert L. Doughton (D)
9. Charles A. Jonas (R)
10. George M. Pritchard (R)

North Dakota

1. Olger B. Burtness (R)
2. Thomas Hall (R)
3. James H. Sinclair (R)

Ohio

1. Nicholas Longworth (R)
2. William E. Hess (R)
3. Roy G. Fitzgerald (R)
4. John L. Cable (R)
5. Charles J. Thompson (R)
6. Charles C. Kearns (R)
7. Charles Brand (R)
8. Grant E. Mouser Jr. (R)
9. William W. Chalmers (R)
10. Thomas A. Jenkins (R)
11. Mell G. Underwood (D)
12. John C. Speaks (R)
13. Joseph E. Baird (R)
14. Francis Seiberling (R)
15. C. Ellis Moore (R)
16. Charles B. McClintock (R)
17. William M. Morgan (R)
18. B. Frank Murphy (R)
19. John G. Cooper (R)
20. Charles A. Mooney (D)
21. Robert Crosser (D)
22. Chester C. Bolton (R)

Oklahoma

1. Charles O'Connor (R)
2. William W. Hastings (D)
3. Wilburn Cartwright (D)
4. Tom D. McKeown (D)
5. Ulysses S. Stone (R)
6. Jed J. Johnson (D)
7. James V. McClintic (D)
8. Milton C. Garber (R)

Oregon

1. Willis C. Hawley (R)
2. Robert R. Butler (R)
3. Franklin F. Korell (R)

Pennsylvania

1. James M. Beck (R)
2. George S. Graham (R)
3. Harry C. Ransley (R)
4. Benjamin M. Golder (R)
5. James J. Connolly (R)
6. George A. Welsh (R)
7. George P. Darrow (R)
8. James Wolfenden (R)
9. Henry W. Watson (R)
10. William W. Griest (R), until December 5, 1929
J. Roland Kinzer (R), from January 28, 1930
11. Laurence H. Watres (R)
12. John J. Casey (D), until May 5, 1929
C. Murray Turpin (R), from June 4, 1929
13. George F. Brumm (R)
14. Charles J. Esterly (R)
15. Louis T. McFadden (R)
16. Edgar R. Kiess (R), until July 20, 1930
Robert F. Rich (R), from November 4, 1930
17. Frederick W. Magrady (R)
18. Edward M. Beers (R)
19. Isaac H. Doutrich (R)
20. James R. Leech (R)
21. J. Banks Kurtz (R)
22. Franklin Menges (R)
23. J. Mitchell Chase (R)
24. Samuel A. Kendall (R)
25. Henry W. Temple (R)
26. J. Howard Swick (R)
27. Nathan L. Strong (R)
28. Thomas C. Cochran (R)
29. Milton W. Shreve (R)
30. William R. Coyle (R)
31. Adam M. Wyant (R)
32. Stephen G. Porter (R), until June 27, 1930
Edmund F. Erk (R), from November 4, 1930
33. M. Clyde Kelly (R)
34. Patrick J. Sullivan (R)
35. Harry A. Estep (R)
36. Guy E. Campbell (R)

Rhode Island

1. Clark Burdick (R)
2. Richard S. Aldrich (R)
3. Jeremiah E. O'Connell (D), until May 9, 1930
Francis B. Condon (D), from November 4, 1930

South Carolina

1. Thomas S. McMillan (D)
2. Butler B. Hare (D)
3. Fred H. Dominick (D)
4. John J. McSwain (D)
5. William F. Stevenson (D)
6. Allard H. Gasque (D)
7. Hampton P. Fulmer (D)

South Dakota

1. Charles A. Christopherson (R)
2. Royal C. Johnson (R)
3. William Williamson (R)

Tennessee

1. B. Carroll Reece (R)
2. J. Will Taylor (R)
3. Samuel D. McReynolds (D)
4. Cordell Hull (D)
5. Ewin L. Davis (D)
6. Joseph W. Byrns (D)
7. Edward E. Eslick (D)
8. Gordon Browning (D)
9. Jere Cooper (D)
10. Hubert Fisher (D)

Texas

1. Wright Patman (D)
2. John C. Box (D)
3. Morgan G. Sanders (D)
4. Sam Rayburn (D)
5. Hatton W. Sumners (D)
6. Luther Alexander Johnson (D)
7. Clay Stone Briggs (D)
8. Daniel E. Garrett (D)
9. Joseph J. Mansfield (D)
10. James P. Buchanan (D)
11. Oliver H. Cross (D)
12. Fritz G. Lanham (D)
13. Guinn Williams (D)
14. Augustus McCloskey (D), until February 10, 1930
Harry M. Wurzbach (R), from February 10, 1930
15. John Nance Garner (D)
16. Claude B. Hudspeth (D)
17. Robert Q. Lee (D), until April 18, 1930
Thomas L. Blanton (D), from May 20, 1930
18. John Marvin Jones (D)

Utah

1. Don B. Colton (R)
2. Elmer O. Leatherwood (R), until December 24, 1929
Frederick C. Loofbourow (R), from November 4, 1930

Vermont

1. Elbert S. Brigham (R)
2. Ernest Willard Gibson (R)

Virginia

1. S. Otis Bland (D)
2. Menalcus Lankford (R)
3. Andrew Jackson Montague (D)
4. Patrick H. Drewry (D)
5. Joseph Whitehead (D)
6. Clifton A. Woodrum (D)
7. Jacob A. Garber (R)
8. R. Walton Moore (D)
9. Joseph C. Shaffer (R)
10. Henry St. George Tucker III (D)

Washington

1. John F. Miller (R)
2. Lindley H. Hadley (R)
3. Albert Johnson (R)
4. John W. Summers (R)
5. Samuel B. Hill (D)

West Virginia

1. Carl G. Bachmann (R)
2. Frank L. Bowman (R)
3. John M. Wolverton (R)
4. James Anthony Hughes (R), until March 2, 1930
Robert L. Hogg (R), from November 4, 1930
5. Hugh Ike Shott (R)
6. Joe L. Smith (D)

Wisconsin

1. Henry Allen Cooper (R), until March 1, 1931
2. Charles A. Kading (R)
3. John M. Nelson (R)
4. John C. Schafer (R)
5. William H. Stafford (R)
6. Florian Lampert (R), until July 18, 1930
Michael K. Reilly (D), from November 4, 1930
7. Merlin Hull (R)
8. Edward E. Browne (R)
9. George J. Schneider (R)
10. James A. Frear (R)
11. Hubert H. Peavey (R)

Wyoming

At-large. Vincent Carter (R)

Non-voting members

Alaska Territory. Daniel Sutherland (R)
Hawaii Territory. Victor S. K. Houston (R)
Philippines. Pedro Guevara (Nac.)
Philippines. Camilo Osías (Nac.)
Puerto Rico. Félix Córdova Dávila
House seats by party holding plurality in state
  80+% to 100% Democratic
  80+% to 100% Republican
  60+% to 80% Democratic
  60+% to 80% Republican
  Up to 60% Democratic
  Up to 60% Republican
Speaker of the House
Nicholas Longworth
Majority leader of the House
John Tilson
Minority leader of the House
John Garner

Changes in membership

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

Senate

  • Replacements: 15
    • Democratic: 3-seat net gain
    • Republican: 1-seat net loss
  • Deaths: 5
  • Resignations: 3
  • Interim appointments: 6
  • Total seats with changes: 9
Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[b]
Kansas
(3)
Vacant Charles Curtis (R) had resigned at end of previous congress to become Vice President of the United States.
Successor appointed April 1, 1929, to continue the term.
Successor later lost nomination to finish the term, see below.
Henry J. Allen (R) April 1, 1929
Pennsylvania
(3)
Vacant Sen.-elect William S. Vare (R) was apparently elected but vote was never certified by the Governor due to election irregularities. The Senate refused to qualify him and he was formally unseated December 9, 1929.
Successor appointed December 11, 1929.
Successor later lost nomination to finish the term, see below.
Joseph R. Grundy (R) December 11, 1929
Tennessee
(2)
Lawrence Tyson (D) Died August 24, 1929.
Successor appointed September 2, 1929, to continue the term.
Successor was also later elected November 4, 1930, to finish the term.[4]
William E. Brock (D) September 2, 1929
Ohio
(3)
Theodore E. Burton (R) Died October 28, 1929.
Successor appointed November 5, 1929, to continue the term.
Successor later lost election to finish the term, see below.
Roscoe C. McCulloch (R) November 5, 1929
New Jersey
(2)
Walter E. Edge (R) Resigned November 21, 1929, to become U.S. Ambassador to France.
Successor appointed November 30, 1929, to continue the term.
Successor later did not run to finish the term, see below.
David Baird Jr. (R) November 30, 1929
Wyoming
(2)
Francis E. Warren (R) Died November 24, 1929.
Successor appointed December 5, 1929.
Successor later did not run to finish the term, see below.
Patrick J. Sullivan (R) December 5, 1929
Kentucky
(2)
Frederic M. Sackett (R) Resigned January 9, 1930, to become U.S. Ambassador to Germany.
Successor appointed January 11, 1930, to continue the term.
Successor later lost election to finish the term, see below.
John M. Robsion (R) January 11, 1930
Wyoming
(2)
Patrick Joseph Sullivan (R) Interim appointee did not run to finish the term.
Successor elected November 4, 1930.
Robert D. Carey (R) December 1, 1930
Kansas
(3)
Henry J. Allen (R) Interim appointee lost election to finish the term.
Successor elected November 4, 1930.
George McGill (D) December 1, 1930
Kentucky
(2)
John M. Robsion (R) Interim appointee lost election to finish the term.
Successor elected November 4, 1930.
Ben M. Williamson (D) December 1, 1930
Ohio
(3)
Roscoe C. McCulloch (R) Interim appointee lost election to finish the term.
Successor elected November 4, 1930.
Robert J. Bulkley (D) December 1, 1930
Pennsylvania
(3)
Joseph R. Grundy (R) Interim appointee lost nomination to finish the term.
Successor elected November 4, 1930.
James J. Davis (R) December 2, 1930
New Jersey
(2)
David Baird Jr. (R) Interim appointee did not run to finish the term.
Successor elected November 4, 1930.
Dwight Morrow (R) December 3, 1930
North Carolina
(3)
Lee S. Overman (D) Died December 12, 1930.
Successor appointed December 13, 1930, to continue the term.
Successor later lost election to finish the term, see (72nd United States Congress).
Cameron A. Morrison (D) December 13, 1930
Vermont
(1)
Frank L. Greene (R) Died December 17, 1930.
Successor appointed December 23, 1930, to continue the term.
Successor later lost nomination to finish the term, see (72nd United States Congress).
Frank C. Partridge (R) December 23, 1930

House of Representatives

  • Replacements: 27
    • Democratic: 4 seat net gain
    • Republican: 3 seat net loss
  • Deaths: 25
  • Resignations: 6
  • Contested election: 1
  • Total seats with changes: 32
District Vacated by Reason for vacancy Successor Date of successor's installation
New York 21st Vacant Rep. Royal H. Weller died during previous congress Joseph A. Gavagan (D) November 5, 1929
Illinois 15th Vacant Rep. Edward J. King died in previous congress Burnett M. Chiperfield (R) November 4, 1930
Kentucky 3rd Charles W. Roark (R) Died April 5, 1929 John W. Moore (D) June 1, 1929
Louisiana 3rd Whitmell P. Martin (D) Died April 6, 1929 Numa F. Montet (D) August 6, 1929
Pennsylvania 12th John J. Casey (D) Died May 5, 1929 Charles M. Turpin (R) June 1, 1929
Minnesota 5th Walter Newton (R) Resigned June 30, 1929, after being appointed secretary to President Herbert Hoover William I. Nolan (R) July 17, 1929
Georgia 5th Leslie J. Steele (D) Died July 24, 1929 Robert Ramspeck (D) October 2, 1929
Minnesota 7th Ole J. Kvale (FL) Died September 11, 1929 Paul J. Kvale (FL) October 16, 1929
New York 18th John F. Carew (D) Resigned December 28, 1929, after being appointed a justice to the New York Supreme Court Martin J. Kennedy (D) April 11, 1930
Illinois 24th Thomas S. Williams (R) Resigned November 11, 1929, after being appointed to the United States Court of Claims Claude V. Parsons (D) November 4, 1930
Pennsylvania 10th William W. Griest (R) Died December 5, 1929 J. Roland Kinzer (R) January 28, 1930
Massachusetts 2nd Will Kirk Kaynor (R) Died December 20, 1929 William J. Granfield (D) February 17, 1930
Utah 2nd Elmer O. Leatherwood (R) Died December 24, 1929 Frederick C. Loofbourow (R) November 4, 1930
Kentucky 11th John M. Robsion (R) Resigned January 10, 1930, after being appointed to the U.S. Senate Charles Finley (R) February 15, 1930
Texas 14th Augustus McCloskey (D) Lost contested election February 10, 1930 Harry M. Wurzbach (R) February 10, 1930
West Virginia 4th James A. Hughes (R) Died March 2, 1930 Robert L. Hogg (R) November 4, 1930
Connecticut 5th James P. Glynn (R) Died March 6, 1930 Edward W. Goss (R) November 4, 1930
Texas 17th Robert Q. Lee (D) Died April 18, 1930 Thomas L. Blanton (D) May 20, 1930
Rhode Island 3rd Jeremiah E. O'Connell (D) Resigned May 9, 1930, after being appointed a justice to the Rhode Island Superior Court Francis Condon (D) November 4, 1930
Wisconsin 6th Florian Lampert (R) Died July 18, 1930 Michael Reilly (D) November 4, 1930
Pennsylvania 32nd Edgar R. Kiess (R) Died July 20, 1930 Robert F. Rich (R) November 4, 1930
Pennsylvania 16th Stephen G. Porter (R) Died June 27, 1930 Edmund F. Erk (R) November 4, 1930
North Carolina 5th Charles M. Stedman (D) Died September 23, 1930 Franklin W. Hancock Jr. (D) November 4, 1930
North Carolina 7th William C. Hammer (D) Died September 26, 1930 Hinton James (D) November 4, 1930
Kentucky 2nd David H. Kincheloe (D) Resigned October 5, 1930, after being appointed to the United States Customs Court John L. Dorsey Jr. (D) November 4, 1930
California 3rd Charles F. Curry (R) Died October 10, 1930 Seat remained vacant until next Congress
Arkansas 4th Otis Wingo (D) Died October 21, 1930 Effiegene Locke Wingo (D) November 4, 1930
New York 7th John Quayle (D) Died November 27, 1930 Seat remained vacant until next Congress
New York 9th David J. O'Connell (D) Died December 29, 1930 Stephen A. Rudd (D) February 17, 1931
Wisconsin 1st Henry A. Cooper (R) Died March 1, 1931 Seat remained vacant until next Congress

Committees

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


House of Representatives

Joint committees

Caucuses

Officers

Legislative branch agency directors

Senate

House of Representatives

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Socialist
  2. ^ When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.
  1. ^ Macmahon, Arthur W. (1930). "First Session of the Seventy-First Congress". The American Political Science Review. 24 (1): 38–59. doi:10.2307/1946785. JSTOR 1946785.
  2. ^ Macmahon, Arthur W. (1930). "Second Session of the Seventy-first Congress, December 2, 1929, to July 3, 1930; Special Session of the Senate, July 7–21". American Political Science Review. 24 (4): 913–946. doi:10.2307/1946750. ISSN 0003-0554. JSTOR 1946750.
  3. ^ William S. Vare (R-PA) had been elected to the Senate for the term starting March 4, 1927, but the Senate had refused to qualify him due to charges of corruption and fraud concerning his election. The Senate finally unseated him on December 9, 1929. See http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=V000071
  4. ^ Byrd, p. 171.

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

  • Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
  • U.S. House of Representatives: House History
  • U.S. Senate: Statistics and Lists
  • "Official Congressional Directory for the 71st Congress, 1st Session". Congressional Directory. 1929/1931- : S. Pub. 1887.
  • Official Congressional Directory for the 71st Congress, 2nd Session. 1929.
  • Official Congressional Directory for the 71st Congress, 2nd Session (Revision). 1930.
  • Official Congressional Directory for the 71st Congress, 3rd Session. 1930.
  • Official Congressional Directory for the 71st Congress, 3rd Session (Revision). 1931.
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United States congresses (and year convened)