List of Members of the United States House of Representatives in the 1st Congress by seniority

This is a complete list of members of the United States House of Representatives during the 1st United States Congress listed by seniority. For the most part, representatives are ranked by the beginning of their terms in office.

As an historical article, the districts and party affiliations listed reflect those during the 1st Congress (March 4, 1789 – March 3, 1791). Seats and party affiliations on similar lists for other Congresses will be different for certain members.

This article describes the criteria for seniority in the House of Representatives and sets out the list of members by seniority. It is prepared on the basis of the interpretation of seniority applied to the House of Representatives in the current congress. In the absence of information to the contrary, it is presumed that the twenty-first-century practice is identical to the seniority customs used during the 1st Congress.[1]

House seniority

Seniority in the House, for Congressmen with unbroken service, depends on the date on which the members first term began. That date is either the start of the Congress (4th March in odd numbered years, for the era up to and including the 73rd Congress starting in 1933) or the date of a special election during the Congress. Since many members start serving on the same day as others, ranking between them is based on alphabetical order by the last name of the congressman.

Congressmen, in early Congresses, were often elected after the legal start of the Congress. Such representatives are attributed with unbroken seniority, from the legal start of the congressional term, if they were the first person elected to a seat in a Congress. The date of the election is indicated in a note.

The seniority date is normally taken from the members entry in the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, except where the date given is the legal start of the Congress and the actual election (for someone who was not the first person elected to the seat in that Congress) was later. The date of election is taken from United States Congressional Elections 1788-1997. In a few instances the latter work provides dates, for the start and end of terms, which correct those in the Biographical Directory.

The Biographical Directory normally uses the date of a special election, as the seniority date. However, mostly in early Congresses, the date of the member taking his seat can be the one given. The date of the special election is mentioned in a note to the list below, when that date is not used as the seniority date by the Biographical Directory.

Representatives who return to the House, after having previously served, are credited with service equal to one less than the total number of terms they served. When a representative has served a prior term of less than two terms (i.e., prior term minus one equals less than one), he is ranked above all others whose service begins on the same day.

Leadership

In this Congress the only formal leader was the Speaker of the House. A Speakership ballot was held on April 1, 1789 and Frederick Muhlenberg (P-PA) was elected. [2]

Standing Committees

The House created its first standing committee, on April 13, 1789. There was one standing committees in the 1st Congress. In addition there was a Ways and Means Committee for part of the 1st session. Although the Ways and Means Committee was not formally added to the list of standing committees until 1802, the 2011 committee considers the one in 1789 to be its forerunner.

Committees, in this period, were appointed for a session at a time and not necessarily for every one in a Congress. Apart from the members of the Elections Committee in the 1st session (who were selected by balloting the House), the Speaker appointed the members.

This list refers to the standing committees of the House in the 1st Congress, the year of establishment as a standing committee, the number of members assigned to the committee and the dates of appointment in each session and its chairman. [3]

No.CommitteeFromMbrsAppointedChairman
1Elections17897April 13, 1789-September 29, 1789George Clymer (P-PA)
February 1, 1790-August 29, 1790Fisher Ames (P-MA)
2Ways and Means[1789]11July 24, 1789-September 17, 1789Thomas Fitzsimons (P-PA)

List of Representatives by seniority

A numerical rank is assigned to each of the 65 members initially elected to the 1st Congress. Other members, who were not the first person elected to a seat but who joined the House during the Congress, are not assigned a number (apart from the Representatives from the two states, admitted after ratifying the constitution during the Congress, who are numbered 60-65). One Representative-elect was not sworn in, as he declined to serve. The list below includes that Representative-elect (with name in italics), with the seniority he would have held if he had been sworn in.

Party designations used in this article are A for Anti-Administration members and P for Pro-Administration representatives.

U.S. House Seniority
RankRepresentativePartyDistrictSeniority dateNotes
One term
1Fisher AmesPMA-1March 4, 1789 Chairman: Elections (1790)
2Abraham BaldwinAGA-2
3Egbert BensonPNY-3 Elected March 3-5, 1789
4Theodorick BlandAVA-9 Died on June 1, 1790 while still serving in the House.
5Elias BoudinotPNJ-al Elected February 11-April 27, 1789
6John BrownAVA-2
7Aedanus BurkeASC-2 Only term while serving in the House.
8Lambert CadwaladerPNJ-al Elected February 11-April 27, 1789. Only term until 3rd Congress.
9Daniel CarrollPMD-6 Only term while serving in the House.
10George ClymerPPA-al Chairman: Elections (1789). Only term while serving in the House.
11Isaac ColesAVA-6 Only term while serving in the House until 3rd Congress.
12Benjamin ConteeAMD-3 Only term while serving in the House.
13Thomas FitzsimonsPPA-al Chairman: Ways and Means (July 24-September 17, 1789)
14William FloydANY-1 Elected March 3-5, 1789. Only term while serving in the House.
15George GalePMD-5 Only term while serving in the House.
16Elbridge GerryAMA-3
17Nicholas GilmanPNH-al
18Benjamin GoodhuePMA-2
19Samuel GriffinPVA-10
20Jonathan GroutAMA-8 Only term while serving in the House.
21Thomas HartleyPPA-al
22John HathornANY-4 Elected March 3-5, 1789. Only term while serving in the House until 4th Congress.
23Daniel HiesterAPA-al
24Daniel HugerPSC-3
25Benjamin HuntingtonPCT-al Only term while serving in the House (elected to 3rd Congress, but declined to serve)
26James JacksonAGA-1 Only term while serving in the House.
27John LaurancePNY-2 Elected March 3-5, 1789
28Richard B. LeePVA-4
29George LeonardPMA-7
30Samuel LivermoreANH-al
31James MadisonAVA-5
32George MathewsAGA-3 Only term while serving in the House.
33Andrew MooreAVA-3
34Frederick MuhlenbergPPA-al Speaker of the House
35Peter MuhlenbergAPA-al Only term while serving in the House until 3rd Congress.
36John PageAVA-7
37Josiah ParkerAVA-8
38George PartridgePMA-5 Resigned on August 14, 1790 while still serving in the House.
39James SchuremanPNJ-al Elected February 11-April 27, 1789. Only term while serving in the House. until 5th Congress.
40Thomas ScottPPA-al Only term while serving in the House until 3rd Congress.
41Theodore SedgwickPMA-4 Elected on May 11, 1789 [4]
42Joshua SeneyAMD-2
43Roger ShermanPCT-al Only term (elected to 2nd Congress, but did not serve)
44Peter SilvesterPNY-5 Elected March 3-5, 1789
45Thomas SinnicksonPNJ-al Elected February 11-April 27, 1789. Only term until 5th Congress.
46William SmithAMD-4 Only term while serving in the House.
47William L. SmithPSC-1
48Michael J. StoneAMD-1 Only term while serving in the House.
49Jonathan SturgesPCT-al
50Thomas SumterASC-4
51George ThatcherPMA-6
52Jonathan Trumbull, Jr.PCT-al
53Thomas T. TuckerASC-5
54Jeremiah Van RensselaerANY-6 Elected March 3-5, 1789. Only term while serving in the House.
55John M. ViningPDE-al
56Jeremiah WadsworthPCT-al
57Benjamin West-NH-al Representative-elect, who declined to serve, probably in May 1789 [5]
58Alexander WhitePVA-1
59Henry WynkoopPPA-al Only term while serving in the House.
Members joining the House, after the start of the Congress
...Abiel FosterPNH-alJune 22, 1789 Special election. [6] Only term while serving in the House until 4th Congress.
60Hugh WilliamsonANC-2March 19, 1790 Took seat from newly represented state
61John B. AsheANC-1March 24, 1790
62Timothy BloodworthANC-3April 6, 1790 Took seat from newly represented state. Only term while serving in the House.
63John SteelePNC-4April 19, 1790 Took seat from newly represented state
64John SevierPNC-5June 16, 1790 Took seat from newly represented state. Only term while serving in the House until 12th Congress.
...William B. GilesAVA-9December 7, 1790 Special election
65Benjamin BournePRI-alDecember 17, 1790 Elected on August 31, 1790. Took seat from newly represented state.

References

  1. 112th Congress official House seniority list
  2. Annals of Congress, for the date of election
  3. Based on Rule X Organisation of Committees, in the House Rules and Manual for the current congress. For membership and chairmen, see the Journal of the House of Representatives for the dates specified in the 1st Congress.
  4. United States Congressional Elections 1788-1997, page 2
  5. United States Congressional Elections 1788-1997, page 2 and note 11 on page 3
  6. United States Congressional Elections 1788-1997, page 2

 This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress website http://bioguide.congress.gov.

See also

External links

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