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35th United States Congress

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(Redirected from 35th U.S. Congress) 1857-1859 U.S. Congress
35th United States Congress
34th ←→ 36th
United States Capitol (1860)

March 4, 1857 – March 4, 1859
Members66 senators
237 representatives
7 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityDemocratic
Senate PresidentJohn C. Breckinridge (D)
House majorityDemocratic
House SpeakerJames L. Orr (D)
Sessions
Special: March 4, 1857 – March 14, 1857
1st: December 7, 1857 – June 14, 1858
Special: June 15, 1858 – June 16, 1858
2nd: December 6, 1858 – March 3, 1859

The 35th 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, 1857, to March 4, 1859, during the first two years of James Buchanan's presidency. 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

See also: 1857 in the United States, 1858 in the United States, and 1859 in the United States

Major legislation

Main article: Major legislation: 35th United States Congress

Treaties

Main article: List of United States treaties

States admitted

  • May 11, 1858: Minnesota admitted as the 32nd state
  • February 14, 1859: Oregon admitted as the 33rd state

Party summary

Senate

Group photo of the U.S. Senate, in 1859, during this Congress.

During this congress, two Senate seats were added for each of the new states of Minnesota and Oregon.

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Know
Nothing

(A)
Democratic
(D)
Republican
(R)
End of previous congress 2 40 20 62 0
Begin 4 37 20 61 1
End 42 660
Final voting share 6.1% 63.6% 30.3%
Beginning of next congress 2 38 26 66 0

House of Representatives

During this congress, two House seats were added for the new state of Minnesota and one House seat was added for the new state of Oregon.

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Know
Nothing

(A)
Democratic
(D)
Independent
Democratic

(ID)
Republican
(R)
Other
End of previous congress 52 81 0 97 0 230 4
Begin 14 127 0 92 0 233 1
End 130 1 2370
Final voting share 5.9% 54.9% 0.4% 38.8% 0.0%
Beginning of next congress 6 84 7 113 25 235 2

Leadership

Senate

President of the Senate
John C. Breckinridge

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 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 with this Congress, facing re-election in 1862; Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, facing re-election in 1858; and Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, facing re-election in 1860.

Alabama

▌3. Benjamin Fitzpatrick (D)
▌2. Clement C. Clay Jr. (D)

Arkansas

▌2. William K. Sebastian (D)
▌3. Robert W. Johnson (D)

California

▌1. David C. Broderick (D)
▌3. William M. Gwin (D)

Connecticut

▌1. James Dixon (R)
▌3. Lafayette S. Foster (R)

Delaware

▌1. James A. Bayard Jr. (D)
▌2. Martin W. Bates (D)

Florida

▌1. Stephen Mallory (D)
▌3. David Levy Yulee (D)

Georgia

▌2. Robert Toombs (D)
▌3. Alfred Iverson Sr. (D)

Illinois

▌2. Stephen A. Douglas (D)
▌3. Lyman Trumbull (R)

Indiana

▌1. Jesse D. Bright (D)
▌3. Graham N. Fitch (D)

Iowa

▌2. George Wallace Jones (D)
▌3. James Harlan (R)

Kentucky

▌2. John B. Thompson (A)
▌3. John J. Crittenden (A)

Louisiana

▌2. Judah P. Benjamin (D)
▌3. John Slidell (D)

Maine

▌1. Hannibal Hamlin (R)
▌2. William Pitt Fessenden (R)

Maryland

▌1. Anthony Kennedy (A)
▌3. James A. Pearce (D)

Massachusetts

▌1. Charles Sumner (R)
▌2. Henry Wilson (R)

Michigan

▌1. Zachariah Chandler (R)
▌2. Charles E. Stuart (D)

Minnesota

▌1. Henry M. Rice (D), from May 11, 1858 (newly admitted state)
▌2. James Shields (D), from May 11, 1858 (newly admitted state)

Mississippi

▌1. Jefferson Davis (D)
▌2. Albert G. Brown (D)

Missouri

▌1. Trusten Polk (D)
▌3. James S. Green (D)

New Hampshire

▌2. John P. Hale (R)
▌3. James Bell (R), until May 26, 1857
Daniel Clark (R), from June 27, 1857

New Jersey

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

New York

▌1. Preston King (R)
▌3. William H. Seward (R)

North Carolina

▌2. David S. Reid (D)
▌3. Asa Biggs (D), until May 5, 1858
Thomas L. Clingman (D), from May 7, 1858

Ohio

▌1. Benjamin Wade (R)
▌3. George E. Pugh (D)

Oregon

▌2. Delazon Smith (D), from February 14, 1859 (newly admitted state)
▌3. Joseph Lane (D), from February 14, 1859 (newly admitted state)

Pennsylvania

▌1. Simon Cameron (R)
▌3. William Bigler (D)

Rhode Island

▌1. James F. Simmons (R)
▌2. Philip Allen (D)

South Carolina

▌2. Josiah J. Evans (D), until May 6, 1858
Arthur P. Hayne (D), from May 11, 1858, until December 2, 1858
James Chesnut Jr. (D), from December 3, 1858
▌3. Andrew Butler (D), until May 25, 1857
James H. Hammond (D), from December 7, 1857

Tennessee

▌1. Andrew Johnson (D), from October 8, 1857
▌2. John Bell (A)

Texas

▌1. Thomas J. Rusk (D), until July 29, 1857
J. Pinckney Henderson (D), November 9, 1857 - June 4, 1858
Matthias Ward (D), from September 27, 1858
▌2. Samuel Houston (D)

Vermont

▌1. Solomon Foot (R)
▌3. Jacob Collamer (R)

Virginia

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

Wisconsin

▌1. James R. Doolittle (R)
▌3. Charles Durkee (R)
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 35th Congress in March 1857. The green stripes represent Know-Nothings. The senators from Minnesota and Oregon were not seated until later in the Congress.   2 Democrats   1 Democrat and 1 Republican   2 Republicans   2 Know-Nothings
Senate President pro tempore
James Murray Mason, March 4, 1857
Senate President pro tempore
Thomas J. Rusk, March 14, 1857 – July 29, 1857
Senate President pro tempore
Benjamin Fitzpatrick, from December 7, 1857

House of Representatives

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

Alabama

1. James A. Stallworth (D)
2. Eli S. Shorter (D)
3. James F. Dowdell (D)
4. Sydenham Moore (D)
5. George S. Houston (D)
6. Williamson R. W. Cobb (D)
7. Jabez L. M. Curry (D)

Arkansas

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

California

At-large. Joseph C. McKibbin (D)
At-large. Charles L. Scott (D)

Connecticut

1. Ezra Clark Jr. (R)
2. Samuel Arnold (D)
3. Sidney Dean (R)
4. William D. Bishop (D)

Delaware

At-large. William G. Whiteley (D)

Florida

At-large. George S. Hawkins (D)

Georgia

1. James L. Seward (D)
2. Martin J. Crawford (D)
3. Robert P. Trippe (A)
4. Lucius J. Gartrell (D)
5. Augustus R. Wright (D)
6. James Jackson (D)
7. Joshua Hill (A)
8. Alexander H. Stephens (D)

Illinois

1. Elihu B. Washburne (R)
2. John F. Farnsworth (R)
3. Owen Lovejoy (R)
4. William Kellogg (R)
5. Isaac N. Morris (D)
6. Thomas L. Harris (D), until November 24, 1858
Charles D. Hodges (D), from January 4, 1859
7. Aaron Shaw (D)
8. Robert Smith (D)
9. Samuel S. Marshall (D)

Indiana

1. James Lockhart (D), until September 7, 1857
William E. Niblack (D), from December 7, 1857
2. William H. English (D)
3. James Hughes (D)
4. James B. Foley (D)
5. David Kilgore (R)
6. James M. Gregg (D)
7. John G. Davis (D)
8. James Wilson (R)
9. Schuyler Colfax (R)
10. Samuel Brenton (R), until March 29, 1857
Charles Case (R), from December 7, 1857
11. John U. Pettit (R)

Iowa

1. Samuel Curtis (R)
2. Timothy Davis (R)

Kentucky

1. Henry C. Burnett (D)
2. Samuel O. Peyton (D)
3. Warner L. Underwood (A)
4. Albert G. Talbott (D)
5. Joshua Jewett (D)
6. John M. Elliott (D)
7. Humphrey Marshall (A)
8. James B. Clay (D)
9. John C. Mason (D)
10. John W. Stevenson (D)

Louisiana

1. George Eustis Jr. (A)
2. Miles Taylor (D)
3. Thomas G. Davidson (D)
4. John M. Sandidge (D)

Maine

1. John M. Wood (R)
2. Charles J. Gilman (R)
3. Nehemiah Abbott (R)
4. Freeman H. Morse (R)
5. Israel Washburn Jr. (R)
6. Stephen C. Foster (R)

Maryland

1. James A. Stewart (D)
2. James B. Ricaud (A)
3. J. Morrison Harris (A)
4. Henry Winter Davis (A)
5. Jacob M. Kunkel (D)
6. Thomas F. Bowie (D)

Massachusetts

1. Robert B. Hall (R)
2. James Buffington (R)
3. William S. Damrell (R)
4. Linus B. Comins (R)
5. Anson Burlingame (R)
6. Timothy Davis (R)
7. Nathaniel P. Banks (R), until December 24, 1857
Daniel W. Gooch (R), from January 31, 1858
8. Chauncey L. Knapp (R)
9. Eli Thayer (R)
10. Calvin C. Chaffee (R)
11. Henry L. Dawes (R)

Michigan

1. William A. Howard (R)
2. Henry Waldron (R)
3. David S. Walbridge (R)
4. De Witt C. Leach (R)

Minnesota

At-large. James M. Cavanaugh (D), from May 11, 1858 (newly admitted state)
At-large. William W. Phelps (D), from May 11, 1858 (newly admitted state)

Mississippi

1. Lucius Q. C. Lamar (D)
2. Reuben Davis (D)
3. William Barksdale (D)
4. Otho R. Singleton (D)
5. John A. Quitman (D), until July 17, 1858
John J. McRae (D), from December 7, 1858

Missouri

1. Francis P. Blair Jr. (R)
2. Thomas L. Anderson (A)
3. John B. Clark (D), from December 7, 1857
4. James Craig (D)
5. Samuel H. Woodson (A)
6. John S. Phelps (D)
7. Samuel Caruthers (D)

New Hampshire

1. James Pike (R)
2. Mason Tappan (R)
3. Aaron H. Cragin (R)

New Jersey

1. Isaiah D. Clawson (R)
2. George R. Robbins (R)
3. Garnett Adrain (D)
4. John Huyler (D)
5. Jacob R. Wortendyke (D)

New York

1. John A. Searing (D)
2. George Taylor (D)
3. Daniel Sickles (D)
4. John Kelly (D), until December 25, 1858
Thomas J. Barr (ID), from January 7, 1859
5. William B. Maclay (D)
6. John Cochrane (D)
7. Elijah Ward (D)
8. Horace F. Clark (D)
9. John B. Haskin (D)
10. Ambrose S. Murray (R)
11. William F. Russell (D)
12. John Thompson (R)
13. Abram B. Olin (R)
14. Erastus Corning (D)
15. Edward Dodd (R)
16. George W. Palmer (R)
17. Francis E. Spinner (R)
18. Clark B. Cochrane (R)
19. Oliver A. Morse (R)
20. Orsamus B. Matteson (R)
21. Henry Bennett (R)
22. Henry C. Goodwin (R)
23. Charles B. Hoard (R)
24. Amos P. Granger (R)
25. Edwin B. Morgan (R)
26. Emory B. Pottle (R)
27. John M. Parker (R)
28. William H. Kelsey (R)
29. Samuel G. Andrews (R)
30. Judson W. Sherman (R)
31. Silas M. Burroughs (R)
32. Israel T. Hatch (D)
33. Reuben Fenton (R)

North Carolina

1. Henry M. Shaw (D)
2. Thomas H. Ruffin (D)
3. Warren Winslow (D)
4. Lawrence O'Bryan Branch (D)
5. John A. Gilmer (A)
6. Alfred M. Scales (D)
7. F. Burton Craige (D)
8. Thomas L. Clingman (D), until May 7, 1858
Zebulon B. Vance (D), from December 7, 1858

Ohio

1. George H. Pendleton (D)
2. William S. Groesbeck (D)
3. Lewis D. Campbell (R), until May 25, 1858
Clement Vallandigham (D), from May 25, 1858
4. Matthias H. Nichols (R)
5. Richard Mott (R)
6. Joseph R. Cockerill (D)
7. Aaron Harlan (R)
8. Benjamin Stanton (R)
9. Lawrence W. Hall (D)
10. Joseph Miller (D)
11. Valentine B. Horton (R)
12. Samuel S. Cox (D)
13. John Sherman (R)
14. Philemon Bliss (R)
15. Joseph Burns (D)
16. Cydnor B. Tompkins (R)
17. William Lawrence (D)
18. Benjamin F. Leiter (R)
19. Edward Wade (R)
20. Joshua R. Giddings (R)
21. John Bingham (R)

Oregon

At-large. La Fayette Grover (D), from February 14, 1859 (newly admitted state)

Pennsylvania

1. Thomas B. Florence (D)
2. Edward Joy Morris (R)
3. James Landy (D)
4. Henry M. Phillips (D)
5. Owen Jones (D)
6. John Hickman (D)
7. Henry Chapman (D)
8. J. Glancey Jones (D), until October 30, 1858
William H. Keim (R), from December 7, 1858
9. Anthony E. Roberts (R)
10. John C. Kunkel (R)
11. William L. Dewart (D)
12. John G. Montgomery (D), until April 24, 1857
Paul Leidy (D), from December 7, 1857
13. William H. Dimmick (D)
14. Galusha A. Grow (R)
15. Allison White (D)
16. John A. Ahl (D)
17. Wilson Reilly (D)
18. John R. Edie (R)
19. John Covode (R)
20. William Montgomery (D)
21. David Ritchie (R)
22. Samuel A. Purviance (R)
23. William Stewart (R)
24. James L. Gillis (D)
25. John Dick (R)

Rhode Island

1. Nathaniel B. Durfee (R)
2. William D. Brayton (R)

South Carolina

1. John McQueen (D)
2. William P. Miles (D)
3. Laurence M. Keitt (D)
4. Milledge L. Bonham (D)
5. James L. Orr (D)
6. William W. Boyce (D)

Tennessee

1. Albert G. Watkins (D)
2. Horace Maynard (A)
3. Samuel A. Smith (D)
4. John H. Savage (D)
5. Charles Ready (A)
6. George W. Jones (D)
7. John V. Wright (D)
8. Felix K. Zollicoffer (A)
9. John D. C. Atkins (D)
10. William T. Avery (D)

Texas

1. John H. Reagan (D)
2. Guy M. Bryan (D)

Vermont

1. Eliakim P. Walton (R)
2. Justin S. Morrill (R)
3. Homer E. Royce (R)

Virginia

1. Muscoe R. H. Garnett (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. Sherrard Clemens (D)
11. Albert G. Jenkins (D)
12. Henry A. Edmundson (D)
13. George W. Hopkins (D)

Wisconsin

1. John F. Potter (R)
2. Cadwallader C. Washburn (R)
3. Charles Billinghurst (R)

Non-voting members

Kansas Territory. Marcus J. Parrott (R)
Minnesota Territory. William W. Kingsbury (D), until May 11, 1858
Nebraska Territory. Fenner Ferguson (D)
New Mexico Territory. Miguel A. Otero (D)
Oregon Territory. Joseph Lane (D), until February 14, 1859
Utah Territory. John M. Bernhisel
Washington Territory. Isaac Stevens (D)
House seats by party holding plurality in state
  80.1-100% Democratic   80.1-100% Republican
  60.1-80% Democratic   60.1-80% Republican
  Up to 60% Democratic   Up to 60% Republican
House Speaker
James L. Orr

Changes in membership

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

Senate

See also: List of special elections to the United States Senate
Senate changes
State
(class)
Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation
Tennessee
(1)
Vacant Legislature had failed to elect.
Successor elected October 8, 1857.
Andrew Johnson (D) October 8, 1857
South Carolina
(3)
Andrew Butler (D) Died May 25, 1857.
Successor elected December 7, 1857.
James H. Hammond (D) December 7, 1857
New Hampshire
(3)
James Bell (R) Died May 26, 1857.
Successor elected June 27, 1857.
Daniel Clark (R) June 27, 1857
Texas
(1)
Thomas J. Rusk (D) Died July 29, 1857.
Successor appointed November 9, 1857.
J. Pinckney Henderson (D) November 9, 1857
North Carolina
(3)
Asa Biggs (D) Resigned May 5, 1858, to become judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of North Carolina.
Successor appointed May 7, 1858.
Appointee elected November 23, 1858.
Thomas L. Clingman (D) May 7, 1858
South Carolina
(2)
Josiah J. Evans (D) Died May 6, 1858.
Successor appointed May 11, 1858.
Arthur P. Hayne (D) May 11, 1858
Minnesota
(1)
New seat Minnesota admitted to the Union May 11, 1858, and its first Senators were elected that day. Henry M. Rice (D) May 11, 1858
Minnesota
(2)
New seat Minnesota admitted to the Union May 11, 1858, and its first Senators were elected that day. James Shields (D) May 11, 1858
Texas
(1)
J. Pinckney Henderson (D) Died June 4, 1858.
Successor appointed September 27, 1858.
Matthias Ward (D) September 27, 1858
South Carolina
(2)
Arthur P. Hayne (D) Interim appointee retired.
Successor elected December 2, 1858.
James Chesnut Jr. (D) December 3, 1858
Oregon
(2)
New seat Oregon admitted to the Union February 14, 1859, and its first Senators were elected that day. Delazon Smith (D) February 14, 1859
Oregon
(3)
New seat Oregon admitted to the Union February 14, 1859, and its first Senators were elected that day. Joseph Lane (D) February 14, 1859

House of Representatives

See also: List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives
House changes
District Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation
Missouri 3rd Vacant Rep. James S. Green was elected to this term but resigned after being elected in turn to the US Senate John B. Clark (D) Seated December 7, 1857
Indiana 10th Samuel Brenton (R) Died March 29, 1857 Charles Case (R) Seated December 7, 1857
Pennsylvania 12th John G. Montgomery (D) Died April 24, 1857 Paul Leidy (D) Seated December 7, 1857
Indiana 1st James Lockhart (D) Died September 7, 1857 William E. Niblack (D) Seated December 7, 1857
Massachusetts 7th Nathaniel P. Banks (R) Resigned December 24, 1857, after being elected Governor of Massachusetts Daniel W. Gooch (R) Seated January 31, 1858
North Carolina 8th Thomas L. Clingman (D) Resigned May 7, 1858, after being appointed to the US Senate Zebulon B. Vance (D) Seated December 7, 1858
Minnesota At-Large New seat Minnesota was admitted to the Union May 11, 1858 James M. Cavanaugh (D) Seated May 11, 1858
Minnesota Territory At-Large William W. Kingsbury (D) Minnesota was admitted to the Union May 11, 1858 Seat eliminated
Minnesota At-Large New seat Minnesota was admitted to the Union May 11, 1858 William W. Phelps (D) Seated May 11, 1858
Ohio 3rd Lewis D. Campbell (R) Lost contested election May 25, 1858 Clement Vallandigham (D) Seated May 25, 1858
Mississippi 5th John A. Quitman (D) Died July 17, 1858 John J. McRae (D) Seated December 7, 1858
Pennsylvania 8th J. Glancy Jones (D) Resigned October 30, 1858 William H. Keim (R) Seated December 7, 1858
Illinois 6th Thomas L. Harris (D) Died November 24, 1858 Charles D. Hodges (D) Seated January 4, 1859
New York 4th John Kelly (D) Resigned December 25, 1858 Thomas J. Barr (D) Seated January 7, 1859
Oregon Territory At-Large Joseph Lane (D) Oregon was admitted to the Union February 14, 1859 Seat eliminated
Oregon At-Large New seat Oregon was admitted to the Union February 14, 1859 La Fayette Grover (D) Seated February 14, 1859

Committees

Lists 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. ^ United States representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
  1. Special session of the Senate.
  2. Special session of the Senate.
  3. Opposition
  4. Opposition
  5. ^ When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

References

Specific citations
  1. Charles J. Kappler, ed. (1904). "Treaty with the Ponca, 1858". Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties. Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office. Archived from the original on 2015-02-13. Retrieved 2013-11-09. The Ponca tribe of Indians hereby cede and relinquish to the United States all the lands now owned or claimed by them, wherever situate, except the tract bounded as follows, viz: Beginning at a point on the Neobrara River and running due north, so as to intersect the Ponca River 25 miles from its mouth; thence from said point of intersection, up and along the Ponca River, twenty — miles; thence due south to the Neobrara River; and thence down and along said river to the place of beginning...
General 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

United States congresses (and year convened)
   
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