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9th United States Congress

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(Redirected from Ninth U.S. Congress) 1805-1807 meeting of U.S. legislature
9th United States Congress
8th ←→ 10th
United States Capitol (1800)

March 4, 1805 – March 4, 1807
Members34 senators
142 representatives
3 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityDemocratic-Republican
Senate PresidentGeorge Clinton (DR)
House majorityDemocratic-Republican
House SpeakerNathaniel Macon (DR)
Sessions
Special: March 4, 1805 – March 4, 1805
1st: December 2, 1805 – April 21, 1806
2nd: December 1, 1806 – March 4, 1807

The 9th 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, 1805, to March 4, 1807, during the fifth and sixth years of Thomas Jefferson's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1800 United States census. Both chambers had a Democratic-Republican majority.

The Lewis and Clark Expedition scouted the Louisiana Territory and the Pacific Northwest.

Major events

Main articles: 1805 in the United States, 1806 in the United States, and 1807 in the United States

Major legislation

Main article: List of United States federal legislation § 9th United States Congress

Territories organized

Senate President George Clinton
Senate President pro tempore
Samuel Smith (DR)
House Speaker
Nathaniel Macon (DR)

Party summary

The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.

Senate

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic-
Republican

(DR)
Federalist
(F)
End of previous congress 25 9 34 0
Begin 26 7 33 1
End
Final voting share 78.8% 21.2%
Beginning of next congress 28 6 34 0

House of Representatives

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic-
Republican

(DR)
Federalist
(F)
End of previous congress 102 39 141 1
Begin 113 26 139 3
End 112 28 1402
Final voting share 80.0% 20.0%
Beginning of next congress 115 25 140 2

Leadership

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.

Skip to House of Representatives, below

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.

Connecticut

▌1. James Hillhouse (F)
▌3. Uriah Tracy (F)

Delaware

▌1. Samuel White (F)
▌2. James A. Bayard (F)

Georgia

▌2. Abraham Baldwin (DR)
▌3. James Jackson (DR), until March 19, 1806
John Milledge (DR), from June 19, 1806

Kentucky

▌2. Buckner Thruston (DR)
▌3. John Breckinridge (DR), until August 7, 1805
John Adair (DR), November 8, 1805 – November 18, 1806
Henry Clay (DR), from November 19, 1806

Maryland

▌1. Samuel Smith (DR)
▌3. Robert Wright (DR), until November 12, 1806
Philip Reed (DR), from November 25, 1806

Massachusetts

▌1. John Quincy Adams (F)
▌2. Timothy Pickering (F)

New Hampshire

▌2. Nicholas Gilman (DR)
▌3. William Plumer (F)

New Jersey

▌1. John Condit (DR)
▌2. Aaron Kitchell (DR)

New York

▌1. Samuel L. Mitchill (DR)
▌3. John Smith (DR)

North Carolina

▌2. James Turner (DR), from December 22, 1805
▌3. David Stone (DR), until February 17, 1807

Ohio

▌1. John Smith (DR)
▌3. Thomas Worthington (DR)

Pennsylvania

▌1. Samuel Maclay (DR)
▌3. George Logan (DR)

Rhode Island

▌1. Benjamin Howland (DR)
▌2. James Fenner (DR)

South Carolina

▌2. Thomas Sumter (DR)
▌3. John Gaillard (DR)

Tennessee

▌1. Joseph Anderson (DR)
▌2. Daniel Smith (DR)

Vermont

▌1. Israel Smith (DR)
▌3. Stephen R. Bradley (DR)

Virginia

▌1. Andrew Moore (DR)
▌2. William B. Giles (DR)
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 9th Congress in March 1805.   2 Democratic-Republicans   1 Democratic-Republican and 1 Federalist   2 Federalists

House of Representatives

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

Connecticut

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Samuel W. Dana (F)
At-large. John Davenport (F)
At-large. Jonathan O. Moseley (F)
At-large. Timothy Pitkin (F), seated September 16, 1805
At-large. John Cotton Smith (F), until August 1806
Theodore Dwight (F), seated December 1, 1806
At-large. Lewis B. Sturges (F), seated September 16, 1805
At-large. Benjamin Tallmadge (F)

Delaware

At-large. James M. Broom (F)

Georgia

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Joseph Bryan (DR), until 1806
Dennis Smelt (DR), from September 1, 1806
At-large. Peter Early (DR)
At-large. David Meriwether (DR)
At-large. Cowles Mead (DR), until December 24, 1805
Thomas Spalding (DR), December 24, 1805 – 1806
William W. Bibb (DR), from January 26, 1807

Kentucky

1. Matthew Lyon (DR)
2. John Boyle (DR)
3. Matthew Walton (DR)
4. Thomas Sandford (DR)
5. John Fowler (DR)
6. George M. Bedinger (DR)

Maryland

The 5th district was a plural district with two representatives.

1. John Campbell (F)
2. Leonard Covington (DR)
3. Patrick Magruder (DR)
4. Roger Nelson (DR)
5. William McCreery (DR)
5. Nicholas R. Moore (DR)
6. John Archer (DR)
7. Joseph H. Nicholson (DR), until March 1, 1806
Edward Lloyd (DR), from December 3, 1806
8. Charles Goldsborough (F)

Massachusetts

1. Josiah Quincy (F)
2. Jacob Crowninshield (DR)
3. Jeremiah Nelson (F)
4. Joseph Bradley Varnum (DR)
5. William Ely (F)
6. Samuel Taggart (F)
7. Joseph Barker (DR)
8. Isaiah L. Green (DR)
9. Phanuel Bishop (DR)
10. Seth Hastings (F)
11. William Stedman (F)
12. Barnabas Bidwell (DR)
13. Ebenezer Seaver (DR)
14. Richard Cutts (DR)
15. Peleg Wadsworth (F)
16. Orchard Cook (DR)
17. John Chandler (DR)

New Hampshire

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Silas Betton (F)
At-large. Caleb Ellis (F)
At-large. David Hough (F)
At-large. Samuel Tenney (F)
At-large. Thomas W. Thompson (F)

New Jersey

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Ezra Darby (DR)
At-large. Ebenezer Elmer (DR)
At-large. William Helms (DR)
At-large. John Lambert (DR)
At-large. James Sloan (DR)
At-large. Henry Southard (DR)

New York

1. Eliphalet Wickes (DR)
2. and 3. Joint district with two seats.
Gurdon S. Mumford (DR)
George Clinton Jr. (DR)
4. Philip Van Cortlandt (DR)
5. John Blake Jr. (DR)
6. Daniel C. Verplanck (DR)
7. Martin G. Schuneman (DR)
8. Henry W. Livingston (F)
9. Killian K. Van Rensselaer (F)
10. Josiah Masters (DR)
11. Peter Sailly (DR)
12. David Thomas (DR)
13. Thomas Sammons (DR)
14. John Russell (DR)
15. Nathan Williams (DR)
16. Uri Tracy (DR)
17. Silas Halsey (DR)

North Carolina

1. Thomas Wynns (DR)
2. Willis Alston (DR)
3. Thomas Blount (DR)
4. William Blackledge (DR)
5. Thomas Kenan (DR)
6. Nathaniel Macon (DR)
7. Duncan McFarlan (DR)
8. Richard Stanford (DR)
9. Marmaduke Williams (DR)
10. Nathaniel Alexander (DR), until November 1805
Evan S. Alexander (DR), from February 24, 1806
11. James Holland (DR)
12. Joseph Winston (DR)

Ohio

At-large. Jeremiah Morrow (DR)

Pennsylvania

There were four plural districts, the 1st, 2nd and 3rd had three representatives each, the 4th had two representatives.

1. Joseph Clay (DR)
1. Michael Leib (DR), until February 14, 1806
John Porter (DR), from December 8, 1806
1. Jacob Richards (DR)
2. Robert Brown (DR)
2. Frederick Conrad (DR)
2. John Pugh (DR)
3. Isaac Anderson (DR)
3. Christian Lower (DR), until December 19, 1806, vacant thereafter
3. John Whitehill (DR)
4. David Bard (DR)
4. John A. Hanna (DR), until July 23, 1805
Robert Whitehill (DR), from November 7, 1805
5. Andrew Gregg (DR)
6. James Kelly (F)
7. John Rea (DR)
8. William Findley (DR)
9. John Smilie (DR)
10. John Hamilton (DR)
11. Samuel Smith (DR), seated November 7, 1805

Rhode Island

Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Nehemiah Knight (DR)
At-large. Joseph Stanton Jr. (DR)

South Carolina

1. Robert Marion (DR)
2. William Butler Sr. (DR)
3. David R. Williams (DR)
4. O'Brien Smith (DR)
5. Richard Winn (DR)
6. Levi Casey (DR), until February 3, 1807, vacant thereafter
7. Thomas Moore (DR)
8. Elias Earle (DR)

Tennessee

1. John Rhea (DR)
2. George W. Campbell (DR)
3. William Dickson (DR)

Vermont

1. Gideon Olin (DR)
2. James Elliott (F)
3. James Fisk (DR)
4. Martin Chittenden (F)

Virginia

1. John G. Jackson (DR)
2. John Morrow (DR)
3. John Smith (DR)
4. David Holmes (DR)
5. Alexander Wilson (DR)
6. Abram Trigg (DR)
7. Joseph Lewis Jr. (F)
8. Walter Jones (DR)
9. Philip R. Thompson (DR)
10. John Dawson (DR)
11. James M. Garnett (DR)
12. Burwell Bassett (DR)
13. Christopher Clark (DR), until July 1, 1806
William A. Burwell (DR), from December 1, 1806
14. Matthew Clay (DR)
15. John Randolph (DR)
16. John W. Eppes (DR)
17. John Claiborne (DR)
18. Peterson Goodwyn (DR)
19. Edwin Gray (DR)
20. Thomas Newton Jr. (DR)
21. Thomas M. Randolph (DR)
22. John Clopton (DR)

Non-voting members

Indiana Territory. Benjamin Parke, seated December 12, 1805
Mississippi Territory. William Lattimore
Orleans Territory. Daniel Clark, seated December 1, 1806

Changes in membership

The count below reflects changes from the beginning 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
North Carolina
(2)
Vacant Montfort Stokes (DR) was elected in 1804 but declined the position.
Successor elected December 22, 1805.
James Turner (DR) Seated December 22, 1805
Kentucky
(3)
John Breckinridge (DR) Resigned August 7, 1805, after being appointed United States Attorney General.
Successor elected November 8, 1805, to finish the term ending March 4, 1807.
John Adair (DR) Seated November 8, 1805
Georgia
(3)
James Jackson (DR) Died March 19, 1806.
Winner elected June 19, 1806, to finish the term ending March 4, 1807.
John Milledge (DR) Seated June 19, 1806
Maryland
(3)
Robert Wright (DR) Resigned November 12, 1806, after being elected Governor of Maryland.
Successor elected November 25, 1806, to finish the term ending March 4, 1807 (as well as to the next term).
Philip Reed (DR) Seated November 25, 1806
Kentucky
(3)
John Adair (DR) Resigned November 18, 1806, after losing the election to the next term.
Successor elected November 19, 1806, despite being younger than the constitutional age minimum.
Henry Clay (DR) Seated November 19, 1806
North Carolina
(3)
David Stone (DR) Resigned February 17, 1807.
Vacant for remainder of Congress.
Vacant

House of Representatives

Main article: 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
Connecticut
at-large
Vacant Calvin Goddard (F) resigned before the beginning of this Congress Timothy Pitkin (F) Seated September 16, 1805
Connecticut
at-large
Vacant Roger Griswold (F) resigned before the beginning of this Congress Lewis B. Sturges (F) Seated September 16, 1805
Pennsylvania
11th
Vacant John B. C. Lucas (DR) resigned before the beginning of this Congress Samuel Smith (DR) Seated November 7, 1805
Pennsylvania
4th
John A. Hanna (DR) Died July 23, 1805 Robert Whitehill (DR) Seated November 7, 1805
North Carolina
10th
Nathaniel Alexander (DR) Resigned November, 1805 after being elected Governor of North Carolina Evan S. Alexander (DR) Seated February 24, 1806
Indiana Territory Vacant Territory elected delegate to Congress for first time Benjamin Parke Elected December 12, 1805
Georgia
at-large
Cowles Mead (DR) Lost contested election December 24, 1805 Thomas Spalding (DR) Seated December 24, 1805
Georgia
at-large
Joseph Bryan (DR) Resigned sometime in 1806 Dennis Smelt (DR) September 1, 1806
Georgia
at-large
Thomas Spalding (DR) Resigned sometime in 1806 William W. Bibb (DR) Seated January 26, 1807
Pennsylvania
1st
Michael Leib (DR) Resigned February 14, 1806 John Porter (DR) Seated December 8, 1806
Maryland
7th
Joseph H. Nicholson (DR) Resigned March 1, 1806 Edward Lloyd (DR) Seated December 3, 1806
Virginia
13th
Christopher H. Clark (DR) Resigned July 1, 1806 William A. Burwell (DR) December 1, 1806
Connecticut
at-large
John Cotton Smith (F) Resigned sometime in August, 1806 Theodore Dwight (F) December 1, 1806
Territory of Orleans Vacant Territory elected delegate to Congress for first time Daniel Clark Elected December 1, 1806
Pennsylvania
3rd
Christian Lower (DR) Resigned December 19, 1806 Vacant Not filled for remainder of term
South Carolina
6th
Levi Casey (DR) Died February 3, 1807 Vacant Not filled for remainder of term

Committees

Lists of committees and their party leaders.

Senate

House of Representatives

Joint committees

Employees

Legislative branch agency directors

Senate

House of Representatives

See also

Notes

  1. Special session of the Senate.
  2. ^ When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

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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