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26th United States Congress

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26th United States Congress
25th ←→ 27th
United States Capitol (1846)

March 4, 1839 – March 4, 1841
Members52 senators
242 representatives
3 non-voting delegates
Senate majorityDemocratic
Senate PresidentRichard M. Johnson (D)
House majorityDemocratic
House SpeakerRobert M. T. Hunter (W)
Sessions
1st: December 2, 1839 – July 21, 1840
2nd: December 7, 1840 – March 3, 1841

The 26th 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, 1839, to March 4, 1841, during the third and fourth years of Martin Van Buren's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1830 United States census. Both chambers had a Democratic majority.

Major events

See also: 1839 in the United States, 1840 in the United States, and 1841 in the United States

Major legislation

Main article: Major legislation: 26th United States Congress

Party summary

Senate

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Democratic
(D)
Whig
(W)
End of previous congress 35 16 51 1
Begin 28 19 47 5
End 29 23 520
Final voting share 55.8% 44.2%
Beginning of next congress 22 29 51 1

House of Representatives

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
Anti-
Masonic

(AM)
Conservative
(C)
Democratic
(D)
Whig
(W)
Other
End of previous congress 7 0 123 106 4 240 2
Begin 6 2 125 109 0 242 0
End 5 123 111 2411
Final voting share 2.1% 0.8% 51.0% 46.1% 0.0%
Beginning of next congress 0 0 99 142 1 242 0

Leadership

President of the Senate
Richard M. Johnson

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. In this Congress, Class 1 meant their term began with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1844; Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1840; and Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1842.

Alabama

▌2. William R. King (D)
▌3. Clement C. Clay (D)

Arkansas

▌2. William S. Fulton (D)
▌3. Ambrose H. Sevier (D)

Connecticut

▌1. Thaddeus Betts (W), until April 7, 1840
Jabez W. Huntington (W), from May 4, 1840
▌3. Perry Smith (D)

Delaware

▌1. Richard H. Bayard (W), until September 19, 1839
Richard H. Bayard (W), from January 12, 1841
▌2. Thomas Clayton (W)

Georgia

▌2. Wilson Lumpkin (D)
▌3. Alfred Cuthbert (D)

Illinois

▌2. John M. Robinson (D)
▌3. Richard M. Young (D)

Indiana

▌1. Albert S. White (W)
▌3. Oliver H. Smith (W)

Kentucky

▌2. John J. Crittenden (W)
▌3. Henry Clay (W)

Louisiana

▌2. Robert C. Nicholas (D)
▌3. Alexander Mouton (D)

Maine

▌1. Reuel Williams (D)
▌2. John Ruggles (D)

Maryland

▌1. William D. Merrick (W)
▌3. John S. Spence (W), until October 24, 1840
John L. Kerr (W), from January 5, 1841

Massachusetts

▌1. Daniel Webster (W), until February 22, 1841
Rufus Choate (W), from February 23, 1841
▌2. John Davis (W), until January 5, 1841
Isaac C. Bates (W), from January 13, 1841

Michigan

▌1. Augustus S. Porter (W), from January 20, 1840
▌2. John Norvell (D)

Mississippi

▌1. John Henderson (W)
▌2. Robert J. Walker (D)

Missouri

▌1. Thomas H. Benton (D)
▌3. Lewis F. Linn (D)

New Hampshire

▌2. Henry Hubbard (D)
▌3. Franklin Pierce (D)

New Jersey

▌1. Samuel L. Southard (W)
▌2. Garret D. Wall (D)

New York

▌1. Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (W), from January 14, 1840
▌3. Silas Wright Jr. (D)

North Carolina

▌2. Bedford Brown (D), until November 16, 1840
Willie P. Mangum (W), from November 25, 1840
▌3. Robert Strange (D), until November 16, 1840
William A. Graham (W), from November 25, 1840

Ohio

▌1. Benjamin Tappan (D)
▌3. William Allen (D)

Pennsylvania

▌1. Daniel Sturgeon (D), from January 14, 1840
▌3. James Buchanan (D)

Rhode Island

▌1. Nathan F. Dixon (W)
▌2. Nehemiah R. Knight (W)

South Carolina

▌2. John C. Calhoun (D)
▌3. William C. Preston (W)

Tennessee

▌1. Felix Grundy (D), November 19, 1839 – December 19, 1840
Alfred O. P. Nicholson (D), from December 25, 1840
▌2. Hugh Lawson White (W), until January 13, 1840
Alexander O. Anderson (D), from February 26, 1840

Vermont

▌1. Samuel S. Phelps (W)
▌3. Samuel Prentiss (W)

Virginia

▌1. William C. Rives (W), from January 18, 1841
▌2. William H. Roane (D)
Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 26th Congress in March 1839.   2 Democrats   1 Democrat and 1 Whig   2 Whigs
President pro tempore
William R. King

House of Representatives

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

Alabama

1. Reuben Chapman (D)
2. David Hubbard (D)
3. George W. Crabb (W)
4. Dixon H. Lewis (D)
5. James Dellet (W)

Arkansas

At-large. Edward Cross (D)

Connecticut

1. Joseph Trumbull (W)
2. William L. Storrs (W), until June ???, 1840
William W. Boardman (W), from December 7, 1840
3. Thomas W. Williams (W)
4. Thomas B. Osborne (W)
5. Truman Smith (W)
6. John H. Brockway (W)

Delaware

At-large. Thomas Robinson Jr. (D)

Georgia

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Julius C. Alford (W)
At-large. Edward J. Black (W)
At-large. Walter T. Colquitt (W), until July 21, 1840
Hines Holt (W), from February 1, 1841
At-large. Mark A. Cooper (W)
At-large. William C. Dawson (W)
At-large. Richard W. Habersham (W)
At-large. Thomas Butler King (W)
At-large. Eugenius A. Nisbet (W)
At-large. Lott Warren (W)

Illinois

1. John Reynolds (D)
2. Zadok Casey (D)
3. John T. Stuart (W)

Indiana

1. George H. Proffit (W)
2. John W. Davis (D)
3. John Carr (D)
4. Thomas Smith (D)
5. James Rariden (W)
6. William W. Wick (D)
7. Tilghman A. Howard (D), until July 1, 1840
Henry S. Lane (W), from August 3, 1840

Kentucky

1. Linn Boyd (D)
2. Philip Triplett (W)
3. Joseph R. Underwood (W)
4. Sherrod Williams (W)
5. Simeon H. Anderson (W), until August 11, 1840
John B. Thompson (W), from December 7, 1840
6. Willis Green (W)
7. John Pope (W)
8. William J. Graves (W)
9. John White (W)
10. Richard Hawes (W)
11. Landaff W. Andrews (W)
12. Garrett Davis (W)
13. William O. Butler (D)

Louisiana

1. Edward D. White (W)
2. Thomas W. Chinn (W)
3. Rice Garland (W), until July 21, 1840
John Moore (W), from December 17, 1840

Maine

1. Nathan Clifford (D)
2. Albert Smith (D)
3. Benjamin Randall (W)
4. George Evans (W), until March 3, 1841
5. Virgil D. Parris (D)
6. Hugh J. Anderson (D)
7. Joshua A. Lowell (D)
8. Thomas Davee (D)

Maryland

The 4th district was a plural district with two representatives.

1. John Dennis (W)
2. Philip F. Thomas (D)
3. John T. H. Worthington (D)
4. James Carroll (D)
4. Solomon Hillen Jr. (D)
5. William Cost Johnson (W)
6. Francis Thomas (D)
7. Daniel Jenifer (W)

Massachusetts

1. Abbott Lawrence (W), until September 18, 1840
Robert C. Winthrop (W), from November 9, 1840
2. Leverett Saltonstall I (W)
3. Caleb Cushing (W)
4. William Parmenter (D)
5. Levi Lincoln Jr. (W)
6. James C. Alvord (W), until September 27, 1839
Osmyn Baker (W), from January 14, 1840
7. George N. Briggs (W)
8. William B. Calhoun (W)
9. William S. Hastings (W)
10. Henry Williams (D)
11. John Reed Jr. (W)
12. John Quincy Adams (W)

Michigan

At-large. Isaac E. Crary (D)

Mississippi

Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Albert G. Brown (D)
At-large. Jacob Thompson (D)

Missouri

Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Albert G. Harrison (D), until September 7, 1839
John Jameson (D), from December 12, 1839
At-large. John Miller (D)

New Hampshire

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. Charles G. Atherton (D)
At-large. Edmund Burke (D)
At-large. Ira A. Eastman (D)
At-large. Tristram Shaw (D)
At-large. Jared W. Williams (D)

New Jersey

All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.

At-large. William R. Cooper (D)
At-large. Philemon Dickerson (D)
At-large. Joseph Kille (D)
At-large. Joseph F. Randolph (W)
At-large. Daniel B. Ryall (D)
At-large. Peter D. Vroom (D)

New York

There were four plural districts, the 8th, 17th, 22nd & 23rd had two representatives each, the 3rd had four representatives.

1. Thomas B. Jackson (D)
2. James De la Montanya (D)
3. Edward Curtis (W)
3. Moses H. Grinnell (W)
3. Ogden Hoffman (W)
3. James Monroe (W)
4. Gouverneur Kemble (D)
5. Charles Johnston (W)
6. Nathaniel Jones (D)
7. Rufus Palen (W)
8. John Ely (D)
8. Aaron Vanderpoel (D)
9. Hiram P. Hunt (W)
10. Daniel D. Barnard (W)
11. Anson Brown (W), until June 14, 1840
Nicholas B. Doe (W), from December 7, 1840
12. David A. Russell (W)
13. Augustus C. Hand (D)
14. John Fine (D)
15. Peter J. Wagner (W)
16. Andrew W. Doig (D)
17. David P. Brewster (D)
17. John G. Floyd (D)
18. Thomas C. Chittenden (W)
19. John H. Prentiss (D)
20. Judson Allen (D)
21. John C. Clark (W)
22. Amasa Dana (D)
22. Stephen B. Leonard (D)
23. Nehemiah H. Earll (D)
23. Edward Rogers (D)
24. Christopher Morgan (W)
25. Theron R. Strong (D)
26. Francis Granger (W)
27. Meredith Mallory (D)
28. Thomas Kempshall (W)
29. Seth M. Gates (W)
30. Luther C. Peck (W)
31. Richard P. Marvin (W)
32. Millard Fillmore (W)
33. Charles F. Mitchell (W)

North Carolina

1. Kenneth Rayner (W)
2. Jesse A. Bynum (D)
3. Edward Stanly (W)
4. Charles B. Shepard (D)
5. James I. McKay (D)
6. Micajah T. Hawkins (D)
7. Edmund Deberry (W)
8. William Montgomery (D)
9. John Hill (D)
10. Charles Fisher (D)
11. Henry W. Connor (D)
12. James Graham (W)
13. Lewis Williams (W)

Ohio

1. Alexander Duncan (D)
2. John B. Weller (D)
3. Patrick G. Goode (W)
4. Thomas Corwin (W), until May 30, 1840
Jeremiah Morrow (W), from October 13, 1840
5. William Doan (D)
6. Calvary Morris (W)
7. William K. Bond (W)
8. Joseph Ridgway (W)
9. William Medill (D)
10. Samson Mason (W)
11. Isaac Parrish (D)
12. Jonathan Taylor (D)
13. Daniel P. Leadbetter (D)
14. George Sweeny (D)
15. John W. Allen (W)
16. Joshua R. Giddings (W)
17. John Hastings (D)
18. David A. Starkweather (D)
19. Henry Swearingen (D)

Pennsylvania

There were two plural districts, the 2nd had two representatives, the 4th had three representatives.

1. Lemuel Paynter (D)
2. John Sergeant (W)
2. George W. Toland (W)
3. Charles Naylor (W)
4. Edward Davies (AM)
4. John Edwards (AM)
4. Francis James (AM)
5. Joseph Fornance (D)
6. John Davis (D)
7. David D. Wagener (D)
8. Peter Newhard (D)
9. George M. Keim (D)
10. William Simonton (W)
11. James Gerry (D)
12. James Cooper (W)
13. William S. Ramsey (D), until October 17, 1840
Charles McClure (D), from December 7, 1840
14. William W. Potter (D), until October 28, 1839
George McCulloch (D), from November 20, 1839
15. David Petrikin (D)
16. Robert H. Hammond (D)
17. Samuel W. Morris (D)
18. Charles Ogle (AM)
19. Albert G. Marchand (D)
20. Enos Hook (D)
21. Isaac Leet (D)
22. Richard Biddle (AM), until July 21, 1840
Henry M. Brackenridge (W), from October 13, 1840
23. William Beatty (D)
24. Thomas Henry (AM)
25. John Galbraith (D)

Rhode Island

At-large. Robert B. Cranston (W)
At-large. Joseph L. Tillinghast (W)

South Carolina

1. Isaac E. Holmes (D)
2. Robert Rhett (D)
3. John Campbell (D)
4. Sampson H. Butler (D)
5. Francis W. Pickens (D)
6. Waddy Thompson Jr. (W)
7. James Rogers (D)
8. Thomas D. Sumter (D)
9. John K. Griffin (D)

Tennessee

1. William B. Carter (W)
2. Abraham McClellan (D)
3. Joseph L. Williams (W)
4. Julius W. Blackwell (D)
5. Hopkins L. Turney (D)
6. William B. Campbell (W)
7. John Bell (W)
8. Meredith P. Gentry (W)
9. Harvey M. Watterson (D)
10. Aaron V. Brown (D)
11. Cave Johnson (D)
12. John W. Crockett (W)
13. Christopher H. Williams (W)

Vermont

1. Hiland Hall (W)
2. William Slade (W)
3. Horace Everett (W)
4. John Smith (D)
5. Isaac Fletcher (D)

Virginia

1. Joel Holleman (D), until December 1840
Francis Mallory (W), from December 28, 1840
2. Francis E. Rives (D)
3. John W. Jones (D)
4. George C. Dromgoole (D)
5. John Hill (W)
6. Walter Coles (D)
7. William L. Goggin (W)
8. Henry A. Wise (W)
9. Robert M. T. Hunter (W)
10. John Taliaferro (W)
11. John M. Botts (W)
12. James Garland (C)
13. Linn Banks (D)
14. Charles F. Mercer (W), until December 26, 1839
William M. McCarty (W), from January 25, 1840
15. William Lucas (D)
16. Green B. Samuels (D)
17. Robert Craig (D)
18. George W. Hopkins (C)
19. Andrew Beirne (D)
20. Joseph Johnson (D)
21. Lewis Steenrod (D)

Non-voting members

Florida Territory. Charles Downing
Iowa Territory. William W. Chapman (D), until October 27, 1840
Augustus C. Dodge (D), from October 28, 1840
Wisconsin Territory. James D. Doty (D)
House seats by party holding plurality in state
  80+% Democratic   80+% Whig
  60+% to 80% Democratic   60+% to 80% Whig
  Up to 60% Democratic   Up to 60% Whig
Speaker of the House
Robert M. T. Hunter

Changes in membership

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

Senate

  • Replacements: 8
    • Democrats: 0-seat net loss
    • Whigs: 0-seat net gain
  • Deaths: 3
  • Resignations: 7
  • Interim appointments: 0
  • Total seats with changes: 11
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 after previous Congress Felix Grundy (D) Elected November 19, 1839
New York
(1)
Vacant after previous Congress Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (W) Elected January 14, 1840
Pennsylvania
(1)
Vacant after previous Congress Daniel Sturgeon (D) Elected January 14, 1840
Michigan
(1)
Vacant after legislature failed to reelect incumbent. Augustus S. Porter (W) Elected January 20, 1840
Virginia
(1)
Vacant after legislature failed to reelect incumbent. William C. Rives (W) Elected January 18, 1841
Delaware
(1)
Richard H. Bayard (W) Resigned September 19, 1839, to become Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court Richard H. Bayard (W) Elected January 12, 1841, to his former position
Tennessee
(2)
Hugh Lawson White (W) Resigned January 13, 1840, because he could not conscientiously obey the intentions of his constituents Alexander O. Anderson (D) Elected February 26, 1840
Connecticut
(1)
Thaddeus Betts (W) Died April 7, 1840 Jabez W. Huntington (W) Elected May 4, 1840
Maryland
(3)
John S. Spence (W) Died October 24, 1840 John L. Kerr (W) Elected January 5, 1841
North Carolina
(2)
Bedford Brown (D) Resigned November 16, 1840, because he could not obey instructions of the North Carolina General Assembly Willie P. Mangum (W) Elected November 25, 1840
North Carolina
(3)
Robert Strange (D) Resigned November 16, 1840 William A. Graham (W) Elected November 25, 1840
Tennessee
(1)
Felix Grundy (D) Died December 19, 1840 Alfred O. P. Nicholson (D) Elected December 25, 1840
Massachusetts
(2)
John Davis (W) Resigned January 5, 1841, after being elected Governor of Massachusetts Isaac C. Bates (W) Elected January 13, 1841
Massachusetts
(1)
Daniel Webster (W) Resigned February 22, 1841 Rufus Choate (W) Elected February 23, 1841

House of Representatives

  • Replacements: 15
    • Democrats: 2-seat net loss
    • Whigs: 3-seat net gain
    • Anti-Masonic: 1-seat net loss
  • Deaths: 6
  • Resignations: 10
  • Contested election: 0
  • Total seats with changes: 17
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
Indiana 7th Vacant Rep-elect Howard presented credentials August 5, 1839 Tilghman Howard (D) Seated August 5, 1839
Missouri at-large Albert G. Harrison (D) Died September 7, 1839 John Jameson (D) Seated December 12, 1839
Massachusetts 6th James C. Alvord (W) Died September 27, 1839 Osmyn Baker (W) Seated January 14, 1840
Pennsylvania 14th William W. Potter (D) Died October 28, 1839 George McCulloch (D) Seated November 20, 1839
Virginia 14th Charles F. Mercer (W) Resigned December 26, 1839 William M. McCarty (W) Seated January 25, 1840
Ohio 4th Thomas Corwin (W) Resigned May 30, 1840, having become a candidate for Governor of Ohio Jeremiah Morrow (W) Seated October 13, 1840
Connecticut 2nd William L. Storrs (W) Resigned some time in June, 1840 William W. Boardman (W) Seated December 7, 1840
New York 11th Anson Brown (W) Died June 14, 1840 Nicholas B. Doe (W) Seated December 7, 1840
Indiana 7th Tilghman Howard (D) Resigned July 1, 1840 HHenry S. Lane (W) Seated August 3, 1840
Georgia at-large Walter T. Colquitt (W) Resigned July 21, 1840 Hines Holt (W) Seated February 1, 1841
Louisiana 3rd Rice Garland (W) Resigned July 21, 1840, to accept appointment as judge of Louisiana Supreme Court John Moore (W) Seated December 17, 1840
Pennsylvania 22nd Richard Biddle (AM) Resigned July 21, 1840 Henry M. Brackenridge (W) Seated October 13, 1840
Kentucky 5th Simeon H. Anderson (W) Died August 11, 1840 John B. Thompson (W) Seated December 7, 1840
Massachusetts 1st Abbott Lawrence (W) Resigned September 18, 1840 Robert C. Winthrop (W) Seated November 9, 1840
Pennsylvania 13th William S. Ramsey (D) Died October 17, 1840 Charles McClure (D) Seated December 7, 1840
Iowa Territory at-large William W. Chapman (D) Term expired by law October 27, 1840 Augustus C. Dodge (D) Seated October 28, 1840
Virginia 1st Joel Holleman (D) Resigned in December 1840 Francis Mallory (W) Seated December 28, 1840
Maine 4th George Evans (W) Resigned March 3, 1841, after being elected to the US Senate Vacant Not filled this term

Committees

Lists of committees and their party leaders.

Senate

House of Representatives

Joint committees

Employees

Senate

House of Representatives

See also

Notes

  1. Nullifer
  2. ^ When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

References

  1. "A Mob in Search of a Speaker". House.gov. US House of Representatives. Retrieved March 18, 2017.
  • 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

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