List of members of the United States Congress from multiple states
Appearance
Throughout the history of the United States Congress, some members were elected either as representatives and/or senators from more than one U.S. state at different times in their career.
Multiple states in the House
[edit]Multiple states in the Senate
[edit]Only two senators have represented more than one state.[1]
- James Shields uniquely served terms in the U.S. Senate for three states; representing Illinois (1849–1855), Minnesota (1858–1859), and 20 years later he was appointed by the State of Missouri for a term expiring in just six weeks (1879). He was a Democrat.[2]
- Waitman T. Willey was a Restored Government of Virginia Senator (1861–1863) who helped create West Virginia. He was then appointed as one of the new state's first two senators (1863–1871). He was a Unionist until 1865 and a Republican thereafter.[1]
One state in the House, another in the Senate
[edit]Name | Offices | Start | End | Party |
---|---|---|---|---|
John Brown | ![]() |
1789 | 1792 | Democratic-Republican |
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1792 | 1805 | ||
Robert Harper | ![]() |
1795 | 1801 | Federalist |
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1816 | 1816 | ||
Edward Livingston | ![]() |
1795 | 1801 | Democratic-Republican |
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1829 | 1831 | Jacksonian | |
William Claiborne | ![]() |
1797 | 1801 | Democratic-Republican |
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1817 | 1817 | ||
David Holmes | ![]() |
1797 | 1809 | Democratic-Republican |
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1820 | 1825 | ||
John Chandler | ![]() |
1805 | 1809 | Democratic-Republican |
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1820 | 1829 | ||
William R. King | ![]() |
1811 | 1816 | Democratic-Republican |
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1819 | 1844 | ||
Democratic | ||||
1848 | 1852 | |||
Israel Pickens | ![]() |
1811 | 1817 | Democratic-Republican |
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1826 | 1826 | Jacksonian | |
Daniel Webster | ![]() |
1813 | 1817 | Federalist |
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1827 | 1833 | National Republican | |
1833 | 1841 | Whig | ||
1845 | 1850 | |||
Albion Parris | ![]() |
1815 | 1818 | Democratic-Republican |
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1827 | 1828 | Jacksonian | |
John Holmes | ![]() |
1817 | 1820 | Democratic-Republican |
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1820 | 1827 | ||
1829 | 1833 | National Republican | ||
Sam Houston | ![]() |
1823 | 1827 | Democratic-Republican |
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1846 | 1859 | Democratic | |
Jesse Speight | ![]() |
1829 | 1837 | Jacksonian |
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1845 | 1847 | Democratic | |
John B. Weller | ![]() |
1839 | 1845 | Democratic |
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1852 | 1857 | ||
William Gwin | ![]() |
1841 | 1843 | Democratic |
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1850 | 1855 | ||
1857 | 1861 | |||
Alexander Ramsey | ![]() |
1843 | 1847 | Whig |
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1863 | 1875 | Republican | |
Edward Baker | ![]() |
1845 | 1847 | Whig |
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1849 | 1851 | ||
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1860 | 1861 | Republican | |
James Lane | ![]() |
1853 | 1855 | Democratic |
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1861 | 1866 | Republican | |
Charles Van Wyck | ![]() |
1859 | 1863 | Republican |
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1867 | 1869 | ||
1870 | 1871 | |||
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1881 | 1887 | ||
J. Hamilton Lewis | ![]() |
1897 | 1899 | Democratic |
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1913 | 1919 | ||
1933 | 1939 | |||
Charles A. Towne | ![]() |
1900 | 1901 | Democratic |
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1905 | 1907 |
Territories and states
[edit]- William Henry Harrison – the future president of the United States was a delegate to the 6th United States Congress from Northwest Territory (1799–1800), resigning to become territorial Governor of Indiana. He returned to Congress first as a representative from Ohio's 1st congressional district (1816–19), and then serving an incomplete term as senator for Ohio (1825–28), resigning to become U.S. Minister Plenipotentiary to Gran Colombia. He was a Whig.
- James M. Cavanaugh – represented Minnesota (1858–59) as a representative and then Montana Territory (1867–71) as a delegate. He was a Democrat.
- Stephen Benton Elkins – represented New Mexico Territory (1873–77) as a delegate and later West Virginia (1895–1911) as a senator. He was a Republican.
- John Noble Goodwin – represented Maine as a representative (1861–63) and later Arizona Territory as a delegate (1866–76). He was also first governor of the Territory of Arizona. He was a Republican.
- George Wallace Jones – was a delegate from Michigan Territory (1835–37) until Michigan was created as a State. He continued representing the remaining renamed Wisconsin Territory as a delegate (1837–39). Later, after Iowa was carved from the Wisconsin Territory and subsequently admitted to the union, he became one of the first senators from Iowa (1848–59). He was a Democrat.
- Richard Cunningham McCormick – represented Arizona Territory (1869–75) and later New York as a representative (1895–97). He was a Unionist as a delegate and a Republican as a representative.
- Henry Hastings Sibley – represented Wisconsin Territory (1848–49) and later Minnesota Territory as a delegate (1849–53). He was a Democrat.
- Jesse B. Thomas – represented Indiana Territory (1808–09) as a delegate and later Illinois (1818–1829) as a senator. He was initially a Democratic-Republican, but became an Anti-Jacksonian while senator.
- William H. Wallace – represented Washington Territory (1861–63) and later Idaho Territory as a delegate (1864–65). He was a Republican.
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Scott Brown won his primary. Now he wants to be the first multi-state senator in 135 years". www.vox.com.
- ^ "U.S. Senate: Senator for Three States". www.senate.gov.