Massachusetts House of Representatives' 2nd Berkshire district
Appearance
Massachusetts House of Representatives' 2nd Berkshire district in the United States is one of 160 legislative districts included in the lower house of the Massachusetts General Court. It covers parts of Berkshire County and Franklin County.[1] Democrat Paul Mark has represented the district since 2011.[2] Mark is running unopposed for re-election in the 2020 Massachusetts general election.[3][4]
Towns represented
[edit]The district includes the following localities:[5]
- Bernardston
- Charlemont
- Colrain
- Dalton
- Greenfield
- Hawley
- Heath
- Hinsdale
- Leyden
- Monroe
- Northfield
- Peru
- Pittsfield
- Rowe
- Savoy
- Windsor
The current district geographic boundary overlaps with those of the Massachusetts Senate's Berkshire, Hampshire, Franklin and Hampden and Hampshire, Franklin and Worcester districts.[6]
Former locales
[edit]The district previously covered:
Representatives
[edit]- Russell C. Brown, circa 1858[8]
- Sylvander Johnson, circa 1858[8]
- William H. Tyler, 2d, circa 1859[9]
- John Milton Morin, circa 1888[10]
- William H. Woodhead, circa 1920[11]
- Richard August Ruether, circa 1951[12]
- Anthony P. McBride, circa 1975[13]
- Sherwood Guernsey, 1983–1990
- Shaun P. Kelly, 1991–2005
- Denis Guyer, 2005–2011
- Paul W. Mark, 2011-current[2]
See also
[edit]- Other Berkshire County districts of the Massachusetts House of Representatives: 1st, 3rd, 4th
- List of Massachusetts House of Representatives elections
- List of Massachusetts General Courts
- List of former districts of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
Images
[edit]-
Homer Hall
-
George Waterman
-
James Welch
-
Elmer McCulloch
-
Richard August Ruether
-
Edward Zelazo
-
Anthony McBride
-
Thomas Lussier
-
Shaun Kelly
References
[edit]- ^ "Massachusetts Representative Districts". Sec.state.ma.us. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
- ^ a b Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Elections Division. "State Representative elections: 2nd Berkshire district". PD43+. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
- ^ "2020 State Primary Candidates", Sec.state.ma.us, Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, retrieved August 28, 2020
- ^ Zack DeLuca (August 27, 2020), "Area legislators running unopposed in primary", Recorder.com
- ^ Massachusetts General Court, "Chapter 153. An Act Relative to Establishing Representative Districts in the General Court", Acts (2011)
- ^ David Jarman (July 30, 2019), "Upper legislative district ↔ lower legislative district correspondences: MA", How do counties, House districts, and legislative districts all overlap?, Daily Kos,
State House Districts to State Senate Districts
- ^ a b c d "Representative Districts". Massachusetts Register. Boston: Sampson, Davenport, & Company. 1872.
- ^ a b "Massachusetts House of Representatives". Massachusetts Register. Boston: Adams, Sampson & Co. 1858. pp. 10–12.
- ^ Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Manual for the Use of the General Court. Boston. 1859 – via Internet Archive.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Geo. F. Andrews (ed.). "Representatives: Berkshire County". 1888 State House Directory. Official Gazette, Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Lakeview Press.
- ^ Public Officials of Massachusetts: 1920. Boston Review.
- ^ 1951–1952 Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Boston.
- ^ 1975–1976 Public Officers of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Boston.
External links
[edit]- Ballotpedia
- "2nd Berkshire District, MA". Censusreporter.org. (State House district information based on U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey).
- League of Women Voters of Williamstown