imported>Howard C. Berkowitz |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz |
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| ==Party summary== | | ==Party summary== |
| The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress, and includes members from vacancies and newly admitted states, when they were first seated. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section. | | The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress, and includes members from vacancies and newly admitted states, when they were first seated. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section. |
| | {| class="wikitable" |
| | '''Senate (54 seats)''' |
| | |- |
| | ! Party |
| | ! Members |
| | ! Notes |
| | |- |
| | |[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig '' (W) ''] |
| | | 29 |
| | | Majority |
| | |- |
| | |[[Democratic Party (United States)| Democratic '' (D) '']] |
| | | 23 |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | |Vacant |
| | | 2 |
| | | |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| {|width=65% | | {| class="wikitable" |
| |-valign=top
| | '''House of Representatives (224 seats)''' |
| |
| | |- |
| :'''Senate'''
| | ! Party |
| *[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig '' (W) '']]: 29 ''(majority)''
| | ! Members |
| *[[Democratic Party (United States)| Democratic '' (D) '']]: 23
| | ! Notes |
| *vacant: 2
| | |- |
| '''TOTAL members: 54'''
| | |[[Democratic Party (United States)| Democratic '' (D) '']] |
| | | | | 147 |
| :'''House of Representatives'''
| | | Majority |
| *[[Democratic Party (United States)| Democratic '' (D) '']]: 147 ''(majority)''
| | |- |
| *[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig '' (W) '']]: 72
| | |[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig '' (W) '']] |
| *[[Law and Order Party of Rhode Island| Law and Order '' (LO) '']]: 2
| | | 72 |
| *Independent Democrat: 1
| | | |
| *Independent Whig: 1
| | |- |
| *vacant: 1
| | |[[Law and Order Party of Rhode Island| Law and Order '' (LO) ''] |
| '''TOTAL members: 224'''
| | | 2 |
| |} | | | |
| | |- |
| | |Independent Democrat |
| | | 1 |
| | | |
| | |- |
| | |Independent Whig |
| | | 1 |
| | | |
| | |} |
|
| |
|
| ==Leadership== | | ==Leadership== |
| {|width=65%
| | ===Senate=== |
| |-valign=top
| |
| |
| |
| *[[President of the United States Senate| President]]: Vacant | | *[[President of the United States Senate| President]]: Vacant |
| *[[President pro tempore of the United States Senate| President ''pro tempore'']]: [[Willie P. Mangum]], ''[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig]]'' of [[North Carolina]], elected December 4, 1843. | | *[[President pro tempore of the United States Senate| President ''pro tempore'']]: [[Willie P. Mangum]], ''[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig]]'' of [[North Carolina]], elected December 4, 1843. |
| :'''House of Representatives'''
| | ===House of Representatives=== |
| *[[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives| Speaker]]: [[John Winston Jones| John W. Jones]], ''[[Democratic Party (United States)| Democratic]]'' of [[Virginia]], elected December 4, 1843. | | *[[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives| Speaker]]: [[John Winston Jones| John W. Jones]], ''[[Democratic Party (United States)| Democratic]]'' of [[Virginia]], elected December 4, 1843. |
| |}
| |
|
| |
| ==Major events==
| |
| Events of 1843, 1844 & 1845
| |
|
| |
|
| ==Major legislation== | | ==Major legislation== |
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|
| |
|
| Many of the congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress. | | Many of the congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress. |
| ====Delegates====
| |
| {|width=100%
| |
| |-valign=top
| |
| |
| |
| :'''Florida Territory'''
| |
| *A/L: [[David Levy Yulee]] ''([[Democratic Party (United States)|D]])''
| |
| |
| |
| :'''Iowa Territory'''
| |
| *A/L: [[Augustus C. Dodge]] ''([[Democratic Party (United States)|D]])''
| |
| |
| |
| :'''Wisconsin Territory'''
| |
| *A/L: [[Henry Dodge]] ''([[Democratic Party (United States)|D]])''
| |
| |}
| |
|
| |
|
| ===Membership detail by Chamber/Party=== | | ===Membership detail by Chamber/Party=== |
Template:TOC-right
The Twenty-eighth 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, 1843 to March 3, 1845, during the last two years of the administration of U.S. President John Tyler.
The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the Sixth Census of the United States in 1840. The Senate had a Whig majority, and the House had a Democratic majority.
Dates of sessions
March 4, 1843 - March 3, 1845
- First session: December 4, 1843 - June 17, 1844.
- Second session: December 2, 1844 - March 3, 1845.
- Previous congress: 27th Congress
- Next congress: 29th Congress
Party summary
The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this Congress, and includes members from vacancies and newly admitted states, when they were first seated. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.
Senate (54 seats)
Party
|
Members
|
Notes
|
[[Whig Party (United States)| Whig (W) ]
|
29
|
Majority
|
Democratic (D)
|
23
|
|
Vacant
|
2
|
|
House of Representatives (224 seats)
Party
|
Members
|
Notes
|
Democratic (D)
|
147
|
Majority
|
Whig (W)
|
72
|
|
[[Law and Order Party of Rhode Island| Law and Order (LO) ]
|
2
|
|
Independent Democrat
|
1
|
|
Independent Whig
|
1
|
|
Leadership
Senate
House of Representatives
Major legislation
List of United States federal legislation in the 28th Congress
- March 3, 1845 -- Florida was admitted as a state into the Union.
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 ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1844; Class 2 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1846; and Class 3 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1848.
House of Representatives
The names of members of the House of Representatives elected statewide on the general ticket or otherwise at-large, are preceded by an "A/L," and the names of those elected from districts, whether plural or single member, are preceded by their district numbers.
Many of the congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress.
Membership detail by Chamber/Party
The list below is arranged by chamber, then by political party. Members are shown in alphabetical order.
Senate
Senators were elected by the state legislatures every two years, with one-third beginning new six year terms with each Congress.
- A-F
- William Allen, Ohio
- Chester Ashley, Arkansas
- David R. Atchison, Missouri
- Charles G. Atherton, New Hampshire
- Arthur P. Bagby, Alabama
- Thomas H. Benton, Missouri
- Sidney Breese, Illinois
- James Buchanan, Pennsylvania
- Walter T. Colquitt, Georgia
- Daniel S. Dickinson, New York
- John A. Dix, New York
- John Fairfield, Maine
- Henry A. Foster, New York
- William S. Fulton, Arkansas
|
- G-R
- Edward A. Hannegan, Indiana
- William H. Haywood, Jr., North Carolina
- Daniel E. Huger, South Carolina
- William R. D. King, Alabama
- Dixon H. Lewis, Alabama
- Lewis F. Linn, Missouri
- George McDuffie, South Carolina
- Samuel McRoberts, Illinois
- John M. Niles, Connecticut
|
- S-Z
|
- A-F
- William S. Archer, Virginia
- Alexander Barrow, Louisiana
- Isaac C. Bates, Massachusetts
- Richard H. Bayard, Delaware
- John Mcpherson Berrien, Georgia
- Rufus Choate, Massachusetts
- Thomas Clayton, Delaware
- John J. Crittenden, Kentucky
- William L. Dayton, New Jersey
- George Evans, Maine
- Ephraim H. Foster, Tennessee
|
- G-R
- John Henderson, Mississippi
- Jabez W. Huntington, Connecticut
- Spencer Jarnagin, Tennessee
- Henry Johnson, Louisiana
- Willie P. Mangum, North Carolina
- William D. Merrick, Maryland
- Jacob W. Miller, New Jersey
- James T. Morehead, Kentucky
- James A. Pearce, Maryland
- Samuel S. Phelps, Vermont
- Augustus S. Porter, Michigan
- William C. Rives, Virginia
|
- S-Z
|
House of Representatives
Members of the House of Representatives were elected by popular vote, variously to single member districts or at-large.
- A-B-C
- Joseph H. Anderson, New York
- Archibald H. Arrington, North Carolina
- Archibald Atkinson, Virginia
- Thomas H. Bayly, Virginia .
- Samuel Beardsley, New York .
- James E. Belser, Alabama
- Charles S. Benton, New York
- Benjamin A. Bidlack, Pennsylvania
- Edward J. Black, Georgia
- James Black, Pennsylvania
- James A. Black, South Carolina
- Julius W. Blackwell, Tennessee
- Pierre E. J. B. Bossier, Louisiana
- Gustavus M. Bower, Missouri
- James B. Bowlin, Missouri
- Linn Boyd, Kentucky
- Henry R. Brinkerhoff, Ohio
- Jacob Brinkerhoff, Ohio
- Richard Brodhead, Pennsylvania
- Aaron V. Brown, Tennessee
- William J. Brown, Indiana
- Edmund Burke, New Hampshire
- Armistead Burt, South Carolina
- George A. Caldwell, Kentucky
- John Campbell, South Carolina
- Levi D. Carpenter, New York
- Jeremiah E. Cary, New York
- Shepard Cary, Maine .
- George S. Catlin, Connecticut
- Augustus A. Chapman]], Virginia
- Reuben Chapman, Alabama
- James G. Clinton, New York
- Howell Cobb, Georgia
- Walter Coles, Virginia
- Mark A. Cooper, Georgia
- Edward Cross, Arkansas
- Alvan Cullom, Tennessee
- D-E-F
- Amasa Dana, New York
- John R. J. Daniel, North Carolina
- John W. Davis, Indiana
- Richard D. Davis, New York
- John B. Dawson, Louisiana
- Ezra Dean, Ohio
- Paul Dillingham, Jr., Vermont
- Stephen A. Douglas, Illinois
- George C. Dromgoole, Virginia
- Alexander Duncan, Ohio
- Robert P. Dunlap, Maine
- Chesselden Ellis, New York
- Lucius Q. C. Elmer, New Jersey
- Isaac G. Farlee, New Jersey
- Orlando B. Ficklin, Illinois
- Henry D. Foster, Pennsylvania
- Richard French, Kentucky
- George Fuller, Pennsylvania
|
- G-H-I
- Thomas W. Gilmer, Virginia
- Byram Green, New York
- John P. Hale, New Hampshire
- Hannibal Hamlin, Maine
- William H. Hammett, Mississippi
- Hugh A. Haralson, Georgia
- Samuel Hays, Pennsylvania
- Thomas J. Henley, Indiana
- Joshua Herrick, Maine
- Joseph P. Hoge, Illinois
- Isaac E. Holmes, South Carolina
- George W. Hopkins, Virginia
- George S. Houston, Alabama
- Edmund W. Hubard, Virginia
- William S. Hubbell, New York
- James M. Hughes, Missouri
- Orville Hungerford, New York
- James B. Hunt, Michigan
- Charles J. Ingersoll, Pennsylvania
- J-K-L
- John Jameson, Missouri
- Andrew Johnson, Tennessee
- Cave Johnson, Tennessee
- George W. Jones, Tennessee
- John W. Jones, Virginia
- Andrew Kennedy, Indiana
- Preston King, New York
- Littleton Kirkpatrick, New Jersey
- Alcée L. La Branche, Louisiana
- John B. Lamar, Georgia
- Moses G. Leonard, New York
- Dixon H. Lewis, Alabama
- William Lucas, Virginia
- John H. Lumpkin,
- Lucius Lyon, Michigan
- M-N-O
- William B. Maclay, New York
- James Mathews, Ohio
- William C. McCauslen, Ohio
- Robert McClelland , Michigan
- John A. McClernand, Illinois
- Felix G. McConnell, Alabama
- Joseph J. McDowell, Ohio
- James I. McKay, North Carolina
- John Millen, Georgia
- Heman Allen Moore, Ohio
- Joseph Morris, Ohio
- Isaac E. Morse, Louisiana
- Henry C. Murphy, New York
- Moses Norris, Jr. , New Hampshire
- Robert D. Owen, Indiana
|
- P-Q-R
- William Parmenter, Massachusetts
- William W. Payne, Alabama
- John Pettit, Indiana
- Emery D. Potter, Ohio
- Zadock Pratt, New York
- Smith M. Purdy, New York
- George O. Rathbun, New York
- Almon H. Read, Pennsylvania .
- John R. Reding, New Hampshire
- David S. Reid, North Carolina
- James H. Relfe , Missouri
- R. Barnwell Rhett, South Carolina
- John Ritter, Pennsylvania
- Robert W. Roberts, Mississippi
- Orville Robinson, New York
- Jeremiah Russell, New York
- S-T-U-V
- Romulus M. Saunders, North Carolina
- David L. Seymour, New York
- Thomas H. Seymour, Connecticut
- Samuel Simons, Connecticut
- Richard F. Simpson, South Carolina
- John Slidell, Louisiana
- John T. Smith, Pennsylvania
- Robert Smith, Illinois
- Robert B. Smith, South Carolina
- Thomas Smith, Indiana
- Henry St. John, Ohio
- Lewis Steenrod, Virginia
- Lemuel Stetson, New York
- John Stewart, Connecticut
- William H. Stiles, Georgia
- Alfred P. Stone, Ohio
- James W. Stone, Kentucky
- Selah B. Strong, New York
- George Sykes, New Jersey
- William Taylor, Virginia
- Jacob Thompson, Mississippi
- John W. Tibbatts, Kentucky
- Tilghman M. Tucker, Mississippi
- W-X-Y-Z
- John B. Weller, Ohio
- John Wentworth, Illinois
- Horace Wheaton, New York
- Benjamin White, Maine
- William Wilkins, Pennsylvania
- Henry Williams, Massachusetts
- Henry A. Wise, Virginia
- Joseph A. Woodward, South Carolina
- Joseph A. Wright, Indiana
- William L. Yancey, Alabama
- Jacob S. Yost, Pennsylvania
|
- A-B-C
- Amos Abbott, Massachusetts
- John Quincy Adams, Massachusetts
- John B. Ashe, Tennessee
- Osmyn Baker, Massachusetts
- Daniel D. Barnard, New York
- Daniel M. Barringer, North Carolina
- Francis Brengle , Maryland
- Jeremiah Brown, Pennsylvania
- Milton Brown, Tennessee
- Joseph Buffington, Pennsylvania
- Barker Burnell , Massachusetts
- Charles H. Carroll, New York
- John M. S. Causin, Maryland
- Absalom H. Chappell, Georgia
- Samuel Chilton, Virginia
- Duncan L. Clinch, Georgia
- Thomas L. Clingman, North Carolina
- Jacob Collamer, Vermont
- D-E-F
- Cornelius Darragh, Pennsylvania
- Garrett Davis, Kentucky
- Edmund Deberry, North Carolina
- James Dellet, Alabama
- John Dickey, Pennsylvania
- David W. Dickinson, Tennessee
- Hamilton Fish, New York
- Elias Florence, Ohio
- Solomon Foot, Vermont
- Henry Frick, Pennsylvania .
|
- G-H-I
- Joshua R. Giddings, Ohio
- William L. Goggin, Virginia
- Willis Green, Kentucky
- Henry Grider, Kentucky
- Joseph Grinnell, Massachusetts
- Edward S. Hamlin, Ohio
- John J. Hardin, Illinois
- Alexander Harper, Ohio
- Charles Hudson, Massachusetts
- Washington Hunt, New York
- Joseph R. Ingersoll, Pennsylvania
- James Irvin), Pennsylvania
- J-K-L
- M-N-O
|
- P-Q-R
- Thomas J. Patterson, New York
- Joseph H. Peyton, Tennessee
- J. Phillips Phoenix, New York
- James Pollock, Pennsylvania
- Jacob A. Preston, Maryland
- Alexander Ramsey, Pennsylvania
- Kenneth Rayner, North Carolina
- Charles M. Reed, Pennsylvania
- Julius Rockwell, Massachusetts
- George B. Rodney, Delaware
- Charles Rogers, New York
- S-T-U-V
- Samuel C. Sample Indiana
- Robert C. Schenck, Ohio
- William T. Senter, Tennessee
- Luther Severance, Maine
- Albert Smith, New York
- Caleb B. Smith, Indiana
- Thomas A. Spence, Maryland
- Alexander H. Stephens, Georgia.
- Andrew Stewart, Pennsylvania
- George W. Summers, Virginia
- William P. Thomasson, Kentucky
- Daniel R. Tilden, Ohio
- Asher Tyler, New York
- Joseph Vance, Ohio
- John I. Vanmeter, Ohio
- Samuel F. Vinton, Ohio
- W-X-Y-Z
|
Membership Changes
The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.
- Senate
- replacements: 7
- deaths: 3
- resignations: 5
- interim appointments: 1
- Total seats with changes: 10
|
- House of Representatives
- replacements: 14
- deaths: 7
- resignations: 7
- contested election: 0
- Total seats with changes: 16
|
Officers
- Senate
|
- House of Representatives
|
Notes