UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATIONS FROM NEW YORK
These are tables of congressional delegations from New York to the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives.
Over the years, New York has undergone too much demographic change to consider each district to be a continuation of the same numbered district before reapportionment. For example, Carolyn Maloney has represented the 9th District since 1993, but is considered the successor of S. William Green since the current 9th takes up nearly all of the former territory of the 15th District as it existed before 1993.
During these two decades, New York had its maximum apportionment (to date) of 45 seats. From 1933 to 1945 there were 43 districts and 2 seats At-large. After 1945, there were 45 districts.
1. Representing the 17th district, Weiss died in office the day before the 1992 primary. Nadler was appointed to fill the remainder of Weiss' unexpired term, and was elected in November 1992 to the 8th district seat.
Over the years, New York has undergone too much demographic change to consider each district to be a continuation of the same numbered district before reapportionment. For example, Carolyn Maloney has represented the 9th District since 1993, but is considered the successor of S. William Green since the current 9th takes up nearly all of the former territory of the 15th District as it existed before 1993.
United States Senate
| Class 1 Senators | Congress | Class 3 Senators |
|---|---|---|
| Philip J. Schuyler (Pro-Admin.) | '1st' (1789–1791) | Rufus King (Pro-Admin.) |
| Aaron Burr (Anti-Admin.) | '2nd' (1791–1793) | |
| '3rd' (1793–1795) | ||
| '4th' (1795–1797) | ||
| John Laurance (F) | ||
| Philip J. Schuyler (F) | '5th' (1797–1799) | |
| John Sloss Hobart (F) | ||
| William North (F) | ||
| James Watson (F) | ||
| '6th' (1799–1801) | ||
| Gouverneur Morris (F) | John Armstrong, Jr. (D-R) | |
| '7th' (1801–1803) | ||
| De Witt Clinton (D-R) | ||
| Theodorus Bailey (D-R) | '8th' (1803–1805) | John Armstrong, Jr. (D-R) |
| John Armstrong, Jr. (D-R) | John Smith (D-R) | |
| Samuel L. Mitchill (D-R) | ||
| '9th' (1805–1807) | ||
| '10th' (1807–1809) | ||
| Obadiah German (D-R) | '11th' (1809–1811) | |
| '12th' (1811–1813) | ||
| '13th' (1813–1815) | Rufus King (F) | |
| Nathan Sanford (D-R) | '14th' (1815–1817) | |
| '15th' (1817–1819) | ||
| '16th' (1819–1821) | ||
| Martin Van Buren (D-R) | '17th' (1821–1823) | |
| '18th' (1823–1825) | ||
| '19th' (1825–1827) | Nathan Sanford (Adams) | |
| '20th' (1827–1829) | ||
| Charles E. Dudley (D-R) | ||
| '21st' (1829–1831) | ||
| '22nd' (1831–1833) | William L. Marcy (D-R) | |
| Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (D-R) | '23rd' (1833–1835) | Silas Wright, Jr. (D-R) |
| '24th' (1835–1837) | ||
| '25th' (1837–1839) | ||
| Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (D) | '26th' (1839–1841) | |
| '27th' (1841–1843) | ||
| Daniel S. Dickinson (D) | '28th' (1843–1845) | Henry A. Foster (D) |
| '29th' (1845–1847) | John Adams Dix (D) | |
| '30th' (1847–1849) | ||
| '31st' (1849–1851) | William H. Seward (W) | |
| Hamilton Fish (W) | '32nd' (1851–1853) | |
| '33rd' (1853–1855) | ||
| '34th' (1855–1857) | William H. Seward (R) | |
| Preston King (R) | '35th' (1857–1859) | |
| '36th' (1859–1861) | ||
| '37th' (1861–1863) | Ira Harris (R) | |
| Edwin D. Morgan (R) | '38th' (1863–1865) | |
| '39th' (1865–1867) | ||
| '40th' (1867–1869) | Roscoe Conkling (R) | |
| Reuben E. Fenton (R) | '41st' (1869–1871) | |
| '42nd' (1871–1873) | ||
| '43rd' (1873–1875) | ||
| Francis Kernan (D) | '44th' (1875–1877) | |
| '45th' (1877–1879) | ||
| '46th' (1879–1881) | ||
| Thomas C. Platt (R) | '47th' (1881–1883) | |
| Warner Miller (R) | Elbridge G. Lapham (R) | |
| '48th' (1883–1885) | ||
| '49th' (1885–1887) | William M. Evarts (R) | |
| Frank Hiscock (R) | '50th' (1887–1889) | |
| '51st' (1889–1891) | ||
| '52nd' (1891–1893) | David B. Hill (D) | |
| Edward Murphy, Jr. (D) | '53rd' (1893–1895) | |
| '54th' (1895–1897) | ||
| '55th' (1897–1899) | Thomas C. Platt (R) | |
| Chauncey M. Depew (R) | '56th' (1899–1901) | |
| '57th' (1901–1903) | ||
| '58th' (1903–1905) | ||
| '59th' (1905–1907) | ||
| '60th' (1907–1909) | ||
| '61st' (1909–1911) | Elihu Root (R) | |
| James A. O'Gorman (D) | '62nd' (1911–1913) | |
| '63rd' (1913–1915) | ||
| '64th' (1915–1917) | James W. Wadsworth, Jr. (R) | |
| William M. Calder (R) | '65th' (1917–1919) | |
| '66th' (1919–1921) | ||
| '67th' (1921–1923) | ||
| Royal S. Copeland (D) | '68th' (1923–1925) | |
| '69th' (1925–1927) | ||
| '70th' (1927–1929) | Robert F. Wagner (D) | |
| '71st' (1929–1931) | ||
| '72nd' (1931–1933) | ||
| '73rd' (1933–1935) | ||
| '74th' (1935–1937) | ||
| '75th' (1937–1939) | ||
| James M. Mead (D) | ||
| '76th' (1939–1941) | ||
| '77th' (1941–1943) | ||
| '78th' (1943–1945) | ||
| '79th' (1945–1947) | ||
| Irving M. Ives (R) | '80th' (1947–1949) | |
| '81st' (1949–1951) | ||
| John Foster Dulles (R) | ||
| Herbert H. Lehman (D) | ||
| '82nd' (1951–1953) | ||
| '83rd' (1953–1955) | ||
| '84th' (1955–1957) | ||
| '85th' (1957–1959) | Jacob K. Javits (R) | |
| Kenneth Keating (R) | '86th' (1959–1961) | |
| '87th' (1961–1963) | ||
| '88th' (1963–1965) | ||
| Robert F. Kennedy (D) | '89th' (1965–1967) | |
| '90th' (1967–1969) | ||
| Charles E. Goodell (R) | ||
| '91st' (1969–1971) | ||
| James L. Buckley (Conservative) | '92nd' (1971–1973) | |
| '93rd' (1973–1975) | ||
| '94th' (1975–1977) | ||
| Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D) | '95th' (1977–1979) | |
| '96th' (1979–1981) | ||
| '97th' (1981–1983) | Alfonse D'Amato (R) | |
| '98th' (1983–1985) | ||
| '99th' (1985–1987) | ||
| '100th' (1987–1989) | ||
| '101st' (1989–1991) | ||
| '102nd' (1991–1993) | ||
| '103rd' (1993–1995) | ||
| '104th' (1995–1997) | ||
| '105th' (1997–1999) | ||
| '106th' (1999–2001) | Charles Schumer (D) | |
| Hillary Rodham Clinton (D) | '107th' (2001–2003) | |
| '108th' (2003–2005) | ||
| '109th' (2005–2007) | ||
| '110th' (2007-2009) |
United States House of Representatives
1789-1793: 6 seats
| Congress | District | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| '1st' 1789-1791 | William Floyd (Anti-Admin.) | John Laurance (Pro-Admin.) | Egbert Benson (Pro-Admin.) | John Hathorn (Anti-Admin.) | Peter Silvester (Pro-Admin.) | Jeremiah Van Rensselaer (Anti-Admin.) |
| '2nd' 1791-1793 | Thomas Tredwell (Anti-Admin.) | Cornelius C. Schoonmaker (Anti-Admin.) | James Gordon (Pro-Admin.) | |||
1793-1803: 10 seats
| Congress | District | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| '3rd' 1793-1795 | Thomas Tredwell (Anti-Admin.) | John Watts (Pro-Admin.) | Philip Van Cortlandt (Anti-Admin.) | Peter Van Gaasbeck (Pro-Admin.) | Theodorus Bailey (Anti-Admin.) | Ezekiel Gilbert (Pro-Admin.) | John E. Van Alen (Pro-Admin.) | Henry Glen (Pro-Admin.) | James Gordon (Pro-Admin.) | Silas Talbot (Pro-Admin.) |
| '4th' 1795-1797 | Jonathan N. Havens (DR) | Edward Livingston (DR) | Philip Van Cortlandt (DR) | John Hathorn (DR) | Theodorus Bailey (DR) | Ezekiel Gilbert (F) | John E. Van Alen (F) | Henry Glen (F) | John Williams (F) | William Cooper (F) |
| '5th' 1797-1799 | Lucas C. Elmendorf (DR) | David Brooks (F) | Hezekiah L. Hosmer (F) | James Cochran (F) | ||||||
| '6th' 1799-1801 | Theodorus Bailey (DR) | John Bird (F) | John Thompson (DR) | Jonas Platt (F) | William Cooper (F) | |||||
| John Smith (DR) | ||||||||||
| '7th' 1801-1803 | Samuel L. Mitchill (DR) | Thomas Tillotson | David Thomas (DR) | Killian Van Rensselaer (F) | Benjamin Walker (F) | Thomas Morris (F) | ||||
| Theodorus Bailey (DR) | John P. Van Ness (DR) | |||||||||
1803-1813: 17 seats
1813-1823: 27 seats
1823-1833: 34 seats
1833-1843: 40 seats
1843-1853: 34 seats
1853-1863: 33 seats
1863-1873: 31 seats
1873-1883: 33 seats
1883-1903: 34 seats
1903-1913: 37 seats
1913-1923: 43 seats
1923-1933: 43 Seats
1933-1953: 44 seats
During these two decades, New York had its maximum apportionment (to date) of 45 seats. From 1933 to 1945 there were 43 districts and 2 seats At-large. After 1945, there were 45 districts.
1953-present
1. Representing the 17th district, Weiss died in office the day before the 1992 primary. Nadler was appointed to fill the remainder of Weiss' unexpired term, and was elected in November 1992 to the 8th district seat.
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