Membership of the 22nd Congress of the United States
 
March 4, 1831 to March 3, 1833
 
First Session:  December 5, 1831 to July 16, 1832
Second Session:  December 3, 1832 to March 2, 1833
 
Vice President of the United States:  John C. Calhoun (South Carolina)

President Pro Tempore of the Senate: 

Littleton W. Tazewell (Virginia)
Hugh L. White (Tennessee), from December 3, 1832
Secretary of the Senate:  Walter Lowrie (Pennsylvania)
Sergeant At Arms of the Senate:  Mountjoy Bayly (Maryland)
   
Speaker of the House of Representatives:  Andrew Stevenson (Virginia)
Clerk of the House:  Matthew St. Clair Clarke (Pennsylvania)
Sergeant At Arms of the House:  John O. Dunn (District of Columbia)
Doorkeeper of the House:  Overton Carr (Maryland)

 

Alabama

 

Senators

 

William R. King (Jacks.)

Gabriel Moore (Jacks.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Clement Comer Clay (Jacks.)
District 2: Samuel W. Mardis (Jacks.)
District 3: Dixon H. Lewis (States Rights Dem.)
 

Connecticut

 

Senators

 

Samuel A. Foot

Gideon Tomlinson

 

Representatives At Large

 

Noyes Barber
William W. Ellsworth
Jabez W. Huntington
Ralph I. Ingersoll
William L. Storrs
Ebenezer Young
 

Delaware

 

Senators

 

John Middleton Clayton

Arnold S. Naudain

 

Representative At Large

 

John J. Milligan
 

Georgia

 

Senators

 

George M. Troup

John Forsyth

 

Representatives At Large

 

Thomas F. Foster
Henry G. Lamar
Wilson Lumpkin (resigned 1831 before Congress convened to become Governor of Georgia)
Augustin S. Clayton (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Wilson Lumpkin; served from January 21, 1832)
Daniel Newnan
Wiley Thompson
James M. Wayne
Richard H. Wilde
 

Illinois

 

Senators

 

Elias K. Kane (Jacks.)

John M. Robinson (Jacks.)

 

Representative At Large

 

Joseph Duncan (Jacks.)
 

Indiana

 

Senators

 

William Hendricks

Robert Hanna (appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Noble; served from August 19, 1831 to January 3, 1832, when John B. Tipton was elected)

John B. Tipton (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Noble; served from January 3, 1832)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Ratliff Boon
District 2: John Carr
District 3: Johnathan McCarty
 

Kentucky

 

Senators

 

George M. Bibb

Henry Clay (elected to fill the vacancy in the term commencing March 4, 1831; served from November 10, 1831)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Henry Daniel
District 2: Thomas A. Marshall
District 3: Chilton Allan
District 4: Robert Letcher
District 5: Richard M. Johnson
District 6: Joseph Lecompte
District 7: John Adair
District 8: Nathan Gaither
District 9: Charles A. Wickliffe
District 10: Christopher Tompkins
District 11: Albert G. Hawes
District 12: Chittenden Lyon
 

Louisiana

 

Senators

 

Josiah S. Johnston

Edward Livingston (resigned May 24, 1831 to become Secretary of State)

George A. Waggaman (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Edward Livingston; served from November 15, 1831)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Edward D. White
District 2: Philemon Thomas
District 3: Henry A. Bullard
 

Maine

 

Senators

 

John Holmes

Peleg Sprague

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Rufus McIntire
District 2: John Anderson
District 3: Edward Kavanaugh
District 4: George Evans
District 5: Cornelius Holland
District 6: Leonard Jarvis
District 7: James Bates
 

Maryland

 

Senators

 

Samuel Smith

Ezekiel F. Chambers

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Daniel Jenifer
District 2: Benedict J. Semmes
District 3: George C. Washington
District 4: Francis Thomas
District 5*: John T. H. Worthington
Benjamin C. Howard
District 6: George E. Mitchell (died June 28, 1832)
Charles S. Sewall (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of George E. Mitchell; served from October 1, 1832)
District 7: John L. Kerr
District 8: John S. Spence
 
* Two-member district
 

Massachusetts

 

Senators

 

Nathaniel Silsbee

Daniel Webster

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Nathan Appleton
District 2: Rufus Choate
District 3: Jeremiah Nelson
District 4: Edward Everett
District 5: John Davis
District 6: Joseph G. Kendall
District 7: George Grennell, Jr.
District 8: Isaac C. Bates
District 9: George N. Briggs
District 10: Henry A. S. Dearborn
District 11: John Quincy Adams
District 12: James L. Hodges
District 13: John Reed, Jr.
 

Mississippi

 

Senators

 

Powhatan Ellis (resigned July 16, 1832 to become judge of the United States court for the district of Mississippi )

George Poindexter

John Black (appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Powhatan Ellis; served from November 12, 1832)

 

Representative At Large

 

Franklin E. Plummer
 

Missouri

 

Senators

 

Thomas Hart Benton

Alexander Buckner

 

Representative At Large

 

Spencer D. Pettis (died August 28, 1831 of wounds suffered in a duel with Major Thomas Biddle in St. Louis, MO)
William H. Ashley (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Spencer D. Pettis; served from October 31, 1831)
 

New Hampshire

 

Senators

 

Samuel Bell

Isaac Hill

 

Representatives At Large

 

John Brodhead
Thomas Chandler
Joseph Hammons
Henry Hubbard
Joseph M. Harper
John W. Weeks
 

New Jersey

 

Senators

 

Mahlon Dickerson

Theodore Frelinghuysen

 

Representatives At Large

 

Isaac Southard
Lewis Condict
Richard M. Cooper
James F. Randolph
Silas Condit
Thomas Hughes
 

New York

 

Senators

 

Charles E. Dudley (Jacks.)

William L. Marcy (Jacks.) (resigned January 1, 1833 to become Governor of New York)

Silas Wright, Jr. (Jacks.) (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of William Marcy; served from January 4, 1833)

 

Representatives

 
District 1: James Lent (Jacks.) (died February 22, 1833)
District 2: John T. Bergen (Jacks.)
District 3: Churchill C. Cambreleng (Jacks.)
Gulian C. Verplanck (Jacks.)
Campbell P. White (Jacks.)
District 4: Aaron Ward (Jacks.)
District 5: Edmund H. Pendleton (Anti-Jacks.)
District 6: Samuel J. Wilkin (Anti-Jacks.)
District 7: John C. Brodhead (Jacks.)
District 8: John King (Jacks.)
District 9: Job Pierson (Jacks.)
District 10: Gerrit Y. Lansing (Jacks.)
District 11: Erastus Root (Jacks.)
District 12: Joseph Bouck (Jacks.)
District 13: William G. Angel (Jacks.)
District 14: Samuel Beardsley (Jacks.)
District 15: Michael Hoffman (Jacks.)
District 16: Nathan Soule (Jacks.)
District 17: John W. Taylor (Anti-Jacks.)
District 18: Nathaniel Pitcher (Jacks.)
District 19: William Hogan (Jacks.)
District 20†: Daniel Wardwell (Jacks.)
Charles Dayan (Jacks.)
District 21: John A. Collier (Jacks.)
District 22: Edward C. Reed (Jacks.)
District 23: Freeborn G. Jewett (Jacks.)
District 24: Ulysses F. Doubleday (Jacks.)
District 25: Gamaliel H. Barstow (Anti-Mason)
District 26‡: William Babcock (Anti-Mason)
John Dickinson (Anti-Mason)
District 27: Frederick Whittlesey (Anti-Mason)
District 28: Grattan H. Wheeler (Anti-Mason)
District 29: Phineas L. Tracy (Anti-Mason)
District 30: Bates Cooke (Anti-Jacks.)
 
* Three-member district
† Two-member district
‡ Two-member district
 

North Carolina

 

Senators

 

Bedford Brown

Willie P. Mangum

 

Representatives

 

District 1: William B. Shepard
District 2: John Branch (served as Secretary of the Navy until May 12, 1831)
District 3: Thomas H. Hall
District 4: Jesse Speight
District 5: James I. McKay
District 6: Robert Potter (resigned November, 1831)
Micajah T. Hawkins (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Robert Potter; served from December 15, 1831)
District 7: Lauchlin Bethune
District 8: Daniel L. Barringer
District 9: Augustine H. Shepperd
District 10: Abraham Rencher
District 11: Henry W. Connor
District 12: Samuel P. Carson
District 13: Lewis Williams
 

Ohio

 

Senators

 

Benjamin Ruggles (Anti-Jacks.)

Thomas Ewing (Anti-Jacks.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: James Findlay (Jacks.)
District 2: Thomas Corwin (Anti-Jacks.)
District 3: Joseph H. Crane (Anti-Jacks.)
District 4: Joseph Vance
District 5: William Russell (Jacks.)
District 6: William Creighton, Jr. (Anti-Jacks.)
District 7: Samuel F. Vinton
District 8: William Stanbery (Anti-Jacks.)
District 9: William W. Irvin (Jacks.)
District 10: William Kennon, Sr. (Jacks.)
District 11: Humphrey H. Leavitt (Jacks.)
District 12: John Thomson (Jacks.)
District 13: Elisha Whittlesey
District 14: Eleutheros Cooke (Anti-Jacks.)
 

Pennsylvania

 

Senators

 

Isaac D. Barnard (Jacks.) (resigned December 6, 1831)

William Wilkins (Jacks.)

George M. Dallas (Jacks.) (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Isaac D. Barnard; served from December 13, 1831)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Joel B. Sutherland (Jacks.)
District 2: Henry Horn (Jacks.)
District 3: John G. Watmough (Anti-Jacks.)
District 4*: William Hiester (Anti-Mason)
Joshua Evans, Jr. (Jacks.)
David Potts, Jr. (Anti-Mason)
District 5: Joel K. Mann (Jacks.)
District 6: John C. Bucher (Jacks.)
District 7†: Henry A. P. Muhlenberg (Jacks.)
Henry King (Jacks.)
District 8‡: Peter Ihrie, Jr. (Jacks.)
Samuel A. Smith (Jacks.)
District 9#: James Ford (Jacks.)
Lewis Dewart (Jacks.)
Philander Stephens (Jacks.)
District 10: Adam King (Jacks.)
District 11§: William Ramsey (Jacks.) (died September 29, 1831)
Robert McCoy (Jacks.) (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of William Ramsey; served from November 22, 1831)
Thomas H. Crawford (Jacks.)
District 12: Robert Allison (Anti-Mason)
District 13: George Burd (Anti-Jacks.)
District 14: Andrew Stewart (Anti-Mason)
District 15: Thomas M. T. McKennan (Anti-Mason)
District 16¶: John Gilmore (Jacks.)
Harmar Denny (Anti-Mason)
District 17: Richard Coulter (Jacks.)
District 18: John Banks (Anti-Mason)
 
* Three-member district
† Two-member district
‡ Two-member district
# Three-member district
§ Two-member district
¶ Two-member district
 

Rhode Island

 

Senators

 

Nehemiah R. Knight

Asher Robbins

 

Representatives At Large

 

Tristam Burges
Dutee J. Pearce
 

South Carolina

 

Senators

 

Robert Y. Hayne (resigned December 13, 1832 to become Governor of South Carolina)

Stephen Decatur Miller (resigned March 2, 1833 due to ill health)

John C. Calhoun (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Robert Y. Hayne; served from December 29, 1832)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: William Drayton
District 2: Robert W. Barnwell
District 3: Thomas R. Mitchell
District 4: John M. Felder
District 5: George McDuffie
District 6: Warren R. Davis
District 7: William T. Nuckolls
District 8: James Blair
District 9: John K. Griffin
 

Tennessee

 

Senators

 

Hugh L. White

Felix Grundy

 

Representatives

 

District 1: John Blair
District 2: Thomas D. Arnold
District 3: James I. Standifer
District 4: Jacob C. Isacks
District 5: William Hall
District 6: James K. Polk
District 7: John Bell
District 8: Cave Johnson
District 9: William Fitzgerald
 

Vermont

 

Senators

 

Horatio Seymour

Samuel Prentiss

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Jonathan Hunt (died May 15, 1832)
Hiland Hall (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Jonathan Hunt; served from January 1, 1833)
District 2: Rollin C. Mallary (died April 15, 1831)
William Slade (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Rollin C. Mallary; served from November 1, 1831)
District 3: Horace Everett
District 4: Heman Allen
District 5: William Cahoon
 

Virginia

 

Senators

 

Littleton W. Tazewell (resigned July 16, 1832)

John Tyler

William Cabell Rives (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Littleton W. Tazewell; served from December 10, 1832)

 

Representatives

 

District 1: Thomas Newton, Jr.
District 2: John Y. Mason
District 3: William S. Archer
District 4: Mark Alexander
District 5: Thomas T. Bouldin
District 6: Thomas Davenport
District 7: Nathaniel H. Claiborne
District 8: Richard Coke, Jr.
District 9: Andrew Stevenson
District 10: William F. Gordon
District 11: John M. Patton
District 12: John Roane
District 13: Joseph W. Chinn
District 14: Charles F. Mercer
District 15: James S. Barbour
District 16: William Armstrong
District 17: Robert Allen
District 18: Philip Doddridge (died November 19, 1832)
Joseph Johnson (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Philip Doddridge; served from January 21 to March 3, 1833)
District 19: William McCoy
District 20: Robert Craig
District 21: Lewis Maxwell
District 22: Charles C. Johnston (drowned June 17, 1832 near one of the docks in Alexandria, VA)
Joseph Draper (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Charles C. Johnston; served from December 6, 1832)
 
Arkansas Territory
 

Delegate

 
Ambrose H. Sevier
 

Florida Territory

 

Delegate

 

Joseph M. White

 

Michigan Territory

 

Delegate

 

Austin E. Wing