Membership of the 73rd Congress of the United States

 

March 4, 1933 to January 3, 1935

 

First Session:  March 9, 1933 to June 15, 1933

Second Session:  January 3, 1934 to June 18, 1934

Special Sessions of the Senate:  March 4, 1933 to March 6, 1933

 

Vice President of the United States: 

John N. Garner (Texas)

President Pro Tempore of the Senate: 

Key Pittman (Nevada)

Secretary of the Senate: 

Edwin A. Halsey (Virginia)

Sergeant at Arms of the Senate: 

Chesley W. Jurney (Texas)

 

 

Speaker of the House of Representatives: 

Henry T. Rainey (Illinois)

Clerk of the House: 

South Trimble (Kentucky)

Sergeant at Arms of the House: 

Kenneth Romney (Montana)

Doorkeeper of the House: 

Joseph J. Sinnott (Virginia)

Postmaster of the House: 

Finis E. Scott

 

Alabama

 

Senators

 

Hugo L. Black

John Hollis Bankhead II

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John McDuffie

District 2:

J. Lister Hill

District 3:

Henry B. Steagall

District 4:

Lamar Jeffers

District 5:

Miles C. Allgood

District 6:

William B. Oliver

District 7:

William B. Bankhead

District 8:

Edward B. Almon (died June 22, 1933)

Archibald H. Carmichael (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Edward B. Almon; served from November 14, 1933)

District 9:

George Huddleston

 

Arizona

 

Senators

 

Henry F. Ashurst

Carl T. Hayden

 

Representative At Large

 

Isabella S. Greenway (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Lewis W. Douglas in the previous Congress; served from October 3, 1933)

 

Arkansas

 

Senators

 

Joseph T. Robinson

Hattie Caraway

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William J. Driver

District 2:

John E. Miller

District 3:

Claude A. Fuller

District 4:

William B. Cravens

District 5:

Heartsill Ragon (resigned June 16, 1933 to become judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas)

David D. Terry (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Heartsill Ragon; served from December 19, 1933)

District 6:

David D. Glover

District 7:

Tilman B. Parks

 

California

 

Senators

 

Hiram W. Johnson

William Gibbs McAdoo

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Clarence F. Lea

District 2:

Harry L. Englebright

District 3:

Frank H. Buck

District 4:

Florence P. Kahn

District 5:

Richard J. Welch

District 6:

Albert E. Carter

District 7:

Ralph R. Eltse

District 8:

John J. McGrath

District 9:

Denver S. Church

District 10:

Henry E. Stubbs

District 11:

William E. Evans

District 12:

John H. Hoeppel

District 13:

Charles Kramer

District 14:

Thomas F. Ford

District 15:

William I. Traeger

District 16:

John F. Dockweiler

District 17:

Charles J. Colden

District 18:

John H. Burke

District 19:

Sam L. Collins

District 20:

George Burnham

 

Colorado

 

Senators

 

Edward P. Costigan

Alva B. Adams

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Lawrence Lewis

District 2:

Fred N. Cummings

District 3:

John A. Martin

District 4:

Edward T. Taylor

 

Connecticut

 

Senators

 

Frederic C. Walcott

Augustine Lonergan

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Herman P. Kopplemann

District 2:

William L. Higgins

District 3:

Francis T. Maloney

District 4:

Schuyler Merritt

District 5:

Edward W. Goss

At Large:

Charles M. Bakewell

 

Delaware

 

Senators

 

Daniel O. Hastings

John G. Townsend, Jr.

 

Representative At Large

 

Wilbur L. Adams

 

Florida

 

Senators

 

Duncan U. Fletcher

Park Trammell

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

J. Hardin Peterson

District 2:

R. A. "Lex" Green

District 3:

Millard F. Caldwell

District 4:

J. Mark Wilcox 

At Large:

William J. Sears

 

Georgia

 

Senators

 

Walter F. George

Richard B. Russell

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Homer C. Parker

District 2:

Edward E. Cox

District 3:

Bryant T. Castellow

District 4:

Emmett M. Owen

District 5:

Robert C. W. Ramspeck

District 6:

Carl Vinson

District 7:

Malcolm C. Tarver

District 8:

Braswell D. Deen

District 9:

John S. Wood

District 10:

Charles H. Brand (died May 17, 1933)

Paul Brown (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Charles H. Brand; served from July 5, 1933)

 

Idaho

 

Senators

 

William E. Borah

James P. Pope

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Compton I. White

District 2:

Thomas C. Coffin (died June 8, 1934 from injuries suffered when struck by an automobile on a driveway in the south grounds of the U.S. Capitol)

 

Illinois

 

Senators

 

J. Hamilton Lewis 

William H. Dieterich

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Oscar S. De Priest

District 2:

Patrick H. Moynihan

District 3:

Edward A. Kelly

District 4:

Harry P. Beam

District 5:

Adolph J. Sabath

District 6:

Thomas J. O'Brien

District 7:

Leonard W. Schuetz

District 8:

Leo P. Kocialkowski

District 9:

Frederick A. Britten

District 10:

James Simpson, Jr.

District 11:

Frank R. Reid

District 12:

John T. Buckbee

District 13:

Leo E. Allen

District 14:

Chester C. Thompson

District 15:

J. Leroy Adair

District 16:

Everett M. Dirksen

District 17:

J. Frank Gillespie

District 18:

James A. Meeks

District 19:

Donald C. Dobbins

District 20:

Henry T. Rainey (died August 19, 1934)

District 21:

J. Earl Major (resigned October 6, 1933 to become a judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois)

District 22:

Edwin M. Schaefer

District 23:

William W. Arnold

District 24:

Claude V. Parsons

District 25:

Kent E. Keller

At Large:

Martin A. Brennan

At Large:

Walter Nesbit

 

Indiana

 

Senators

 

Arthur R. Robinson

Fred Van Nuys

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William T. Schulte

District 2:

George R. Durgan

District 3:

Samuel B. Pettengill

District 4:

James I. Farley

District 5:

Glenn H. Griswold

District 6:

Virginia E. Jenckes

District 7:

Arthur H. Greenwood

District 8:

John W. Boehne, Jr.

District 9:

Eugene B. Crowe

District 10:

Finly H. Gray

District 11:

William H. Larrabee

District 12:

Louis L. Ludlow

 

Iowa

 

Senators

 

Lester J. Dickinson

Richard L. Murphy

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Edward C. Eicher

District 2:

Bernhard M. Jacobsen

District 3:

Albert C. Willford

District 4:

Fred E. Biermann

District 5:

Lloyd Thurston

District 6:

Cassius C. Dowell

District 7:

Otha D. Wearin

District 8:

Fred C. Gilchrist

District 9:

Guy M. Gillette

 

Kansas

 

Senators

 

Arthur Capper

George McGill

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William P. Lambertson

District 2:

U. S. Guyer

District 3:

Harold McGugin

District 4:

Randolph Carpenter

District 5:

William A. Ayres (resigned August 22, 1934 to become a member of the Federal Trade Commission)

District 6:

Kathryn McCarthy

District 7:

Clifford R. Hope

 

Kentucky

 

Senators

 

Alben W. Barkley

Marvel M. Logan

 

Representatives At Large

 

John Y. Brown

Cap R. Carden

Glover H. Cary

Virgil Chapman

W. Voris Gregory

Finley Hamilton

Andrew J. May

Brent Spence

Fred Vinson

 

Louisiana

 

Senators

 

Huey P. Long

John H. Overton

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Joachim O. Fernandez

District 2:

Paul H. Maloney

District 3:

Numa F. Montet

District 4:

John N. Sandlin

District 5:

Riley J. Wilson

District 6:

Bolivar E. Kemp (died June 19, 1933)

J. Y. Sanders, Jr. (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Bolivar E. Kemp; served from May 1, 1934)

District 7:

René L. DeRouen

District 8:

Cleveland Dear

 

Maine

 

Senators

 

Frederick Hale

Wallace H. White, Jr.

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Carroll L. Beedy

District 2:

Edward C. Moran

District 3:

John G. Utterback

 

Maryland

 

Senators

 

Millard E. Tydings

Phillips L. Goldsborough

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

T. Alan Goldsborough

District 2:

William P. Cole

District 3:

Vincent L. Palmisano

District 4:

Ambrose J. Kennedy

District 5:

Stephen W. Gambrill

District 6:

David J. Lewis

 

Massachusetts

 

Senators

 

David I. Walsh

Marcus A. Coolidge

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Allen T. Treadway

District 2:

William J. Granfield

District 3:

Frank H. Foss

District 4:

Pehr G. Holmes

District 5:

Edith N. Rogers

District 6:

A. Piatt Andrew

District 7:

William P. Connery, Jr.

District 8:

Arthur D. Healy

District 9:

Robert Luce

District 10:

George H. Tinkham

District 11:

John J. Douglass

District 12:

John W. McCormack

District 13:

Richard B. Wigglesworth

District 14:

Joseph W. Martin, Jr.

District 15:

Charles L. Gifford

 

Michigan

 

Senators

 

James J. Couzens

Arthur H. Vandenberg

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

George G. Sadowski

District 2:

John C. Lehr

District 3:

Joseph L. Hooper (died February 22, 1934)

District 4:

George E. Foulkes

District 5:

Carl E. Mapes

District 6:

Claude E. Cady

District 7:

Jesse P. Wolcott

District 8:

Michael J. Hart

District 9:

Harry W. Musselwhite

District 10:

Roy O. Woodruff

District 11:

Prentiss M. Brown

District 12:

W. Frank James

District 13:

Clarence J. McLeod

District 14:

Carl M. Weideman

District 15:

John D. Dingell

District 16:

John Lesinski

District 17:

George A. Dondero

 

Minnesota

 

Senators

 

Henrik Shipstead

Thomas D. Schall

 

Representatives At Large

 

Henry Arens

Ray P. Chase

Theodore Christianson

Einar Hoidale

Magnus Johnson

Harold Knutson

Paul J. Kvale

Ernest Lundeen

Francis H. Shoemaker

 

Mississippi

 

Senators

 

Pat Harrison

Hubert D. Stephens

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John E. Rankin

District 2:

Wall Doxey

District 3:

William M. Whittington

District 4:

T. Jeff Busby

District 5:

Ross A. Collins

District 6:

William M. Colmer

District 7:

Lawrence R. Ellzey

 

Missouri

 

Senators

 

Roscoe C. Patterson

J. Bennett Clark

 

Representatives At Large

 

Clarence A. Cannon

James R. Claiborne

John J. Cochran

Clement C. Dickinson

Richard M. Duncan

Frank H. Lee

Ralph F. Lozier

Jacob L. Milligan

Milton A. Romjue

James E. Ruffin

Joseph B. Shannon

Clyde Williams

Reuben T. Wood

 

Montana

 

Senators

 

Burton K. Wheeler

John E. Erickson (appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Thomas J. Walsh; served from March 13, 1933; resigned November 6, 1934 when James E. Murray was elected)

James E. Murray (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Thomas J. Walsh; served from November 7, 1934)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Joseph P. Monaghan

District 2:

Roy E. Ayers

 

Nebraska

 

Senators

 

George W. Norris

Robert B. Howell (died March 11, 1933)

William H. Thompson (appointed to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Robert B. Howell; served from May 24, 1933 to November 6, 1934, when Richard C. Hunter was elected)

Richard C. Hunter (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Robert B. Howell; served from November 7, 1934)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John H. Morehead

District 2:

Edward R. Burke

District 3:

Edgar Howard

District 4:

Ashton C. Shallenberger

District 5:

Terry Carpenter

 

Nevada

 

Senators

 

Key Pittman

Patrick A. McCarran

 

Representative At Large

 

James G. Scrugham

 

New Hampshire

 

Senators

 

Henry W. Keyes

Fred H. Brown

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William N. Rogers

District 2:

Charles W. Tobey

 

New Jersey

 

Senators

 

Hamilton F. Kean

W. Warren Barbour

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Charles A. Wolverton

District 2:

Isaac Bacharach

District 3:

William H. Sutphin

District 4:

D. Lane Powers

District 5:

Charles A. Eaton

District 6:

Donald H. McLean

District 7:

Randolph Perkins

District 8:

George N. Seger

District 9:

Edward A. Kenney

District 10:

Fred A. Hartley, Jr.

District 11:

Peter A. Cavicchia

District 12:

Frederick R. Lehlbach

District 13:

Mary T. Norton

District 14:

Oscar L. Auf der Heide

 

New Mexico

 

Senators

 

Samuel G. Bratton (resigned June 24, 1933)

Bronson M. Cutting

Carl A. Hatch (appointed and subsequently elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Samuel G. Bratton; served from October 10, 1933)

 

Representative At Large

 

Dennis Chavez

 

New York

 

Senators