The 25th 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, 1837, to March 4, 1839, during the first two years of Martin Van Buren's presidency.
The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1830 United States census. Both houses of congress had a Democratic majority.
Major events
thumb|The Modern [[Balaam#Hebrew Bible|Balaam and His Ass, an 1837 caricature placing the blame for the Panic of 1837 and the perilous state of the banking system on outgoing President Andrew Jackson, shown riding a donkey, while President Martin Van Buren comments approvingly.]]
- March 4, 1837: Martin Van Buren became President of the United States
- May 10, 1837: Panic of 1837
- January 6, 1838: First public demonstration of Samuel Morse's telegraph
- May 26, 1838: Trail of Tears: The Cherokee removal began
Major legislation
Territories organized
- June 12, 1838: Iowa Territory was formed from the Wisconsin Territory.
Party summary
The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this congress. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.
Senate
{| align="right" width="300px"
|<gallery mode="slideshow" caption="Senate membership">
File:25th United States Senate Beginning.svg|Beginning of the Congress
File:25th United States Senate Ending.svg|End of the Congress
</gallery>
|}
House of Representatives
{| align="right" width="300px"
|<gallery mode="slideshow" caption="House membership">
File:25th United States House Beginning.svg|Beginning of the Congress
File:25th United States House Ending.svg|Ending of the Congress
</gallery>
|}
Leadership
thumb|175px|President of the Senate<br>[[Richard Mentor Johnson|Richard M. Johnson]]
Senate
- President: Richard Mentor Johnson (D)
- President pro tempore: William R. King (D)
House of Representatives
- Speaker: James K. Polk (D)
Members
This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed by class, and representatives by district.
:Skip to House of Representatives, below
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, ending in 1839; Class 2 meant their term began in the last Congress, ending in 1841; and Class 3 meant their term began in this Congress, ending in 1843.
Alabama
: 2. William R. King (D)
: 3. John McKinley (D), until April 22, 1837
:: Clement C. Clay (D), from June 19, 1837
Arkansas
: 2. William S. Fulton (D)
: 3. Ambrose H. Sevier (D)
Connecticut
: 1. John M. Niles (D)
: 3. Perry Smith (D)
Delaware
: 1. Richard H. Bayard (W)
: 2. Thomas Clayton (W)
Georgia
: 2. John P. King (D), until November 1, 1837
:: Wilson Lumpkin (D), from November 22, 1837
: 3. Alfred Cuthbert (D)
Illinois
: 2. John M. Robinson (D)
: 3. Richard M. Young (D)
Indiana
: 1. John Tipton (D)
: 3. Oliver H. Smith (W)
Kentucky
: 2. John J. Crittenden (W)
: 3. Henry Clay (W)
Louisiana
: 2. Robert C. Nicholas (D)
: 3. Alexander Mouton (D)
Maine
: 1. Reuel Williams (D)
: 2. John Ruggles (D)
Maryland
: 1. Joseph Kent (W), until November 24, 1837
:: William D. Merrick (W), from January 4, 1838
: 3. John S. Spence (W)
Massachusetts
: 1. Daniel Webster (W)
: 2. John Davis (W)
Michigan
: 1. Lucius Lyon (D)
: 2. John Norvell (D)
Mississippi
: 1. John Black (W), until January 22, 1838
:: James F. Trotter (D), from January 22, 1838, until July 10, 1838
:: Thomas Hickman Williams (D), from November 12, 1838
: 2. Robert J. Walker (D)
Missouri
: 1. Thomas H. Benton (D)
: 3. Lewis F. Linn (D)
New Hampshire
: 2. Henry Hubbard (D)
: 3. Franklin Pierce (D)
New Jersey
: 1. Samuel L. Southard (W)
: 2. Garret D. Wall (D)
New York
: 1. Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (D)
: 3. Silas Wright Jr. (D)
North Carolina
: 2. Bedford Brown (D)
: 3. Robert Strange (D)
Ohio
: 1. Thomas Morris (D)
: 3. William Allen (D)
Pennsylvania
: 1. Samuel McKean (D)
: 3. James Buchanan (D)
Rhode Island
: 1. Asher Robbins (W)
: 2. Nehemiah R. Knight (W)
South Carolina
: 2. John C. Calhoun (D)
: 3. William C. Preston (W)
Tennessee
: 1. Felix Grundy (D), until July 4, 1838
:: Ephraim H. Foster (W), from September 17, 1838 – March 3, 1839
: 2. Hugh Lawson White (W)
Vermont
: 1. Benjamin Swift (W)
: 3. Samuel Prentiss (W)
Virginia
: 1. William C. Rives (D)
: 2. Richard E. Parker (D), until March 4, 1837
:: William H. Roane (D), from March 14, 1837
[[File:25th United States Congress Senators.svg|thumb|375px|Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 25th Congress in March 1837.
]]
thumb|right|175px|President pro tempore<br> [[William R. King]]
House of Representatives
The names of representatives are preceded by their district numbers.
Alabama
: . Reuben Chapman (D)
: . Joshua L. Martin (D)
: . Joab Lawler (W), until May 8, 1838
:: George W. Crabb (W), from September 4, 1838
: . Dixon H. Lewis (D)
: . Francis S. Lyon (W)
Arkansas
: . Archibald Yell (D)
Connecticut
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . Isaac Toucey (D)
: . Samuel Ingham (D)
: . Elisha Haley (D)
: . Thomas T. Whittlesey (D)
: . Lancelot Phelps (D)
: . Orrin Holt (D)
Delaware
: . John J. Milligan (W)
Georgia
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . Jesse F. Cleveland (D)
: . William C. Dawson (W)
: . Thomas Glascock (D)
: . Seaton Grantland (D)
: . Charles E. Haynes (D)
: . Hopkins Holsey (D)
: . Jabez Y. Jackson (D)
: . George W. Owens (D)
: . George W. B. Towns (D)
Illinois
: . Adam W. Snyder (D)
: . Zadok Casey (D)
: . William L. May (D)
Indiana
: . Ratliff Boon (D)
: . John Ewing (W)
: . William Graham (W)
: . George H. Dunn (W)
: . James Rariden (W)
: . William Herod (W)
: . Albert S. White (W)
Kentucky
: . John L. Murray (D)
: . Edward Rumsey (W)
: . Joseph R. Underwood (W)
: . Sherrod Williams (W)
: . James Harlan (W)
: . John Calhoon (W)
: . John Pope (W)
: . William J. Graves (W)
: . John White (W)
: . Richard Hawes (W)
: . Richard H. Menefee (W)
: . John Chambers (W)
: . William W. Southgate (W)
Louisiana
: . Henry Johnson (W)
: . Eleazar W. Ripley (D), until March 2, 1839
: . Rice Garland (W)
Maine
: . John Fairfield (D), until December 24, 1838
: . Francis O. J. Smith (D)
: . Jonathan Cilley (D), until February 24, 1838
:: Edward Robinson (W), from April 28, 1838
: . George Evans (W)
: . Timothy J. Carter (D), until March 14, 1838
:: Virgil D. Parris (D), from May 29, 1838
: . Hugh J. Anderson (D)
: . Joseph C. Noyes (W)
: . Thomas Davee (D)
Maryland
The 4th district was a plural district with two representatives.
: . John Dennis (W)
: . James A. Pearce (W)
: . John T. H. Worthington (D)
: . Benjamin C. Howard (D)
: . Isaac McKim (D), until April 1, 1838
:: John P. Kennedy (W), from April 25, 1838
: . William Cost Johnson (W)
: . Francis Thomas (D)
: . Daniel Jenifer (W)
Massachusetts
: . Richard Fletcher (W)
: . Stephen C. Phillips (W), until September 28, 1838
:: Leverett Saltonstall I (W), from December 25, 1838
: . Caleb Cushing (W)
: . William Parmenter (D)
: . Levi Lincoln Jr. (W)
: . George Grennell Jr. (W)
: . George N. Briggs (W)
: . William B. Calhoun (W)
: . William S. Hastings (W)
: . Nathaniel B. Borden (D)
: . John Reed Jr. (W)
: . John Quincy Adams (W)
Michigan
: . Isaac E. Crary (D)
Mississippi
Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . John F. H. Claiborne (D), from July 18, 1837, until February 5, 1838
:: Seargent S. Prentiss (W), from May 30, 1838
: . Samuel J. Gholson (D), from July 18, 1837, until February 5, 1838
:: Thomas J. Word (W), from May 30, 1838
Missouri
Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . Albert G. Harrison (D)
: . John Miller (D)
New Hampshire
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . Charles G. Atherton (D)
: . Samuel Cushman (D)
: . James Farrington (D)
: . Joseph Weeks (D)
: . Jared W. Williams (D)
New Jersey
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . John B. Aycrigg (W)
: . William Halstead (W)
: . John P. B. Maxwell (W)
: . Joseph F. Randolph (W)
: . Charles C. Stratton (W)
: . Thomas Jones Yorke (W)
New York
There were four plural districts, the 8th, 17th, 22nd & 23rd had two representatives each, the 3rd had four representatives.
: . Thomas B. Jackson (D)
: . Abraham Vanderveer (D)
: . Churchill C. Cambreleng (D)
: . Edward Curtis (W)
: . Ogden Hoffman (W)
: . Ely Moore (D)
: . Gouverneur Kemble (D)
: . Obadiah Titus (D)
: . Nathaniel Jones (D)
: . John C. Brodhead (D)
: . Robert McClellan (D)
: . Zadock Pratt (D)
: . Henry Vail (D)
: . Albert Gallup (D)
: . John I. De Graff (D)
: . David A. Russell (W)
: . John Palmer (D)
: . James B. Spencer (D)
: . John Edwards (D)
: . Arphaxed Loomis (D)
: . Henry A. Foster (D)
: . Abraham P. Grant (D)
: . Isaac H. Bronson (D)
: . John H. Prentiss (D)
: . Amasa J. Parker (D)
: . John C. Clark (D)
: . Andrew D. W. Bruyn (D), until July 27, 1838
:: Cyrus Beers (D), from December 3, 1838
: . Hiram Gray (D)
: . Bennet Bicknell (D)
: . William Taylor (D)
: . William H. Noble (D)
: . Samuel Birdsall (D)
: . Mark H. Sibley (W)
: . John T. Andrews (D)
: . Timothy Childs (W)
: . William Patterson (W), until August 14, 1838
:: Harvey Putnam (W), from November 7, 1838
: . Luther C. Peck (W)
: . Richard P. Marvin (W)
: . Millard Fillmore (W)
: . Charles F. Mitchell (W)
North Carolina
: . Samuel T. Sawyer (W)
: . Jesse A. Bynum (D)
: . Edward Stanly (W)
: . Charles B. Shepard (W)
: . James I. McKay (D)
: . Micajah T. Hawkins (D)
: . Edmund Deberry (W)
: . William Montgomery (D)
: . Augustine H. Shepperd (W)
: . Abraham Rencher (W)
: . Henry W. Connor (D)
: . James Graham (W)
: . Lewis Williams (W)
Ohio
: . Alexander Duncan (D)
: . Taylor Webster (D)
: . Patrick G. Goode (W)
: . Thomas Corwin (W)
: . Thomas L. Hamer (D)
: . Calvary Morris (W)
: . William K. Bond (W)
: . Joseph Ridgway (W)
: . John Chaney (D)
: . Samson Mason (W)
: . James Alexander Jr. (W)
: . Alexander Harper (W)
: . Daniel P. Leadbetter (D)
: . William H. Hunter (D)
: . John W. Allen (W)
: . Elisha Whittlesey (W), until July 9, 1838
:: Joshua R. Giddings (W), from December 3, 1838
: . Andrew W. Loomis (W), until October 20, 1837
:: Charles D. Coffin (W), from December 20, 1837
: . Matthias Shepler (D)
: . Daniel Kilgore (D), until July 4, 1838
:: Henry Swearingen (D), from December 3, 1838
Pennsylvania
There were two plural districts, the 2nd had two representatives, the 4th had three representatives.
: . Lemuel Paynter (D)
: . John Sergeant (W)
: . George W. Toland (W)
: . Francis J. Harper (D), until March 18, 1837
:: Charles Naylor (W), from June 29, 1837
: . Edward Darlington (AM)
: . Edward Davies (AM)
: . David Potts Jr. (AM)
: . Jacob Fry Jr. (D)
: . Mathias Morris (W)
: . David D. Wagener (D)
: . Edward B. Hubley (D)
: . Henry A. P. Muhlenberg (D), until February 9, 1838
:: George M. Keim (D), from March 17, 1838
: . Luther Reily (D)
: . Henry Logan (D)
: . Daniel Sheffer (D)
: . Charles McClure (D)
: . William W. Potter (D)
: . David Petrikin (D)
: . Robert H. Hammond (D)
: . Samuel W. Morris (D)
: . Charles Ogle (AM)
: . John J. Klingensmith Jr. (D)
: . Andrew Buchanan (D)
: . Thomas M. T. McKennan (AM)
: . Richard Biddle (AM)
: . William Beatty (D)
: . Thomas Henry (AM)
: . Arnold Plumer (D)
Rhode Island
Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket.
: . Robert B. Cranston (W)
: . Joseph L. Tillinghast (W)
South Carolina
: . Hugh S. Legaré (D)
: . Robert Rhett (D)
: . John Campbell (N)
: . Franklin H. Elmore (States Rights D)
: . Francis W. Pickens (N)
: . Waddy Thompson Jr. (W)
: . William K. Clowney (N)
: . John P. Richardson (D)
: . John K. Griffin (N)
Tennessee
: . William B. Carter (W)
: . Abraham McClellan (D)
: . Joseph L. Williams (W)
: . James I. Standifer (W), until August 20, 1837
:: William Stone (W), from September 14, 1837
: . Hopkins L. Turney (D)
: . William B. Campbell (W)
: . John Bell (W)
: . Abram P. Maury (W)
: . James K. Polk (D)
: . Ebenezer J. Shields (W)
: . Richard Cheatham (W)
: . John W. Crockett (W)
: . Christopher H. Williams (W)
Vermont
: . Hiland Hall (W)
: . William Slade (W)
: . Horace Everett (W)
: . Heman Allen (W)
: . Isaac Fletcher (D)
Virginia
: . Francis Mallory (W)
: . Francis E. Rives (D)
: . John W. Jones (D)
: . George C. Dromgoole (D)
: . James W. Bouldin (D)
: . Walter Coles (D)
: . Archibald Stuart (D)
: . Henry A. Wise (W)
: . Robert M. T. Hunter (W)
: . John Taliaferro (W)
: . John Robertson (W)
: . James Garland (D)
: . John M. Patton (D), until April 7, 1838
:: Linn Banks (D), from April 28, 1838
: . Charles F. Mercer (W)
: . James M. Mason (D)
: . Isaac S. Pennybacker (D)
: . Robert Craig (D)
: . George W. Hopkins (D)
: . Andrew Beirne (D)
: . Joseph Johnson (D)
: . William S. Morgan (D)
Non-voting members
: . Charles Downing
: . William W. Chapman (D), from September 10, 1838
: . George Wallace Jones (D), until January 14, 1839
:: James D. Doty (D), from January 14, 1839
[[File:25 us house membership.png|thumb|400px|
{| align=center
! colspan=2 | House seats by party holding plurality in state
|-
|
|
|-
|
|
|-
|
|
|}]]
thumb|right|175px|Speaker of the House<br/>[[James Polk]]
Changes in membership
The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.
Senate
- Replacements: 6
- Democrats: no net change
- Whigs: no net change
- Deaths: 1
- Resignations: 6
- Total seats with changes: 7
<!--
Sorted Chronologically by date of vacancy
-->
|-
| Virginia<br>(2)
| | Richard E. Parker (D)
| Resigned March 4, 1837, after accepting a seat on the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals
| | William H. Roane (D)
| Elected March 14, 1837
|-
| Alabama<br>(3)
| | John McKinley (D)
| Resigned April 22, 1837, after being appointed Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court
| | Clement C. Clay (D)
| Elected June 19, 1837
|-
| Georgia<br>(2)
| | John P. King (D)
| Resigned November 1, 1837
| | Wilson Lumpkin (D)
| Elected November 22, 1837
|-
| Maryland<br>(1)
| | Joseph Kent (W)
| Died November 24, 1837
| | William D. Merrick (W)
| Elected January 4, 1838
|-
| Mississippi<br>(1)
| | John Black (W)
| Resigned January 22, 1838
| | James F. Trotter (D)
| Appointed January 22, 1838
|-
| Tennessee<br>(1)
| | Felix Grundy (D)
| Resigned July 4, 1838, after being appointed United States Attorney General
| | Ephraim H. Foster (W)
| Elected September 17, 1838
|-
| Mississippi<br>(1)
| | James F. Trotter (D)
| Resigned July 10, 1838
| | Thomas H. Williams (D)
| Appointed November 12, 1838, and subsequently elected
|-
| Tennessee<br>(1)
| | Ephraim H. Foster (W)
| Resigned March 3, 1839 before start of new Congress under orders of state legislature.
| Vacant
|
|}
House of Representatives
- Replacements: 16
- Democrats: 5-seat net loss
- Whigs: 5-seat net gain
- Deaths: 9
- Resignations: 6
- Contested election:1
- Total seats with changes: 20
<!--
Sorted Chronologically by date of vacancy
-->
|-
|
| Vacant
| Rep-elect Claiborne presented credentials July 18, 1837
| | John F. H. Claiborne (D)
| Seated July 18, 1837
|-
|
| Vacant
| Rep-elect Gholson presented credentials July 18, 1837
| | Samuel J. Gholson (D)
| Seated July 18, 1837
|-
|
| | Francis J. Harper (D)
| Died March 18, 1837
| | Charles Naylor (W)
| Seated June 29, 1837
|-
|
| | James I. Standifer (W)
| Died August 20, 1837
| | William Stone (W)
| Seated September 14, 1837
|-
|
| | Elisha Whittlesey (W)
| Resigned October 20, 1837
| | Charles D. Coffin (W)
| Seated December 20, 1837
|-
|
| | John F. H. Claiborne (D)
| Seat declared vacant February 5, 1838
| | Seargent S. Prentiss (W)
| Seated May 30, 1838
|-
|
| | Samuel J. Gholson (D)
| Seat declared vacant February 5, 1838
| | Thomas J. Word (W)
| Seated May 30, 1838
|-
|
| | Henry A. P. Muhlenberg (D)
| Resigned February 9, 1838, after being appointed Minister to Austrian Empire
| | George M. Keim (D)
| Seated March 17, 1838
|-
|
| | Jonathan Cilley (D)
| Killed in a duel February 24, 1838, by Rep. William J. Graves
| | Edward Robinson (W)
| Seated April 28, 1838
|-
|
| | Timothy J. Carter (D)
| Died March 14, 1838
| | Virgil D. Parris (D)
| Seated May 29, 1838
|-
|
| | Isaac McKim (D)
| Died April 1, 1838
| | John P. Kennedy (W)
| Seated April 25, 1838
|-
|
| | John M. Patton (D)
| Resigned April 7, 1838
| | Linn Banks (D)
| Seated April 28, 1838
|-
|
| | Joab Lawler (W)
| Died May 8, 1838
| | George W. Crabb (W)
| Seated October 5, 1835
|-
|
| | Daniel Kilgore (D)
| Resigned July 4, 1838
| | Henry Swearingen (D)
| Seated December 3, 1838
|-
|
| | Elisha Whittlesey (W)
| Resigned July 9, 1838
| | Joshua R. Giddings (W)
| Seated December 3, 1838
|-
|
| | Andrew D. Bruyn (D)
| Died July 27, 1838
| | Cyrus Beers (D)
| Seated December 3, 1838
|-
|
| | William Patterson (W)
| Died August 14, 1838
| | Harvey Putnam (W)
| Seated November 7, 1838
|-
|
| New seat
| Iowa Territory seated its first delegate September 10, 1838
| | George Wallace Jones (D)
| Seated September 10, 1838
|-
|
| | Stephen C. Phillips (W)
| Seat declared vacant September 28, 1838
| | Leverett Saltonstall (W)
| Seated December 15, 1838
|-
|
| | John Fairfield (D)
| Resigned December 24, 1838, after being elected Governor of Maine
| Vacant
| Not filled this congress
|-
|
| | George Wallace Jones (D)
| Lost contested election January 14, 1839
| | James D. Doty (D)
| Seated January 14, 1839
|-
|
| | Eleazar W. Ripley (D)
| Died March 2, 1839
| Vacant
| Not filled this congress
|}
Committees
Lists of committees and their party leaders.
Senate
- Agriculture (Chairman: Perry Smith)
- Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate (Chairman: Samuel McKean)
- Claims (Chairman: Henry Hubbard)
- Commerce (Chairman: William R. King)
- Danger of Steam Vessels (Select)
- Distributing Public Revenue Among the States (Select)
- District of Columbia (Chairman: William H. Roane)
- Engrossed Bills (Chairman: John Norvell)
- Finance (Chairman: Silas Wright)
- Foreign Relations (Chairman: James Buchanan)
- Indian Affairs (Chairman: Hugh Lawson White)
- Judiciary (Chairman: Felix Grundy)
- Letter of Mr. Ruggles (Select)
- Manufactures (Chairman: John M. Niles)
- Memorial of A. B. Quinby (Select)
- Memorial of the Citizens of Georgetown (DC) for the Retrocession of that Part of the District (Select)
- Memorial of Duff Green (Select)
- Memorial of Edward D. Tippett (Select)
- Mileage of Members of Congress (Select)
- Military Affairs (Chairman: Thomas Hart Benton)
- Militia (Chairman: Clement C. Clay)
- Naval Affairs (Chairman: William C. Rives)
- Occupation of the Columbia River (Select)
- Oregon Territory (Select)
- Patents and the Patent Office (Chairman: John Ruggles then Robert Strange)
- Pensions (Chairman: Thomas Morris)
- Post Office and Post Roads (Chairman: John M. Robinson)
- Private Land Claims (Chairman: Lewis F. Linn)
- Public Buildings and Grounds (Chairman: N/A)
- Public Lands (Chairman: Robert J. Walker)
- Purchasing Boyd Reilly's Gas Apparatus (Select)
- Revolutionary Claims (Chairman: Bedford Brown)
- Roads and Canals (Chairman: Thomas Tipton)
- Tariff Regulation (Select)
- Whole
House of Representatives
- Accounts (Chairman: Joseph Johnson)
- Agriculture (Chairman: Edmund Deberry)
- Amendment to the Constitution (Select)
- Claims (Chairman: John Chambers)
- Commerce (Chairman: Samuel Cushman)
- District of Columbia (Chairman: James W. Bouldin)
- Elections (Chairman: Andrew Buchanan)
- Expenditures in the Navy Department (Chairman: John C. Brodhead)
- Expenditures in the Post Office Department (Chairman: Timothy Childs)
- Expenditures in the State Department (Chairman: Mathias Morris)
- Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Chairman: Heman Allen)
- Expenditures in the War Department (Chairman: William K. Clowney)
- Expenditures on Public Buildings (Chairman: Samuel T. Sawyer)
- Foreign Affairs (Chairman: Benjamin C. Howard)
- Indian Affairs (Chairman: John Bell)
- Invalid Pensions (Chairman: William Taylor)
- Judiciary (Chairman: Francis Thomas)
- Manufactures (Chairman: John Quincy Adams)
- Mileage (Chairman: William C. Dawson)
- Military Affairs (Chairman: James I. McKay)
- Militia (Chairman: David D. Wagener)
- Naval Affairs (Chairman: Samuel Ingham)
- Patents (Chairman: Isaac Fletcher)
- Post Office and Post Roads (Chairman: Henry W. Connor)
- Private Land Claims (Chairman: William L. May)
- Public Buildings and Grounds (Chairman: Levi Lincoln Jr.)
- Public Expenditures (Chairman: Elisha Haley)
- Public Lands (Chairman: Ratliff Boon until 1838, then Zadok Casey)
- Revisal and Unfinished Business (Chairman: Matthias Shepler)
- Revolutionary Claims (Chairman: Robert Craig)
- Revolutionary Pensions (Chairman: William S. Morgan)
- Roads and Canals (Chairman: Charles F. Mercer)
- Rules (Select)
- Standards of Official Conduct
- Territories (Chairman: Isaac H. Bronson)
- Ways and Means (Chairman: Churchill C. Cambreleng)
- Whole
Joint committees
- Enrolled Bills
- The Library
Employees
- Librarian of Congress: John Silva Meehan
Senate
- Chaplain: John R. Goodman (Episcopalian), until September 11, 1837
- Henry Slicer (Methodist), elected September 11, 1837
- Secretary: Asbury Dickins
- Sergeant at Arms: John Shackford (died)
- Stephen Haight, elected September 4, 1837
House of Representatives
- Chaplain: Septimus Tustin (Presbyterian), elected September 4, 1837
- Levi R. Reese (Methodist), elected December 4, 1837
- Clerk: Walter S. Franklin, until September 20, 1838 (died)
- Hugh A. Garland, elected December 3, 1838
- Doorkeeper: Overton Carr
- Postmaster: William J. McCormick
- Sergeant at Arms: Roderick Dorsey
See also
- 1836 United States elections (elections leading to this Congress)
- 1836 United States presidential election
- 1836–37 United States Senate elections
- 1836–37 United States House of Representatives elections
- 1838 United States elections (elections during this Congress, leading to the next Congress)
- 1838–39 United States Senate elections
- 1838–39 United States House of Representatives elections
Notes
References
External links
- Statutes at Large, 1789-1875
- Senate Journal, First Forty-three Sessions of Congress
- House Journal, First Forty-three Sessions of Congress
- Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress
- U.S. House of Representatives: House History
- U.S. Senate: Statistics and Lists
