24th United States Congress

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
24th United States Congress
23rd ←
→ 25th
USCapitol1827A.gif
United States Capitol (1827)

March 4, 1835 – March 4, 1837
Members52 senators
242 representatives
3 non-voting delegates
Senate MajorityJacksonian
Senate PresidentMartin Van Buren (J)
House MajorityJacksonian
House SpeakerJames K. Polk (J)
Sessions
1st: December 7, 1835 – July 4, 1836
2nd: December 5, 1836 – March 3, 1837

The 24th 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, 1835, to March 4, 1837, during the seventh and eighth years of Andrew Jackson's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Fifth Census of the United States in 1830. Both chambers had a Jacksonian majority.

Tensions with France[]

Throughout 1835 relations between the United States and France reached an all-time low. Andrew Jackson had America's ambassador to France travel aboard a gunboat and after negotiations broke down had the American ambassador recalled back to the United States and forced the French ambassador to leave. President Jackson and the French government traded threats and insults throughout the duration of the year. In this conflict President Jackson got support from many members of the House of Representatives. In late November 1835 Linn Boyd, Albert G. Hawes, Richard M. Johnson, John E. Coffee, Seaton Grantland, Charles Eaton Haynes, Jabez Young Jackson, George Welshman Owens, Thomas Glascock, William Schley, Reuben Chapman, Joshua L. Martin, Joab Lawler, Jesse Atherton Bynum, Jesse Speight, James Iver McKay, Micajah Thomas Hawkins, William Montgomery, Henry William Connor and James Rogers (congressman) all put in writing that if President Jackson were to formally declare war on France he would have their full support. Shortly after this when the government of the United Kingdom sought to intervene, the same twenty Congressmen signed a letter stating that they welcomed the "wholesome and moderating influence" of British Prime Minister William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, British foreign secretary Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston and the British Secretary of State for War and the Colonies Charles Grant, 1st Baron Glenelg, who the letter referred to as "our thoughtful cousins." The same document referred to the France's leader Louis Philippe I as "dastardly and pusinallimous."[1][2] Senators Bedford Brown, Robert J. Walker, Felix Grundy, John Pendleton King and Alfred Cuthbert all wrote to President Jackson saying that they felt the same way as the aforementioned twenty members of the house "with respects to our relations with Britain and France" and "any potential war" that might break out between the United States and France.[2] In a series of popular outbursts in July 1836, effigies of Louis Philippe I were burnt in Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi.[3] In October 1836 it became known the French were "backing down," celebrations that were "overtly triumphant" and "distinctly anti-French" were held throughout Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi during the last two weeks of October 1836.[4]

Major events[]

  • December 28, 1835: The Second Seminole War began. Seminole fighter Osceola and his warriors attack government agent Thompson outside Fort King in central Florida.
  • 1835: Toledo War fought between Ohio and Michigan Territory over the city of Toledo and the Toledo Strip.
  • February 3, 1836: United States Whig Party held its first convention in Albany, New York.
  • February 23, 1836: Siege of the Alamo began in San Antonio, Texas.
  • July 11, 1836: President Andrew Jackson issued the Specie Circular, beginning the failure of the land speculation economy that would lead to the Panic of 1837.
  • July 13, 1836: United States patent #1 was granted after filing 9,957 unnumbered patents.
  • November 3 – December 7, 1836: 1836 presidential election: Martin Van Buren defeated William Henry Harrison, but Virginia's electors refused to vote for Van Buren's running mate, Richard Mentor Johnson, thereby denying victory to any vice presidential candidate.
  • December 4, 1836: Whig Party held its first national convention, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
  • December 15, 1836: 1836 U.S. Patent Office fire
  • February 8, 1837: Richard Mentor Johnson defeated Francis Granger to win the (first and to date only) contingent election for Vice President of the United States.[5][6]

Major legislation[]

Treaties[]

  • December 29, 1835: Treaty of New Echota signed, ceding all the lands of the Cherokee east of the Mississippi to the United States

States admitted and territories formed[]

  • June 15, 1836: Arkansas admitted as the 25th state 5 Stat. 50
  • July 3, 1836: Wisconsin Territory established; approved April 20, 1836 5 Stat. 10
  • January 26, 1837: Michigan admitted as the 26th state 5 Stat. 144; contingently approved June 15, 1836 5 Stat. 49

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[]

During this congress two Senate seats were added for each of the new states of Arkansas and Michigan.[7][8]

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
National
Republican

(NR)
Jacksonian
(J)
Nullifier
(N)
End of previous congress 26 20 2 48 0
Begin 24 21 2 47 1
End 19 31 520
Final voting share 36.5% 59.6% 3.8%
Beginning of next congress 19[a] 33[b] 0 52 0

House of Representatives[]

During this congress one House seat was added for each of the new states of Arkansas and Michigan.[7][8]

Party
(shading shows control)
Total Vacant
National
Republican

(NR)
Anti-
Masonic

(AM)
Jacksonian
(J)
Nullifier
(N)
States'
Rights

(SR)
End of previous congress 64 26 141 8 0 239 1
Begin 75 16 140 7 0 238 2
End 79 15 139 1 2411
Final voting share 32.8% 6.2% 57.7% 2.9% 0.4%
Beginning of next congress 100[c] 7 121[d] 6 0 234 0

Leadership[]

Senate leadership
Martin Van Buren
Senate President
Martin Van Buren
William R. King
President pro tempore
William R. King

Senate[]

  • President: Martin Van Buren (J)
  • President pro tempore: William R. King (J)

House of Representatives[]

  • Speaker: James K. Polk (J)

Members[]

This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed by class, and representatives are listed 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 began in the last Congress, requiring re-election in 1838; Class 2 meant their term began with this Congress, requiring re-election in 1840; and Class 3 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring re-election in 1836.

House of Representatives[]

The names of members of the House of Representatives are preceded by their district numbers.

Changes in membership[]

The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.

Senate[]

  • Replacements: 11
    • National Republicans: 5-seat net loss
    • Jacksonians: 10-seat net gain
  • Deaths: 3
  • Resignations: 8
  • Interim appointments: 0
  • Seats of newly admitted states: 4
  • Total seats with changes: 16
State
(class)
Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[e]
Louisiana
(2)
Vacant Senator-elect Charles E.A. Gayarre had resigned on account of ill-health.
Successor was elected January 13, 1836.
Robert C. Nicholas (J) January 13, 1836
Connecticut
(1)
Nathan Smith (NR) Died December 6, 1835
Successor was elected December 21, 1835.
John M. Niles (J) December 21, 1835.
Illinois
(3)
Elias Kane (J) Died December 12, 1835
Successor was appointed December 30, 1835.
William Lee D. Ewing (J) December 30, 1835
Virginia
(1)
John Tyler (NR) Resigned February 29, 1836
Successor was elected March 4, 1836.
William C. Rives (J) March 4, 1836
Maine
(1)
Ether Shepley (J) Resigned March 3, 1836
Successor was appointed December 7, 1836.
Judah Dana (J) December 7, 1836
New Hampshire
(3)
Isaac Hill (J) Resigned May 30, 1836, to become Governor of New Hampshire.
Successor was elected June 8, 1836.
John Page (J) June 8, 1836
Delaware
(1)
Arnold Naudain (NR) Resigned June 16, 1836
Successor was elected June 17, 1836.
Richard H. Bayard (NR) June 17, 1836
Virginia
(2)
Benjamin W. Leigh (NR) Resigned July 4, 1836
Successor was elected December 12, 1836.
Richard E. Parker (J) December 12, 1836
Arkansas
(2)
New seats Arkansas was admitted to the Union.
Its new Senators were elected September 18, 1836.
William S. Fulton (J) September 18, 1836.
Arkansas
(3)
Ambrose H. Sevier (J) September 18, 1836.
Maryland
(3)
Robert H. Goldsborough (NR) Died October 5, 1836
Successor was elected December 31, 1836.
John S. Spence (NR) December 31, 1836
North Carolina
(3)
Willie P. Mangum (NR) Resigned November 26, 1836
Successor was elected December 5, 1836.
Robert Strange (J) December 5, 1836
Delaware
(2)
John M. Clayton (NR) Resigned December 29, 1836
Successor was elected January 9, 1837.
Thomas Clayton (NR) January 9, 1837
Louisiana
(3)
Alexander Porter (NR) Resigned January 5, 1837, due to ill health.
Successor was elected January 12, 1837.
Alexandre Mouton (J) January 12, 1837
Michigan
(1)
New seats Michigan was admitted to the Union.
Its new Senators were elected January 6, 1837.
Lucius Lyon (J) January 26, 1837.
Michigan
(2)
John Norvell (J) January 26, 1837.

House of Representatives[]

  • Replacements: 18
    • National Republicans: 5-seat net gain
    • Anti-Masonics: 1-seat net loss
    • Jacksonians: 2-seat net loss
    • Nullifiers: No net change
  • Deaths: 5
  • Resignations: 13
  • Contested election: 0
  • Seats of newly admitted states: 2
  • Total seats with changes: 24
District Vacated by Reason for change Successor Date of successor's
formal installation[e]
South Carolina 6 Vacant Rep. Warren R. Davis died during previous congress Waddy Thompson Jr. (NR) Seated September 10, 1835
Georgia at-large Vacant Rep. James M. Wayne resigned in previous congress Jabez Y. Jackson (J) Seated October 5, 1835
Georgia at-large William Schley (J) Resigned July 1, 1835 when nominated for Governor of Georgia. Jesse F. Cleveland (J) Seated October 5, 1835
Georgia at-large James C. Terrell (J) Resigned July 8, 1835, due to ill health Hopkins Holsey (J) Seated October 5, 1835
Georgia at-large John W. A. Sanford (J) Resigned July 25, 1835, to assist in the Cherokee Indian removal Thomas Glascock (J) Seated October 5, 1835
New York 3 Campbell P. White (J) Resigned October 2, 1835 Gideon Lee (J) Seated November 4, 1835
Connecticut at-large Zalmon Wildman (J) Died December 10, 1835 Thomas T. Whittlesey (J) Seated April 29, 1836
South Carolina 4 James H. Hammond (N) Resigned February 26, 1836, because of ill health Franklin H. Elmore (N) Seated December 10, 1836
New York 17 Samuel Beardsley (J) Resigned March 29, 1836 Rutger B. Miller (J) Seated November 9, 1836
North Carolina 12 James Graham (NR) Seat declared vacant March 29, 1836 James Graham (NR) Seated December 5, 1836
Pennsylvania 24 John Banks (AM) Resigned March 31, 1836 John J. Pearson (NR) Seated December 5, 1836
South Carolina 8 Richard I. Manning (J) Died May 1, 1836 John P. Richardson (J) Seated December 19, 1836
Arkansas Territory at-large Ambrose H. Sevier (J) Seat was eliminated when Arkansas achieved statehood June 15, 1836
Connecticut at-large Andrew T. Judson (J) Resigned July 4, 1836 to become judge of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut. Orrin Holt (J) Seated December 5, 1836
Mississippi at-large David Dickson (NR) Died July 31, 1836 Samuel J. Gholson (J) Seated December 1, 1836
Arkansas at-large Vacant Arkansas was admitted to the Union on June 15, 1836 Archibald Yell (J) Seated August 1, 1836
Georgia at-large George W. Towns (J) Resigned September 1, 1836 Julius C. Alford (NR) Seated January 2, 1837
New York 30 Philo C. Fuller (NR) Resigned September 2, 1836 John Young (NR) Seated November 9, 1836
Georgia at-large John E. Coffee (J) Died September 25, 1836 William C. Dawson (NR) Seated November 7, 1836
Pennsylvania 13 Jesse Miller (J) Resigned October 30, 1836 James Black (J) Seated December 5, 1836
New Jersey at-large Philemon Dickerson (J) Resigned November 3, 1836 to become Governor of New Jersey. William Chetwood (NR) Seated December 5, 1836
Indiana 6 George L. Kinnard (J) Died November 26, 1836 William Herod (NR) Seated January 25, 1837
Virginia 2 John Y. Mason (J) Resigned January 11, 1837 Vacant Not filled this congress
Michigan Territory at-large George Wallace Jones (J) Seat was eliminated when Michigan achieved statehood January 26, 1837
Michigan at-large Vacant Michigan was admitted to the Union on January 26, 1837 Isaac E. Crary (J) Seated January 26, 1837
Wisconsin Territory at-large Vacant Wisconsin Territory was organized on April 3, 1836 George Wallace Jones (J) Seated January 26, 1837

Committees[]

Lists of committees and their party leaders.

Senate[]

  • Agriculture (Chairman: Bedford Brown then John Page)
  • Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate (Chairman: Samuel McKean)
  • Claims (Chairman: Arnold Naudain then Henry Hubbard)
  • Commerce (Chairman: Robert Henry Goldsborough then John Davis)
  • (Select)
  • (Select)
  • District of Columbia (Chairman: John Tyler then Joseph Kent)
  • Engrossed Bills (Chairman: Ether Shepley then Thomas Morris)
  • Finance (Chairman: Daniel Webster then Silas Wright)
  • Foreign Relations (Chairman: Henry Clay then James Buchanan)
  • (Select)
  • Indian Affairs (Chairman: Hugh Lawson White then Ambrose Sevier)
  • Judiciary (Chairman: John M. Clayton then Felix Grundy)
  • (Select)
  • Manufactures (Chairman: Nehemiah Knight)
  • (Select)
  • Military Affairs (Chairman: Thomas Hart Benton)
  • Militia (Chairman: John M. Robinson)
  • Naval Affairs (Chairman: Samuel Southard then William C. Rives)
  • Ohio-Michigan Boundary (Select)
  • Patent Office (Select)
  • Pensions (Chairman: Gideon Tomlinson)
  • Post Office and Post Roads (Chairman: Felix Grundy)
  • Private Land Claims (Chairman: John Black then Lewis Linn)
  • Public Lands (Chairman: Thomas Ewing then Robert J. Walker)
  • (Select) (Chairman: N/A)
  • Revolutionary Claims (Chairman: Gabriel Moore then Bedford Brown)
  • (Chairman: William Hendricks)
  • (Select)
  • Tariff Regulation (Select)
  • Whole

House of Representatives[]

  • Accounts (Chairman: N/A)
  • Agriculture (Chairman: Abraham Bockee)
  • (Select)
  • (Select)
  • Claims (Chairman: N/A)
  • Commerce (Chairman: N/A)
  • District of Columbia (Chairman: N/A)
  • Elections (Chairman: N/A)
  • Expenditures in the Navy Department (Chairman: N/A)
  • Expenditures in the Post Office Department (Chairman: N/A)
  • Expenditures in the State Department (Chairman: N/A)
  • Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Chairman: N/A)
  • Expenditures in the War Department (Chairman: N/A)
  • Expenditures on Public Buildings (Chairman: N/A)
  • Foreign Affairs (Chairman: Benjamin C. Howard)
  • Indian Affairs (Chairman: N/A)
  • Invalid Pensions (Chairman: N/A)
  • Judiciary (Chairman: Samuel Beardsley then Francis Thomas)
  • Manufactures (Chairman: N/A)
  • Military Affairs (Chairman: N/A)
  • Militia (Chairman: N/A)
  • Naval Affairs (Chairman: N/A)
  • Post Office and Post Roads (Chairman: N/A)
  • Public Expenditures (Chairman: N/A)
  • Public Lands (Chairman: Ratliff Boon)
  • Revisal and Unfinished Business (Chairman: N/A)
  • Revolutionary Claims (Chairman: N/A)
  • Roads and Canals (Chairman: N/A)
  • Rules (Select)
  • Standards of Official Conduct
  • Territories (Chairman: N/A)
  • Ways and Means (Chairman: Churchill C. Cambreleng)
  • Whole

Joint committees[]

  • Enrolled Bills
  • The Library

Employees[]

  • Librarian of Congress: John Silva Meehan

Senate[]

  • Chaplain: Frederick Winslow Hatch (Episcopalian), until December 23, 1835
    • Edward Y. Higbee (Episcopalian), elected December 23, 1835
    • John R. Goodman (Episcopalian), elected December 28, 1836
  • Secretary: Walter Lowrie until December 11, 1836
    • Asbury Dickins, elected December 12, 1836
  • Sergeant at Arms:

House of Representatives[]

  • Chaplain: Edward Dunlap Smith (Presbyterian), until December 7, 1835
    • Thomas H. Stockton (Methodist), elected December 7, 1835
    • Oliver C. Comstock (Baptist), elected December 5, 1836
  • Clerk: Walter S. Franklin
  • Doorkeeper:
  • Sergeant at Arms: Thomas B. Randolph, until December 15, 1835
    • , elected December 15, 1835
  • Reading Clerks:[data unknown/missing]
  • Postmaster:

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ as Whigs
  2. ^ as Democrats
  3. ^ as Whigs
  4. ^ as Democrats
  5. ^ a b When seated or oath administered, not necessarily when service began.

References[]

  1. ^ Andrew Jackson's Presidency by Christine Zuchora-Walske pg. 78
  2. ^ a b Andrew Jackson Versus France American Policy toward France, 1834-36 by Robert Charles Thomas - Tennessee Historical Quarterly - Vol. 35, No. 1 (SPRING 1976), pp. 51-64
  3. ^ America and French Romanticism During the July Monarchy by Seymour Drescher - American Quarterly Vol. 11, No. 1 (Spring, 1959), pp. 3-20 (18 pages)
  4. ^ The Foreign Policy of Andrew Jackson. By John M. Belohlavek. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1985) Journal of American History, Volume 73, Issue 3, December 1986, Page 749
  5. ^ "Cong. Globe, 24th Cong., 2nd Sess. 166 (1837)". A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774–1875. Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. Retrieved August 10, 2019.
  6. ^ "The Senate Elects a Vice President". Washington, D.C.: Office of the Secretary of the Senate. Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  7. ^ a b Stat. 50
  8. ^ a b Stat. 144
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""