1952 United States House of Representatives elections#Wisconsin

{{short description|House elections for the 83rd U.S. Congress}}

{{use mdy dates|date=December 2024}}

{{Infobox election

| election_name = 1952 United States House of Representatives elections

| country = United States

| flag_year = 1912

| type = legislative

| ongoing = no

| previous_election = 1950 United States House of Representatives elections

| previous_year = 1950

| next_election = 1954 United States House of Representatives elections

| next_year = 1954

| seats_for_election = All 435 seats in the United States House of Representatives

| majority_seats = 218

| election_date = November 4, 1952{{Efn|September 8, 1952, in Maine}}

| image_size = x180px

| image1 = Forward to forty cry Republicans(cropped).jpg

| leader1 = Joseph Martin

| leader_since1 = January 3, 1939

| party1 = Republican Party (US)

| leaders_seat1 = {{ushr|MA|14|T}}

| last_election1 = 199 seats

| seats1 = 221

| seat_change1 = {{increase}} 22

| popular_vote1 = 28,393,794

| percentage1 = 49.3%

| swing1 = {{increase}} 0.4{{percentage points}}

| image2 = Sam Rayburn.jpg

| leader2 = Sam Rayburn

| leader_since2 = September 16, 1940

| party2 = Democratic Party (US)

| leaders_seat2 = {{ushr|TX|4|T}}

| last_election2 = 235 seats

| seats2 = 213

| seat_change2 = {{decrease}} 22

| popular_vote2 = 28,642,537

| percentage2 = 49.8%

| swing2 = {{increase}} 0.2{{percentage points}}

| party4 = Independent (US)

| last_election4 = 1 seat

| seats4 = 1

| seat_change4 = {{steady}}

| popular_vote4 = 111,780

| percentage4 = 0.2%

| swing4 = {{decrease}} 0.1{{percentage points}}

| map_image = 1952 United States House elections.svg

| map_size = 320px

| map_caption = Results:
{{legend0|#92C5DE|Democratic hold}} {{legend0|#0671B0|Democratic gain}}
{{legend0|#F48882|Republican hold}} {{legend0|#CA0120|Republican gain}}
{{legend0|#999999|Independent hold}}

| title = Speaker

| before_election = Sam Rayburn

| before_party = Democratic Party (US)

| after_election = Joseph Martin

| after_party = Republican Party (US)

}}

The 1952 United States House of Representatives elections was an election for the United States House of Representatives to elect members to serve in the 83rd United States Congress. They were held for the most part on November 4, 1952, while Maine held theirs on September 8. This was the first election after the congressional reapportionment based on the 1950 census. It also coincided with the election of President Dwight Eisenhower. Eisenhower's Republican Party gained 22 seats from the Democratic Party, gaining a majority of the House. However, the Democrats had almost 250,000 more votes (0.4%) thanks to overwhelming margins in the Solid South, although this election did see the first Republican elected to the House from North Carolina since 1928,{{Cite book |last=Fleer |first=Jack D. |title=North Carolina Politics: An Introduction |publisher=University of North Carolina Press |year=1968 |isbn=0807810673 |pages=142}} and the first Republicans elected from Virginia since 1930.{{Cite book |last=Atkinson |first=Frank B. |title=The Dynamic Dominion: Realignment and the Rise of Two-Party Competition in Virginia, 1945-1980 |publisher=George Mason University Press |date=September 1993 |isbn=0913696390 |pages=60–61}} It was also the last election until 2024 in which both major parties increased their share of the popular vote simultaneously, largely due to the disintegration of the American Labor Party and other third parties.

Outgoing President Harry Truman's dismal approval rating was one reason why his party lost its House majority. Also, continued uneasiness about the Korean War was an important factor. Joseph Martin (R-Massachusetts) became Speaker of the House, exchanging places with Sam Rayburn (D-Texas), who became the new Minority Leader.

This was the last time Republicans won control of the House of Representatives until 1994, despite the GOP controlling the presidency for the majority of the next four decades, Democrats outperformed in down-ballot elections, especially in the South, which had started to drift towards Republican presidential candidates. As of {{CURRENTYEAR}}, this is the last time the House changed partisan control during a presidential election, and the last time both houses did so simultaneously. This marked one of only two times in the 20th century in which the Republicans won a House majority without winning the popular vote, with the other time being in 1996;{{cite news|url=https://cookpolitical.com/analysis/house/house-overview/2020-house-overview-can-democrats-keep-their-majority|title=2020 House Overview: Can Democrats Keep Their Majority?|publisher=The Cook Political Report|last=Wasserman|first=David|date=March 1, 2019|accessdate=September 18, 2021}} it was also one of four times where either party did so in the 20th century, with the other three instances occurring in 1914, 1942, and 1996.{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/03/opinion/sunday/the-great-gerrymander-of-2012.html |title=The Great Gerrymander of 2012 |work=The New York Times |first=Sam |last=Wang |date=February 2, 2013 |access-date=May 29, 2013}}{{cite web |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/wp/2012/11/12/in-1996-house-democrats-also-won-the-popular-vote-but-remained-in-the-minority |title=In 1996, House Democrats also won the popular vote but remained in the minority (kind of) |work=Washingtonpost.com |date=November 12, 2012 |access-date=December 3, 2012}}

Overall results

style="width:70%; text-align:center;"

|+ ↓

style="color:white;"

| style="background:red; width:50.80%;" | 221

| style="background:gray; width:0.23%;" | 1

| style="background:blue; width:48.97%;" | 213

Republican

| I

| Democratic

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! colspan=2 | Party

! Total
seats

! Seat
change

! Seat
percentage

! Vote
percentage

! Popular
vote

{{Party color cell|Democratic Party (US)}}

| Democratic Party

| align=right | 213

| align=right | {{decrease}} 22

| align=right | 49.0%

| align=right {{party shading/Democratic}} | 49.8%

| align=right {{party shading/Democratic}} | 28,642,537

{{Party color cell|Republican Party (US)}}

| Republican Party

| align=right {{party shading/Republican}} | 221

| align=right {{party shading/Republican}} | {{increase}} 22

| align=right {{party shading/Republican}} | 50.8%

| align=right | 49.3%

| align=right | 28,393,794

{{Party color cell|Progressive Party (US)}}

| Progressive Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | 0.3%

| align=right | 145,171

{{Party color cell|Liberal Party (New York)}}

| Liberal Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | 0.2%

| align=right | 113,631

{{Party color cell|Independent (US)}}

| Independents

| align=right | 1

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.2%

| align=right | 0.2%

| align=right | 111,780

{{Party color cell|American Labor Party}}

| American Labor Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | 0.2%

| align=right | 95,597

{{Party color cell|Prohibition Party}}

| Prohibition Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | 0.1%

| align=right | 38,664

{{Party color cell|People's Choice Party}}

| People's Choice Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 8,853

{{Party color cell|Socialist Party (US)}}

| Socialist Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 4,892

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Increase Jobless Pay Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 3,432

{{Party color cell|Communist Party (US)}}

| People's Rights Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 2,434

{{Party color cell|Socialist Workers Party (US)}}

| Socialist Workers Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 1,750

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Square Deal Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 548

{{Party color cell|Other}}

| Independent Citizens Committee

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 247

{{Party color cell|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}

| Socialist Labor Party

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 177

{{Party color cell|None}}

| Others

| align=right | 0

| align=right | {{steady}}

| align=right | 0.0%

| align=right | <0.1%

| align=right | 7,233

colspan=2 | Totals

! align=right | 435

! align=right | {{steady}}

! align=right | 100.0%

! align=right | 100.0%

| align=right | 57,570,740

align="left" colspan=9|Source: [http://history.house.gov/Institution/Election-Statistics/Election-Statistics/ Election Statistics - Office of the Clerk]

{{bar box

|title=Popular vote

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=600px

|barwidth=410px

|bars=

{{bar percent|Democratic|{{party color|Democratic Party (US)}}|49.75}}

{{bar percent|Republican|{{party color|Republican Party (US)}}|49.32}}

{{bar percent|Others|#777777|0.93}}

}}

{{bar box

|title=House seats

|titlebar=#ddd

|width=600px

|barwidth=410px

|bars=

{{bar percent|Republican|{{party color|Republican Party (US)}}|50.80}}

{{bar percent|Democratic|{{party color|Democratic Party (US)}}|48.97}}

{{bar percent|Others|#777777|0.23}}

}}

File:1952 United States House elections voteshare.svg

valign=top

|

[[Image:83 us house membership.png|thumb|400px|

{| align=center

! colspan=2 align=center | House seats by party holding majority in state

{{legend|#f00|up to 100% Republican}}

| {{legend|#00f|up to 100% Democratic}}

{{legend|#f66|up to 80% Republican}}

| {{legend|#09f|up to 80% Democratic}}

{{legend|#f99|up to 60% Republican}}

| {{legend|#0ff|up to 60% Democratic}}

]]

|

[[Image:83 us house changes.png|thumb|400px|

align=center

! colspan=2 align=center | Change in seats

{{legend|#f00|6+ Republican gain}}

| {{legend|#00f|6+ Democratic gain}}

{{legend|#f66|3-5 Republican gain}}

| {{legend|#09f|3-5 Democratic gain}}

{{legend|#f99|1-2 Republican gain}}

| {{legend|#0ff|1-2 Democratic gain}}

colspan=2 align=center | {{legend|#ccc|no net change}}
]]

|}

Special elections

{{See also|List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives}}

Four special elections were held to finish terms in the 82nd United States Congress, which would end January 3, 1953.

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Representative

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|New York|5|X}}

| T. Vincent Quinn

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent resigned December 30, 1951.
New member elected February 19, 1952.
Republican gain.
Winner lost re-election in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert T. Ross (Republican) 53.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Hugh Quinn (Democratic) 35.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}George F. Cranmore (Liberal) 8.1%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Thelma Bearman (American Labor) 3.7%

}}

{{ushr|New York|32|X}}

| William T. Byrne

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent died January 27, 1952.
New member elected April 1, 1952.
Democratic hold.
Winner won re-election in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leo W. O'Brien (Democratic) 70.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John F. Former Jr. (Republican) 28.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Scott K. Gray Jr. (American Labor) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|2|X}}

| John A. Whitaker

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948 Kentucky's 2nd congressional district special election

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent died December 15, 1951.
New member elected August 2, 1952.
Democratic hold.
Winner won re-election in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Garrett Withers (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|7|X}}

| Tom Pickett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| {{party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned June 30, 1952.
New member elected September 23, 1952.
Democratic hold.
Winner won re-election in November.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Dowdy (Democratic) 88.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jack Weisner (Democratic) 7.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jim Norton (Democratic) 4.5%

}}

Alabama

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Alabama}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Alabama|1|X}}

| Frank W. Boykin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1935 Alabama's 1st congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank W. Boykin (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|2|X}}

| George M. Grant

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George M. Grant (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|3|X}}

| George W. Andrews

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George W. Andrews (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|4|X}}

| Kenneth A. Roberts

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kenneth A. Roberts (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|5|X}}

| Albert Rains

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert Rains (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|6|X}}

| Edward deGraffenried

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|7|X}}

| Carl Elliott

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Elliott (Democratic) 72.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Cyrus Kitchens (Republican) 27.5%

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|8|X}}

| Robert E. Jones Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947 Alabama's 8th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Alabama|9|X}}

| Laurie C. Battle

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Laurie C. Battle (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Arizona

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Arizona}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Arizona|1|X}}

| John R. Murdock

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Arizona|2|X}}

| Harold Patten

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold Patten (Democratic) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William C. Frey (Republican) 43.1%

}}

Arkansas

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Arkansas}}

Arkansas lost one seat in reapportionment leaving it with 6; the existing 4th district along the western edge of the state lost some of its territory to the 3rd district in the northwest, and the rest was merged with the 7th district in the south, with minor changes to other districts.

{{cite book

| first = Kenneth C.

| last = Martis

| year = 1982

| title = The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts, 1789–1983

| publisher = The Free Press

| isbn = 0-02-920150-0

}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Arkansas|1|X}}

| Ezekiel C. Gathings

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|2|X}}

| Wilbur Mills

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wilbur Mills (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|3|X}}

| James William Trimble

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James William Trimble (Democratic) 56.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jack Joyce (Republican) 44.0%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Arkansas|4|X}}

| Boyd Anderson Tackett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Arkansas.
Democratic loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Oren Harris (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Oren Harris
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Arkansas|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|Arkansas|5|X}}

| Brooks Hays

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Brooks Hays (Democratic) 78.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Alonzo A. Ross (Republican) 19.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Ed Schultz (Independent) 1.8%

}}

{{ushr|Arkansas|6|X}}

| William F. Norrell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William F. Norrell (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

California

{{See also|List of United States representatives from California}}

Seven new seats were added in reapportionment, increasing the delegation from 23 to 30 seats. Two of the new seats were won by Democrats, and five by Republicans. One Republican and one Democratic incumbents lost re-election, and a retiring Democrat was replaced by a Republican. Overall, therefore, Democrats gained one seat and Republicans gained 7.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|California|1|X}}

| Hubert B. Scudder

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hubert B. Scudder (Republican) 86.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Carl Sullivan (Ind. Progressive) 13.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|2|X}}

| Clair Engle

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1943 California's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clair Engle (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John E. Moss (Democratic) 50.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Leslie E. Wood (Republican) 47.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Helen C. Thomsen (Ind. Progressive) 1.4%

}}

{{ushr|California|4|X}}

| Franck R. Havenner

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936/1944

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|5|X}}

| John F. Shelley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1949 California's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John F. Shelley (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|6|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|7|X}}

| John J. Allen Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. Allen Jr. (Republican) 84.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}John Allen Johnson (Ind. Progressive) 15.7%

}}

{{ushr|California|8|X}}

| George P. Miller
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George P. Miller (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|9|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Arthur Younger (Republican) 53.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harold F. Taggart (Democratic) 45.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Charles S. Brown (Ind. Progressive) 1.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|10|X}}

| Jack Z. Anderson
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles Gubser (Republican) 59.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Arthur L. Johnson (Democratic) 39.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Betsey K. Fisher (Ind. Progressive) 1.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|11|X}}

| J. Leroy Johnson
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|12|X}}

| Allan O. Hunter
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|9|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Allan O. Hunter (Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|13|X}}

| Ernest K. Bramblett
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|11|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ernest K. Bramblett (Republican) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Will Hays (Democratic) 49.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|14|X}}

| Thomas H. Werdel
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|10|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harlan Hagen (Democratic) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Thomas H. Werdel (Republican) 49.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|15|X}}

| Gordon L. McDonough

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|16|X}}

| Donald L. Jackson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|17|X}}

| Cecil R. King

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Cecil R. King (Democratic) 54.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert H. Finch (Republican) 44.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Loyd C. Seeliger (Ind. Progressive) 1.3%

}}

{{ushr|California|18|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Craig Hosmer (Republican) 55.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph M. Kennick (Democratic) 44.5%

}}

{{ushr|California|19|X}}

| Chet Holifield

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Chet Holifield (Democratic) 87.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Ida Alvarez (Ind. Progressive) 9.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Milton Snipper (Independent) 3.4%

}}

{{ushr|California|20|X}}

| John Carl Hinshaw

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Carl Hinshaw (Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|21|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|22|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph F. Holt (Republican) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Dean McHenry (Democratic) 39.5%

}}

{{ushr|California|23|X}}

| Clyde Doyle
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|18|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clyde Doyle (Democratic) 87.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Olive T. Thompson (Ind. Progressive) 11.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in}}C. Cleveland (Write-in) 1.5%

}}

{{ushr|California|24|X}}

| Norris Poulson
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|13|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1932/1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Norris Poulson (Republican) 87.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Bertram L. Sharp (Ind. Progressive) 12.6%

}}

{{ushr|California|25|X}}

| Patrick J. Hillings
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|12|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|26|X}}

| Sam Yorty
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|14|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sam Yorty (Democratic) 88.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Horace V. Alexander (Ind. Progressive) 12.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|27|X}}

| Harry R. Sheppard
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|21|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|California|28|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James B. Utt (Republican) 63.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Lionel Van Deerlin (Democratic) 37.0%

}}

{{ushr|California|29|X}}

| John Phillips
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|22|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Phillips (Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|California|30|X}}

| Clinton D. McKinnon
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|California|23|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bob Wilson (Republican) 59.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}De Graff Austin (Democratic) 40.4%

}}

Colorado

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Colorado}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Colorado|1|X}}

| Byron G. Rogers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Byron G. Rogers (Democratic) 50.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Mason K. Knuckles (Republican) 48.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Party (US)}}Carle Whitehead (Socialist) 0.7%

}}

{{ushr|Colorado|2|X}}

| William S. Hill

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Colorado|3|X}}

| John Chenoweth

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Chenoweth (Republican) 57.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John H. Marsalis (Democratic) 42.3%

}}

{{ushr|Colorado|4|X}}

| Wayne N. Aspinall

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Connecticut

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Connecticut}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Connecticut|1|X}}

| Abraham Ribicoff

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas J. Dodd (Democratic) 54.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John Ashmead (Republican) 46.0%

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|2|X}}

| Horace Seely-Brown Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|3|X}}

| John A. McGuire

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|4|X}}

| Albert P. Morano

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert P. Morano (Republican) 60.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph P. Lyford (Democratic) 39.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Party (US)}}Stanley Mayhew (Socialist) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|5|X}}

| James T. Patterson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Connecticut|AL|X}}

| Antoni Sadlak

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Antoni Sadlak (Republican) 55.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Stanley J. Pribyson (Democratic) 44.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Socialist Party (US)}}Annie B. Waterman (Socialist) 0.3%

}}

Delaware

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Delaware}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Delaware|AL|X}}

| J. Caleb Boggs

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Delaware.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Florida

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Florida}}

Florida was redistricted from 6 districts to 8, splitting the area around Sarasota out from the Tampa-St. Petersburg based 1st district, and splitting Gainesville out from the Jacksonville-based 2nd district.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Florida|1|X}}

| Chester B. McMullen

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Florida|2|X}}

| Charles E. Bennett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles E. Bennett (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|3|X}}

| Bob Sikes

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940
1944 {{Small|(resigned)}}
1974

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bob Sikes (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|4|X}}

| Bill Lantaff

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bill Lantaff (Democratic) 66.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Dorothea Vermorel (Republican) 34.0%

}}

{{ushr|Florida|5|X}}

| Syd Herlong

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Syd Herlong (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Florida|6|X}}

| Dwight L. Rogers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Florida|7|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James A. Haley (Democratic) 56.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Kent S. McKinley (Republican) 43.7%

}}

{{ushr|Florida|8|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Georgia

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Georgia}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Georgia|1|X}}

| Prince Hulon Preston Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|2|X}}

| Edward E. Cox

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1924

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward E. Cox (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|3|X}}

| Tic Forrester

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tic Forrester (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|4|X}}

| Albert Sidney Camp

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1939

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|5|X}}

| James C. Davis

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James C. Davis (Democratic) 100.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in Party (US)}}Baxter Jones (Write-in) 0.02%

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|6|X}}

| Carl Vinson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1914

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Vinson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|7|X}}

| Henderson Lovelace Lanham

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|8|X}}

| William M. Wheeler

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William M. Wheeler (Democratic) 99.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Write-in Party (US)}}J. M. Kent (Write-in) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|9|X}}

| John Stephens Wood

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Phillip M. Landrum (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Georgia|10|X}}

| Paul Brown

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1933

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul Brown (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Idaho

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Idaho}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Idaho|1|X}}

| John Travers Wood

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gracie Pfost (Democratic) 50.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John Travers Wood (Republican) 49.7%

}}

{{ushr|Idaho|2|X}}

| Hamer H. Budge

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hamer H. Budge (Republican) 66.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}W. H. Jensen (Democratic) 33.8%

}}

Illinois

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Illinois}}

Illinois lost one seat, redistricting from 26 to 25 districts. No changes were made to the Chicago area districts, but the downstate districts were broadly reorganized, forcing incumbents Peter F. Mack Jr. (Democratic) and Edward H. Jenison (Republican) into the same district.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Illinois|1|X}}

| William L. Dawson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William L. Dawson (Democratic) 73.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edgar G. Brown (Republican) 26.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|2|X}}

| Richard B. Vail

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Barratt O'Hara (Democratic) 51.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Richard B. Vail (Republican) 48.6%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|3|X}}

| Fred E. Busbey

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Fred E. Busbey (Republican) 54.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Neil J. Linehan (Democratic) 45.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|4|X}}

| William E. McVey

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|5|X}}

| John C. Kluczynski

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|6|X}}

| Thomas J. O'Brien

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas J. O'Brien (Democratic) 63.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John L. Roach (Republican) 36.9%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|7|X}}

| Adolph J. Sabath

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1906

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Adolph J. Sabath (Democratic) 70.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Louis F. Capuzi (Republican) 30.0%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|8|X}}

| Thomas S. Gordon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|9|X}}

| Sidney R. Yates

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|10|X}}

| Richard W. Hoffman

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|11|X}}

| Timothy P. Sheehan

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|12|X}}

| Edgar A. Jonas

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|13|X}}

| Marguerite S. Church

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|14|X}}

| Chauncey W. Reed

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|15|X}}

| Noah M. Mason

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Noah M. Mason (Republican) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Stanley Hubbs (Democratic) 36.4%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|16|X}}

| Leo E. Allen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leo E. Allen (Republican) 66.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John P. Barton (Democratic) 33.5%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|17|X}}

| Leslie C. Arends

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|18|X}}

| Harold H. Velde

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|19|X}}

| Robert B. Chiperfield

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|20|X}}

| Sid Simpson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sid Simpson (Republican) 61.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John R. Roy (Democratic) 38.2%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Illinois|21|X}}

| Peter F. Mack Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

Edward H. Jenison
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Illinois|23|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican loss.

{{ushr|Illinois|22|X}}

| William L. Springer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|23|X}}

| Charles W. Vursell
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Illinois|24|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|24|X}}

| Melvin Price
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Illinois|25|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Melvin Price (Democratic) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Phyllis Schlafly (Republican) 35.2%

}}

{{ushr|Illinois|25|X}}

| C. W. Bishop
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Illinois|26|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} C. W. Bishop (Republican) 56.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}C. Edwin Hair (Democratic) 43.8%

}}

Indiana

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Indiana}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Indiana|1|X}}

| Ray Madden

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ray Madden (Democratic) 56.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Elliott Belshaw (Republican) 43.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}John P. Jones (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|2|X}}

| Charles A. Halleck

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1935

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles A. Halleck (Republican) 63.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}L. Dewey Burham (Democratic) 36.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ross J. McLennan (Prohibition) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|3|X}}

| Shepard Crumpacker

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Shepard Crumpacker (Republican) 54.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Charles C. Price (Democratic) 44.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Everett Mishler (Prohibition) 0.7%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|4|X}}

| E. Ross Adair

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} E. Ross Adair (Republican) 63.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Howard L. Morrison (Democratic) 35.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Claude Swartz (Prohibition) 0.9%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|5|X}}

| John V. Beamer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John V. Beamer (Republican) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Philip Chase Dermond (Democratic) 42.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ralph G. Stallsmith (Prohibition) 0.9%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|6|X}}

| Cecil M. Harden

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Cecil M. Harden (Republican) 55.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jack H. Mankin (Democratic) 44.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Woodrow Shields (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|7|X}}

| William G. Bray

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William G. Bray (Republican) 56.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas J. Courtney (Democratic) 43.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Maurice G. Murphy (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|8|X}}

| Winfield K. Denton

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} D. Bailey Merrill (Republican) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Winfield K. Denton (Democratic) 47.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Raymond Morris (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|9|X}}

| Earl Wilson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Earl Wilson (Republican) 56.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edward Lewis (Democratic) 43.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Elmer D. Riggs (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|10|X}}

| Ralph Harvey

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ralph Harvey (Republican) 59.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Fred V. Culp (Democratic) 39.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Lela Stubbefield (Prohibition) 1.0%

}}

{{ushr|Indiana|11|X}}

| Charles B. Brownson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles B. Brownson (Republican) 59.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John C. Carvey (Democratic) 40.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Vernon Dunkel (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

Iowa

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Iowa}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Iowa|1|X}}

| Thomas E. Martin

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas E. Martin (Republican) 62.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Clair A. Williams (Democratic) 36.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}F. A. Oliver (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|2|X}}

| Henry O. Talle

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Henry O. Talle (Republican) 62.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}T. W. Mullaney (Democratic) 37.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Roy Corliss (Democratic) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|3|X}}

| H. R. Gross

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} H. R. Gross (Republican) 65.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}George R. Laub (Democratic) 34.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Paul Kindschi (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|4|X}}

| Karl M. LeCompte

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Karl M. LeCompte (Republican) 61.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Earl E. Glassburner (Democratic) 37.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Benson B. Compton (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|5|X}}

| Paul Cunningham

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul Cunningham (Republican) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Alvin P. Meyer (Democratic) 41.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Richard DeCamp (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|6|X}}

| James I. Dolliver

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James I. Dolliver (Republican) 68.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Francis G. Cutler (Democratic) 31.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Roy C. Nelson (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|7|X}}

| Ben F. Jensen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ben F. Jensen (Republican) 67.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas J. Keleher (Democratic) 32.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ralph Young (Prohibition) 0.08%

}}

{{ushr|Iowa|8|X}}

| Charles B. Hoeven

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles B. Hoeven (Republican) 99.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Charles Warner (Prohibition) 0.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Milo Price (Democratic) 0.01%

}}

Kansas

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Kansas}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Kansas|1|X}}

| Albert M. Cole

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|2|X}}

| Errett P. Scrivner

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1943

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|3|X}}

| Myron V. George

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Myron V. George (Republican) 59.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Fred L. Hedges (Democratic) 40.5%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|4|X}}

| Edward Herbert Rees

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Herbert Rees (Republican) 59.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Bill Porter (Democratic) 40.6%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|5|X}}

| Clifford R. Hope

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1926

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clifford R. Hope (Republican) 70.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Art McAnarney (Democratic) 29.1%

}}

{{ushr|Kansas|6|X}}

| Wint Smith

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wint Smith (Republican) 62.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Horace A. Santry (Democratic) 37.5%

}}

Kentucky

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Kentucky}}

Kentucky lost one seat at reapportionment, and redistricted from 9 districts to 8, adjusting boundaries across the state and dividing the old 8th up among its neighbors.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Kentucky|1|X}}

| Noble Jones Gregory

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|2|X}}

| Garrett Withers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952 Kentucky's 2nd congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Garrett Withers (Democratic) 54.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}David C. Brodie (Republican) 45.6%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|3|X}}

| Thruston Ballard Morton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John M. Robsion Jr. (Republican) 54.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Boman L. Shamburger (Democratic) 45.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}H. A. I. Rosenberg (Independent) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|4|X}}

| Frank Chelf

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Chelf (Democratic) 55.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Bobby Hutchison Jr. (Republican) 44.1%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Kentucky|5|X}}

| Brent Spence

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1930

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Brent Spence (Democratic) 55.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William D. Cochran (Republican) 44.6%

}}

Joe B. Bates
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Kentucky|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1930

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic loss.

{{ushr|Kentucky|6|X}}

| John C. Watts

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951 Kentucky's 6th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|7|X}}

| Carl D. Perkins

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl D. Perkins (Democratic) 58.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Curtis Clark (Republican) 41.8%

}}

{{ushr|Kentucky|8|X}}

| James S. Golden
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Kentucky|9|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James S. Golden (Republican) 68.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Bill Scalf (Democratic) 31.2%

}}

Louisiana

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Louisiana}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Louisiana|1|X}}

| F. Edward Hébert

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|2|X}}

| Hale Boggs

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940
1942 {{Small|(lost)}}
1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hale Boggs (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|3|X}}

| Edwin E. Willis

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edwin E. Willis (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|4|X}}

| Overton Brooks

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Overton Brooks (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|5|X}}

| Otto Passman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Otto Passman (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|6|X}}

| James H. Morrison

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James H. Morrison (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|7|X}}

| Henry D. Larcade Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} T. Ashton Thompson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Louisiana|8|X}}

| A. Leonard Allen

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George S. Long (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Maine

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Maine}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Maine|1|X}}

| Robert Hale

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Hale (Republican) 61.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James A. McVicar (Democratic) 38.4%

}}

{{ushr|Maine|2|X}}

| Charles P. Nelson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles P. Nelson (Republican) 66.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Leland B. Currier (Democratic) 32.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent Democratic Party (US)}}A. M. Chiaravalloti (Liberal Dem.) 0.8%

}}

{{ushr|Maine|3|X}}

| Clifford McIntire

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Maryland

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Maryland}}

Maryland redistricted from 6 to 7 seats, transferring territory from the 2nd to the 3rd and 4th and to a new 7th seat in the Baltimore suburbs.

{{As of|2022}}, this was the last time the Republican Party held a majority of congressional districts from Maryland.{{Original research inline|date=April 2022}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Maryland|1|X}}

| Edward T. Miller

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward T. Miller (Republican) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Dudley Roe (Democratic) 38.9%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|2|X}}

| James Devereux

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James Devereux (Republican) 61.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}A. Gordon Boone (Democratic) 38.6%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|3|X}}

| Edward Garmatz

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Garmatz (Democratic) 70.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jerry Toula (Republican) 29.1%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|4|X}}

| George Hyde Fallon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|5|X}}

| Lansdale Sasscer

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1939

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Small Jr. (Republican) 50.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Richard Lankford (Democratic) 49.6%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|6|X}}

| J. Glenn Beall

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} DeWitt Hyde (Republican) 57.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Stella B. Werner (Democratic) 42.2%

}}

{{ushr|Maryland|7|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Massachusetts

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Massachusetts}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Massachusetts|1|X}}

| John W. Heselton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John W. Heselton (Republican) 67.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William H. Burns (Democratic) 32.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Albert A. Ridyard (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|2|X}}

| Foster Furcolo

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent resigned when appointed Treasurer.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Boland (Democratic) 51.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Troy T. Murray (Republican) 47.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Anthony D. Hall (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|3|X}}

| Philip J. Philbin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Philip J. Philbin (Democratic) 67.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank D. Walker (Republican) 32.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Isaac Goddard (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|4|X}}

| Harold Donohue

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold Donohue (Democratic) 54.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Carl A. Sheridan (Republican) 45.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Lillian E. Williams (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|5|X}}

| Edith Nourse Rogers

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1925

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edith Nourse Rogers (Republican) 75.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Helen M. Fitzgerald Cullen (Democratic) 23.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Miriam S. Hall (Democratic) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|6|X}}

| William H. Bates

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William H. Bates (Republican) 95.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Lula B. White (Prohibition) 4.9%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|7|X}}

| Thomas J. Lane

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1941

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas J. Lane (Democratic) 74.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John L. Southwick Jr. (Republican) 24.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}E. Frank Searle (Prohibition) 0.8%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|8|X}}

| Angier Goodwin

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Angier Goodwin (Republican) 50.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John C. Carr Jr. (Democratic) 48.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Alma D. Shaw (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|9|X}}

| Donald W. Nicholson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Donald W. Nicholson (Republican) 59.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James F. O'Neill (Democratic) 40.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ethel I. Ireland (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|10|X}}

| Christian Herter

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Massachusetts.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Laurence Curtis (Republican) 54.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Frederick C. Hailer Jr. (Democratic) 45.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Katherine L. S. Goddard (Prohibition) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|11|X}}

| John F. Kennedy

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tip O'Neill (Democratic) 69.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jesse A. Rogers (Republican) 30.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}William D. Ross (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|12|X}}

| John W. McCormack

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1928

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|13|X}}

| Richard B. Wigglesworth

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1928

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Massachusetts|14|X}}

| Joseph W. Martin Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1924

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph W. Martin Jr. (Republican) 63.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edward F. Doolan (Democratic) 36.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Grace Farnsworth Luder (Prohibition) 0.3%

}}

Michigan

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Michigan}}

Michigan added one seat, and divided the 17th district to form an 18th district, leaving boundaries otherwise unchanged.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Michigan|1|X}}

| Thaddeus M. Machrowicz

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (Democratic) 84.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ralph G. Tenerowicz (Republican) 15.2%

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Adam Kujtkowski (Progressive) 0.3%

| {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Peter Koker (Independent) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|2|X}}

| George Meader

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George Meader (Republican) 63.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John P. Dawson (Democratic) 36.3%

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Walter S. Haynes (Prohibition) 0.3%

| {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}David R. Luce (Progressive) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|3|X}}

| Paul W. Shafer

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul W. Shafer (Republican) 62.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Kenneth G. Brown (Democratic) 37.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Clarence O. Button (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|4|X}}

| Clare Hoffman

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clare Hoffman (Republican) 66.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Murle E. Gorton (Democratic) 33.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ralph C. March (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|5|X}}

| Gerald Ford

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gerald Ford (Republican) 66.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Vincent E. O'Neill (Democratic) 33.3%

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ella Fruin (Prohibition) 0.4%

| {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}William Glenn (Progressive) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|6|X}}

| William W. Blackney

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kit Clardy (Republican) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Donald Hayworth (Democratic) 47.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Egbert Street (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|7|X}}

| Jesse P. Wolcott

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1930

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jesse P. Wolcott (Republican) 60.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ira D. McCoy (Democratic) 39.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Clarence Dykehouse (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|8|X}}

| Fred L. Crawford

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alvin Morell Bentley (Republican) 66.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Clarence V. Smazel (Democratic) 33.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Marion A. Jones (Prohibition) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|9|X}}

| Ruth Thompson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ruth Thompson (Republican) 59.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John H. Piercey (Democratic) 40.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Glenn Root (Prohibition) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|10|X}}

| Roy O. Woodruff

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1920

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|11|X}}

| Charles E. Potter

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|12|X}}

| John B. Bennett

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John B. Bennett (Republican) 58.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}E. Burr Sherwood (Democratic) 41.8%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|13|X}}

| George D. O'Brien

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George D. O'Brien (Democratic) 64.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Clarence J. McLeod (Republican) 35.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Karl V. Kurtz (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|14|X}}

| Louis C. Rabaut

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Louis C. Rabaut (Democratic) 53.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Richard Durant (Republican) 46.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Herman G. Ottmer (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|15|X}}

| John Dingell Sr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Dingell Sr. (Democratic) 66.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Gregory M. Pillon (Republican) 33.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Clyde Watt (Prohibition) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|16|X}}

| John Lesinski Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Margaret Nowak (Progressive) 0.3%

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Earl A. Johnson (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|17|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles G. Oakman (Republican) 52.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Martha Griffiths (Democratic) 47.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Walter D. Carpenter (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Michigan|18|X}}

| George A. Dondero
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Michigan|17|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George A. Dondero (Republican) 56.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Arthur J. Law (Democratic) 43.6%

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Rene Hall (Prohibition) 0.2%

| {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Dwight I. Todd (Progressive) 0.07%

}}

Minnesota

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Minnesota}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Minnesota|1|X}}

| August H. Andresen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} August H. Andresen (Republican) 69.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}George Alfson (DFL) 30.6%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|2|X}}

| Joseph P. O'Hara

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|3|X}}

| Roy Wier

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}{{Aye}} Roy Wier (DFL) 52.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ed Willow (Republican) 47.8%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|4|X}}

| Eugene McCarthy

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}{{Aye}} Eugene McCarthy (DFL) 61.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Roger G. Kennedy (Republican) 38.3%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|5|X}}

| Walter Judd

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter Judd (Republican) 59.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}Karl Rolvaag (DFL) 40.8%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|6|X}}

| Fred Marshall

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}{{Aye}} Fred Marshall (DFL) 52.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}J. Arthur Bensen (Republican) 47.4%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|7|X}}

| H. Carl Andersen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|8|X}}

| John Blatnik

| {{Party shading/DFL}} | Democratic (DFL)

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}{{Aye}} John Blatnik (DFL) 62.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ernest R. Orchard (Republican) 37.4%

}}

{{ushr|Minnesota|9|X}}

| Harold Hagen

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold Hagen (Republican) 60.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (Minnesota)}}Curtiss Olson (DFL) 39.5%

}}

Mississippi

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Mississippi}}

Mississippi lost 1 seat in reapportionment and redistricted from 7 seats to 6; in addition to other boundary adjustments a substantial portion of the old 4th district was moved into the 1st, and 4th district incumbent Abernethy defeated 1st district incumbent Rankin in the Democratic primary.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Mississippi|1|X}}

| John E. Rankin

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1920

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Abernethy (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Thomas Abernethy
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Mississippi|4|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|Mississippi|2|X}}

| Jamie Whitten

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1941

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jamie Whitten (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|3|X}}

| Frank E. Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank E. Smith (Democratic) 87.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Paul Clark (Republican) 12.8%

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|4|X}}

| John Bell Williams
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Mississippi|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Bell Williams (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|5|X}}

| W. Arthur Winstead

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Mississippi|6|X}}

| William M. Colmer

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William M. Colmer (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Missouri

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Missouri}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Missouri|1|X}}

| Frank M. Karsten
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|13|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|2|X}}

| Thomas B. Curtis
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|12|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|3|X}}

| Claude I. Bakewell
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|11|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|4|X}}

| Leonard Irving

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|5|X}}

| Richard Bolling

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Richard Bolling (Democratic) 56.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank C. Rayburn (Republican) 44.0%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|6|X}}

| Phil J. Welch
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Missouri.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Missouri|7|X}}

| Dewey Short

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dewey Short (Republican) 61.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John Hosmer (Democratic) 38.3%

}}

Orland K. Armstrong
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican loss.

{{ushr|Missouri|8|X}}

| A. S. J. Carnahan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Missouri|9|X}}

| Clarence Cannon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clarence Cannon (Democratic) 54.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Samuel W. Arnold (Republican) 45.3%

}}

Clare Magee
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|1|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic loss.

{{ushr|Missouri|10|X}}

| Paul C. Jones

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul C. Jones (Democratic) 60.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Andrew Sandegren (Republican) 39.3%

}}

{{ushr|Missouri|11|X}}

| Morgan M. Moulder
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Missouri|2|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Morgan M. Moulder (Democratic) 50.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Max Schwabe (Republican) 49.6%

}}

Montana

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Montana}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Montana|1|X}}

| Mike Mansfield

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Montana|2|X}}

| Wesley A. D'Ewart

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1945

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Nebraska

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Nebraska}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Nebraska|1|X}}

| Carl Curtis

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Curtis (Republican) 72.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Samuel Freeman (Democratic) 28.0%

}}

{{ushr|Nebraska|2|X}}

| Howard Buffett

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Roman Hruska (Republican) 56.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James A. Hart (Democratic) 43.9%

}}

{{ushr|Nebraska|3|X}}

| Robert Dinsmore Harrison

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Nebraska|4|X}}

| Arthur L. Miller

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Arthur L. Miller (Republican) 73.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Francis D. Lee (Democratic) 26.7%

}}

Nevada

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Nevada}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Nevada|AL|X}}

| Walter S. Baring Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

New Hampshire

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Hampshire}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|New Hampshire|1|X}}

| Chester Earl Merrow

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New Hampshire|2|X}}

| Norris Cotton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Norris Cotton (Republican) 66.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John Guay (Democratic) 33.6%

}}

New Jersey

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Jersey}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|New Jersey|1|X}}

| Charles A. Wolverton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1926

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles A. Wolverton (Republican) 55.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Alfred R. Pierce (Democratic) 44.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Kent A. Smitheman (Progressive) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|2|X}}

| T. Millet Hand

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|3|X}}

| James C. Auchincloss

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James C. Auchincloss (Republican) 64.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John W. Zimmermann (Democratic) 35.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Marvin H. Fish (Progressive) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|4|X}}

| Charles R. Howell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|5|X}}

| Charles A. Eaton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1924

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Peter Frelinghuysen Jr. (Republican) 62.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Aldona L. Appleton (Democratic) 37.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Clinton A. Smith (Prohibition) 0.06%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|6|X}}

| Clifford P. Case

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clifford P. Case (Republican) 63.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}H. Frank Pettit (Democratic) 35.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Ithamar Quigley (Prohibition) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|7|X}}

| William B. Widnall

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|8|X}}

| Gordon Canfield

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gordon Canfield (Republican) 62.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John J. Winberry (Democratic) 35.0%

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Other}}Peter J. Toth (Increase Jobless Pay) 2.2%

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Edith Claxton (Prohibition) 0.1%

| {{Party stripe|Socialist Labor Party (US)}}Harry Santhouse (Socialist Labor) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|9|X}}

| Frank C. Osmers Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank C. Osmers Jr. (Republican) 66.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William H. McNulty (Democratic) 33.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Angelica Boles (Progressive) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|10|X}}

| Peter W. Rodino

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Lawrence Sutherland (Prohibition) 1.0%

| {{Party stripe|Other}}Michael Burns (Square Deal) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|11|X}}

| Hugh J. Addonizio

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Socialist Workers Party (US)}}William E. Bohannon (Socialist Workers) 1.3%

| {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Walter F. Hartt (Prohibition) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|12|X}}

| Robert Kean

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Kean (Republican) 54.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Martin S. Fox (Democratic) 45.2%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|13|X}}

| Alfred Dennis Sieminski

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alfred Dennis Sieminski (Democratic) 55.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Julius D. Canter (Republican) 41.2%
  • {{Party stripe|People's Choice Party}}Edmund T. Kalinowski (People's Choice) 3.6%

}}

{{ushr|New Jersey|14|X}}

| Edward J. Hart

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward J. Hart (Democratic) 51.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William J. Bozzuffi (Republican) 45.4%
  • {{Party stripe|People's Choice Party}}Thomas F. Conroy (People's Choice) 3.1%

}}

New Mexico

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New Mexico}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|New Mexico|AL|X}}

| John J. Dempsey

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New Mexico|AL|X}}

| Antonio M. Fernández

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

New York

{{See also|List of United States representatives from New York}}

New York redistricted from 45 seats to 43, losing a seat in Long Island and another upstate.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|New York|1|X}}

| Ernest Greenwood

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Stuyvesant Wainwright (Republican) 60.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ernest Greenwood (Democratic) 39.3%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Otto Skottedal (American Labor) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|2|X}}

| Leonard W. Hall

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for Nassau County surrogate.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Steven Derounian (Republican) 68.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph Liff (Democratic) 28.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Herbert H. Stroup (Liberal) 2.1%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Stanley Faulkner (American Labor) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|3|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank J. Becker (Republican) 65.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Richard A. O'Leary (Democratic) 31.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Eugene M. Theuman (Liberal) 2.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Henry Dolimer (American Labor) 0.7%

}}

{{ushr|New York|4|X}}

| Henry J. Latham
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|3|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Henry J. Latham (Republican) 62.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Joseph J. Perrini (Democratic) 36.0%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Herbert A. Shingler (American Labor) 1.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|5|X}}

| L. Gary Clemente
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|4|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert H. Bosch (Republican) 53.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}L. Gary Clemente (Democratic) 45.3%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Hugh Mulzac (American Labor) 1.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|6|X}}

| Robert Tripp Ross
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| February 19, 1952
(special)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lester Holtzman (Democratic) 49.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert Tripp Ross (Republican) 48.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Morris Pottish (American Labor) 1.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|7|X}}

| James J. Delaney
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944
1946 {{Small|(defeated)}}
1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James J. Delaney (Democratic) 51.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William Adam Schulz (Republican) 47.3%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}James Garry (American Labor) 1.7%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|New York|8|X}}

| Victor Anfuso

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Louis B. Heller (Democratic) 65.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Benjamin F. Westervelt Jr. (Republican) 32.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Beny Sher (American Labor) 2.1%

}}

Louis B. Heller
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1949

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|New York|9|X}}

| Eugene Keogh

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Eugene Keogh (Democratic) 61.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Joseph M. Soviero (Republican) 35.7%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Helen Wishnofsky (American Labor) 3.1%

}}

{{ushr|New York|10|X}}

| Edna F. Kelly

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1949

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edna F. Kelly (Democratic) 71.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}George W. Thomas (Republican) 28.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|11|X}}

| Emanuel Celler
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|15|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Emanuel Celler (Democratic) 73.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Henry D. Dorfman (Republican) 21.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Terry Rosenbaum (American Labor) 4.2%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Max Gilgoff (American Labor) 0.4%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|New York|12|X}}

| James J. Heffernan
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|11|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican gain.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

Donald L. O'Toole
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|13|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic loss.

{{ushr|New York|13|X}}

| Abraham J. Multer
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|14|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Abraham J. Multer (Democratic) 68.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}P. Vincent Landi (Republican) 27.8%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Abraham Beacher (American Labor) 2.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Communist Party (US)}}Si Gerson (Peoples Rights) 1.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|14|X}}

| John J. Rooney
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|12|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. Rooney (Democratic) 64.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Jacob P. Lefkowitz (Republican) 33.2%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Charles Cafiero (American Labor) 2.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|15|X}}

| James J. Murphy
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|16|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John H. Ray (Republican) 57.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James J. Murphy (Democratic) 41.5%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Jean Militean (American Labor) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|16|X}}

| Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|22|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (Democratic) 73.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Richard L. Baltimore Jr. (Republican) 16.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Clarence Francis (Liberal) 7.3%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Andronicus Jacobs (American Labor) 2.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|17|X}}

| Frederic Coudert Jr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frederic Coudert Jr. (Republican) 57.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harry Grossman (Democratic) 40.7%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Moses C. Weinman (American Labor) 2.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|18|X}}

| James G. Donovan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James G. Donovan (Democratic) 92.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Vito Magli (American Labor) 7.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|19|X}}

| Arthur G. Klein

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Arthur G. Klein (Democratic) 66.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edward I. Goldberg (Republican) 29.7%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Joseph Selterman (American Labor) 4.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|20|X}}

| Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1949

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. (Democratic) 60.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Clarence C. Van Bell (Republican) 36.8%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Arthur D. Kahn (American Labor) 3.0%

}}

{{ushr|New York|21|X}}

| Jacob Javits

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jacob Javits (Republican) 63.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John C. Hart (Democratic) 33.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}William Mandel (American Labor) 2.9%

}}

{{ushr|New York|22|X}}

| Sidney A. Fine
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|23|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sidney A. Fine (Democratic) 58.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Martin Greene (Republican) 24.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}David I. Wells (Liberal) 13.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Anita Friedlander (American Labor) 3.3%

}}

{{ushr|New York|23|X}}

| Isidore Dollinger
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|24|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Isidore Dollinger (Democratic) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Sidney S. Flaum (Republican) 18.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Harry Kavesh (Liberal) 11.7%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Howard Fast (American Labor) 5.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|24|X}}

| Charles A. Buckley
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|25|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles A. Buckley (Democratic) 46.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Solon S. Kane (Republican) 32.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Herman Woskow (Liberal) 16.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Carl Trost (American Labor) 4.1%

}}

{{ushr|New York|25|X}}

| Christopher C. McGrath
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|26|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for Bronx County surrogate.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul A. Fino (Republican) 50.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Bernard J. O'Connell (Democratic) 40.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Louis Schifrin (Liberal) 7.8%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}August Buhr (American Labor) 1.7%

}}

{{ushr|New York|26|X}}

| Ralph A. Gamble
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|28|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1937

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ralph A. Gamble (Republican) 67.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Flora Chudson (Democratic) 32.0%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Pasquale Barile (American Labor) 0.7%

}}

{{ushr|New York|27|X}}

| Ralph W. Gwinn

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ralph W. Gwinn (Republican) 58.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}George A. Brenner (Democratic) 40.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Herbert C. Hewitt (American Labor) 0.6%

}}

{{ushr|New York|28|X}}

| Katharine St. George
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|29|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Katharine St. George (Republican) 65.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Marion K. Sanders (Democratic) 33.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Harold Chown (American Labor) 0.5%

}}

{{ushr|New York|29|X}}

| J. Ernest Wharton
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|30|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Ernest Wharton (Republican) 69.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Walter Donnaruma (Democratic) 28.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Edward Friss (Liberal) 1.7%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Joseph Kooperman (American Labor) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|30|X}}

| Leo W. O'Brien
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|32|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952 (special)

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leo W. O'Brien (Democratic) 53.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John F. Forner Jr. (Republican) 46.0%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Scott K. Gray Jr. (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|31|X}}

| Dean P. Taylor
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|33|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Dean P. Taylor (Republican) 70.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Helen Nolan Neil (Democratic) 27.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}John H. Sullivan (Liberal) 2.1%

}}

{{ushr|New York|32|X}}

| Bernard W. Kearney
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|31|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New York|33|X}}

| Clarence E. Kilburn
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|34|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clarence E. Kilburn (Republican) 69.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Maurice N. McGrath (Democratic) 29.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}William J. Delo Jr. (Liberal) 1.8%

}}

{{ushr|New York|34|X}}

| William R. Williams
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|35|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William R. Williams (Republican) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Charles Ray Wilson (Democratic) 39.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Anthony Blasting (Liberal) 1.7%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Michael A. Jimenez (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|35|X}}

| R. Walter Riehlman
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|36|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} R. Walter Riehlman (Republican) 63.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Arthur B. McGuire (Democratic) 36.5%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Lillian Reiner (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|36|X}}

| John Taber
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|38|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Taber (Republican) 69.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Donald J. O'Connor (Democratic) 29.9%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Lila K. Larson (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|New York|37|X}}

| Edwin Arthur Hall

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1939

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Republican loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} W. Sterling Cole (Republican) 69.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Jean Ivory (Democratic) 30.4%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Robert L. Blandford (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

W. Sterling Cole
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|39|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|New York|38|X}}

| Kenneth Keating
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|40|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kenneth Keating (Republican) 69.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Victor Kruppenbacher (Democratic) 30.3%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Manuel Gitlin (American Labor) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|New York|39|X}}

| Harold C. Ostertag
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|41|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold C. Ostertag (Republican) 65.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}O. Richard Judson (Democratic) 34.0%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Michael J. Burke (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|40|X}}

| William E. Miller
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|42|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William E. Miller (Republican) 59.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}E. Dent Lackey (Democratic) 40.2%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}John Touralchuk (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|New York|41|X}}

| Edmund P. Radwan
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|43|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|New York|42|X}}

| John Cornelius Butler
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|44|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John R. Pillion (Republican) 55.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Chester C. Gorski (Democratic) 44.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Charles T. Asque (American Labor) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|New York|43|X}}

| Daniel A. Reed
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|New York|45|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1918

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Daniel A. Reed (Republican) 66.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harry D. Johnson (Democratic) 32.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Liberal Party (New York)}}Lyle H. Furlong (Liberal) 1.6%
  • {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Axel W. Berggren (American Labor) 0.2%

}}

North Carolina

{{See also|List of United States representatives from North Carolina}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|North Carolina|1|X}}

| Herbert Covington Bonner

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|2|X}}

| John H. Kerr

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1923

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lawrence H. Fountain (Democratic) 94.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}W. B. White (Republican) 5.2%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|3|X}}

| Graham Arthur Barden

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|4|X}}

| Harold D. Cooley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold D. Cooley (Democratic) 75.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Paul C. West (Republican) 24.7%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|5|X}}

| R. Thurmond Chatham

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|6|X}}

| Carl T. Durham

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl T. Durham (Democratic) 69.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Louis F. Ferree (Republican) 30.5%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|7|X}}

| Frank Ertel Carlyle

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank Ertel Carlyle (Democratic) 98.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}D. R. Johnson (Republican) 1.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}E. N. Pait (Republican) 0.002%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|8|X}}

| Charles B. Deane

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Charles B. Deane (Democratic) 59.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Walter B. Love (Republican) 40.1%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|9|X}}

| Robert L. Doughton

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1910

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hugh Quincy Alexander (Democratic) 51.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Walter P. Johnson (Republican) 48.5%

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|10|X}}

| Hamilton C. Jones

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|11|X}}

| Woodrow W. Jones

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|North Carolina|12|X}}

| Monroe Minor Redden

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George A. Shuford (Democratic) 56.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Hugh Montieth (Republican) 43.1%

}}

North Dakota

{{See also|List of United States representatives from North Dakota}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

rowspan="2"|{{ushr|North Dakota|AL|X}}

| Usher L. Burdick

| {{Party shading/Nonpartisan League}} | Republican-NPL

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Nonpartisan League}}{{Aye}} Usher L. Burdick (Republican-NPL) 46.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{aye}} Otto Krueger (Republican) 40.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edward Nesemeier (Democratic) 12.8%

}}

Fred G. Aandahl

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican hold.

Ohio

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Ohio}}

Ohio's representation was not changed at reapportionment, but redistricted its at-large district into a 23rd district and also removed the 11th district in south Ohio, creating two new districts around Cleveland.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Ohio|1|X}}

| Charles H. Elston

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|2|X}}

| William E. Hess

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William E. Hess (Republican) 56.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Earl T. Wagner (Democratic) 43.4%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|3|X}}

| Paul F. Schenck

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul F. Schenck (Republican) 51.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas B. Talbot (Democratic) 48.9%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|4|X}}

| William Moore McCulloch

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|5|X}}

| Cliff Clevenger

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Cliff Clevenger (Republican) 63.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Dan Batt (Democratic) 36.8%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|6|X}}

| James G. Polk

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James G. Polk (Democratic) 50.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Leo Blackburn (Republican) 49.9%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|7|X}}

| Clarence J. Brown

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clarence J. Brown (Republican)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|8|X}}

| Jackson Edward Betts

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|9|X}}

| Frazier Reams

| {{Party shading/Independent (US)}} | Independent

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}{{Aye}} Frazier Reams (Independent) 40.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Thomas H. Burke (Democratic) 33.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Gilmore Flues (Republican) 25.7%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Ohio|10|X}}

| Thomas A. Jenkins

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1924

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

Walter E. Brehm
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Ohio|11|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican loss.

{{ushr|Ohio|11|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|12|X}}

| John M. Vorys

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|13|X}}

| Alvin F. Weichel

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|14|X}}

| William H. Ayres

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William H. Ayres (Republican) 58.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Walter B. Huber (Democratic) 41.5%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|15|X}}

| Robert T. Secrest

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|16|X}}

| Frank T. Bow

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank T. Bow (Republican) 54.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John McSweeney (Democratic) 45.6%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|17|X}}

| J. Harry McGregor

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} J. Harry McGregor (Republican) 68.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James J. Mayer (Democratic) 31.8%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|18|X}}

| Wayne L. Hays

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wayne L. Hays (Democratic) 55.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Clarence J. Wetzel (Republican) 44.2%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|19|X}}

| Michael J. Kirwan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Michael J. Kirwan (Democratic) 66.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Allen Russell (Republican) 33.7%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|20|X}}

| Michael A. Feighan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|21|X}}

| Robert Crosser

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1922

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert Crosser (Democratic) 68.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Lawrence O. Payne (Republican) 31.4%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|22|X}}

| Frances P. Bolton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frances P. Bolton (Republican) 58.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Chat Paterson (Democratic) 41.2%

}}

{{ushr|Ohio|23|X}}

| George H. Bender
{{Small|Redistricted from the at-large district}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Oklahoma

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Oklahoma}}

Oklahoma was reapportioned from 8 seats to 6 and eliminated the 7th and 8th districts, moving most of their territory into the 1st and 6th and expanding other districts to compensate.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Oklahoma|1|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | George B. Schwabe (R) died April 2, 1952.
Republican loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Page Belcher (Republican) 58.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}H. G. Dickey (Democratic) 41.4%

}}

Page Belcher
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Oklahoma|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|Oklahoma|2|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | William G. Stigler (D) died August 21, 1952
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ed Edmondson (Democratic) 59.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edward E. Easton (Republican) 38.8%

}}{{collapsible list|title={{nobold|Others}}

| {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Sample Eugene Brockman (Independent) 1.1%

| {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Jeff McHenry (Independent) 0.5%

| {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}W. R. Kelton (Independent) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|3|X}}

| Carl Albert

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Carl Albert (Democratic) 77.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank D. McSherry (Republican) 22.1%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|4|X}}

| Tom Steed

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tom Steed (Democratic) 58.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}John L. Goode (Republican) 40.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}L. D. Akin (Independent) 0.7%

}}

{{ushr|Oklahoma|5|X}}

| John Jarman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Jarman (Democratic) 62.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Edwin Whitney Burch (Republican) 37.6%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Oklahoma|6|X}}

| Toby Morris

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic loss.

| rowspan=2 nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Victor Wickersham (Democratic) 63.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}K. B. Cornell (Republican) 36.7%

}}

Victor Wickersham
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Oklahoma|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

Oregon

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Oregon}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Oregon|1|X}}

| A. Walter Norblad

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Oregon|2|X}}

| Lowell Stockman

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sam Coon (Republican) 58.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John G. Jones (Democratic) 41.5%

}}

{{ushr|Oregon|3|X}}

| Homer D. Angell

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Oregon|4|X}}

| Harris Ellsworth

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Pennsylvania

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania}}

Pennsylvania redistricted from 33 districts to 30, eliminating 1 district in northeastern Pennsylvania and 2 in southwestern Pennsylvania.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|1|X}}

| William A. Barrett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944
1946 {{Small|(lost)}}
1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|2|X}}

| William T. Granahan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|3|X}}

| Hardie Scott

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} James A. Byrne (Democratic) 58.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Morton Witkin (Republican) 41.6%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|4|X}}

| Earl Chudoff

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Earl Chudoff (Democratic) 69.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Joseph R. Burns (Republican) 29.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}David P. Widamen (Progressive) 0.4%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|5|X}}

| William J. Green Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|6|X}}

| Hugh Scott

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hugh Scott (Republican) 51.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harrington Herr (Democratic) 48.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Anthony V. Lo Popolo (Independent) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|7|X}}

| Benjamin F. James

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|X}}

| Karl C. King

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|9|X}}

| Paul B. Dague

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul B. Dague (Republican) 66.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Philip E. Ragan (Democratic) 33.8%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|10|X}}

| Harry P. O'Neill

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Democratic loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

Joseph L. Carrigg
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|11|X}}

| Daniel Flood

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944
1946 {{Small|(lost)}}
1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Edward Bonin (Republican) 50.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Daniel Flood (Democratic) 49.8%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|12|X}}

| Ivor D. Fenton

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Ivor D. Fenton (Republican) 60.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Peter Krehel (Democratic) 39.3%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|X}}

| Samuel K. McConnell Jr.
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|14|X}}

| George M. Rhodes
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|13|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|X}}

| Francis E. Walter
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|16|X}}

| Walter M. Mumma
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter M. Mumma (Republican) 61.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}David V. Randall (Democratic) 38.3%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|X}}

| Alvin Bush
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|15|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Alvin Bush (Republican) 64.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Patrick A. McGowan (Democratic) 34.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Prohibition Party}}Clyde A. Taylor (Prohibition) 1.2%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|18|X}}

| Richard M. Simpson
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|17|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1937

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|X}}

| James F. Lind
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} S. Walter Stauffer (Republican) 52.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}James F. Lind (Democratic) 47.7%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|20|X}}

| James E. Van Zandt
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|21|X}}

| Augustine B. Kelley
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|22|X}}

| John P. Saylor
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1949

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|X}}

| Leon H. Gavin
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|19|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Leon H. Gavin (Republican) 67.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Fred C. Barr (Democratic) 32.2%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|X}}

| Carroll D. Kearns
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|25|X}}

| Louis E. Graham

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Louis E. Graham (Republican) 50.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Frank M. Clark (Democratic) 49.6%

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|26|X}}

| Thomas E. Morgan
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|24|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

Edward L. Sittler Jr.
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|23|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican loss.

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|27|X}}

| James G. Fulton
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|31|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Pennsylvania|28|X}}

| Herman P. Eberharter
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|32|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

}}

Harmar D. Denny Jr.
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican loss.

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|29|X}}

| Robert J. Corbett
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1938
1940 {{Small|(lost)}}
1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Robert J. Corbett (Republican) 61.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Lee T. Sellars (Democratic) 38.3%

}}

{{ushr|Pennsylvania|30|X}}

| Vera Buchanan
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Pennsylvania|33|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Vera Buchanan (Democratic) 63.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Peter F. Bender (Republican) 36.4%

}}

Rhode Island

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Rhode Island}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Rhode Island|1|X}}

| Aime Forand

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Rhode Island|2|X}}

| John E. Fogarty

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John E. Fogarty (Democratic) 53.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}James O. Watts (Republican) 46.6%

}}

South Carolina

{{Main|1952 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina}}

{{See also|List of United States representatives from South Carolina}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|South Carolina|1|X}}

| L. Mendel Rivers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} L. Mendel Rivers (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|2|X}}

| John J. Riley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John J. Riley (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|3|X}}

| William Jennings Bryan Dorn

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946
1948 {{Small|(retired)}}
1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|4|X}}

| Joseph R. Bryson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph R. Bryson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|5|X}}

| James P. Richards

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1932

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|South Carolina|6|X}}

| John L. McMillan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John L. McMillan (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

South Dakota

{{See also|List of United States representatives from South Dakota}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|South Dakota|1|X}}

| Harold Lovre

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Harold Lovre (Republican) 68.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Goldie Wells (Democratic) 31.5%

}}

{{ushr|South Dakota|2|X}}

| Ellis Yarnal Berry

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Tennessee

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Tennessee}}

Tennessee lost one seat in reapportionment, and divided the old 4th district between the old 5th and 7th districts, with other minor boundary changes.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Tennessee|1|X}}

| B. Carroll Reece

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|2|X}}

| Howard Baker Sr.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Howard Baker Sr. (Republican) 68.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Boyd W. Cox (Democratic) 31.1%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|3|X}}

| James B. Frazier Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

rowspan=2 | {{ushr|Tennessee|4|X}}

| Albert Gore Sr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Loss}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic loss.

| rowspan=2 | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joe L. Evins (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Joe L. Evins
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Tennessee|5|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

{{ushr|Tennessee|5|X}}

| Percy Priest
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Tennessee|6|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Percy Priest (Democratic) 67.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Homer P. Wall (Republican) 32.5%

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|6|X}}

| James Patrick Sutton
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Tennessee|7|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|7|X}}

| Tom J. Murray
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Tennessee|8|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Tom J. Murray (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|8|X}}

| Jere Cooper
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Tennessee|9|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1928

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jere Cooper (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Tennessee|9|X}}

| Clifford Davis
{{Small|Redistricted from the {{ushr|Tennessee|10|C}}}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Texas

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Texas}}

Texas gained one seat, adding it as an at-large district instead of redistricting.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Texas|1|X}}

| Wright Patman

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1928

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wright Patman (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|2|X}}

| Jesse M. Combs

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jack Brooks (Democratic) 79.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Randolph C. Reed (Republican) 21.0%

}}

{{ushr|Texas|3|X}}

| Lindley Beckworth

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Brady P. Gentry (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|4|X}}

| Sam Rayburn

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1912

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Sam Rayburn (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|5|X}}

| Joseph Franklin Wilson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Texas|6|X}}

| Olin E. Teague

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Olin E. Teague (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|7|X}}

| John Dowdy

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1952 (special)

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John Dowdy (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|8|X}}

| Albert Thomas

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Albert Thomas (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|9|X}}

| Clark W. Thompson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Clark W. Thompson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|10|X}}

| Homer Thornberry

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Homer Thornberry (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|11|X}}

| William R. Poage

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1936

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William R. Poage (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|12|X}}

| Wingate H. Lucas

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Wingate H. Lucas (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|13|X}}

| Frank N. Ikard

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Frank N. Ikard (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|14|X}}

| John E. Lyle Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John E. Lyle Jr. (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|15|X}}

| Lloyd Bentsen

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|16|X}}

| Kenneth M. Regan

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Kenneth M. Regan (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|17|X}}

| Omar Burleson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Omar Burleson (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|18|X}}

| Walter E. Rogers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walter E. Rogers (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|19|X}}

| George H. Mahon

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} George H. Mahon (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|20|X}}

| Paul J. Kilday

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1938

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Paul J. Kilday (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|21|X}}

| O. C. Fisher

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} O. C. Fisher (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Texas|AL|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Martin Dies Jr. (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

Utah

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Utah}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Utah|1|X}}

| Walter K. Granger

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Utah|2|X}}

| Reva Beck Bosone

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Vermont

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Vermont}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Vermont|AL|X}}

| Winston L. Prouty

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Virginia

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Virginia}}

Virginia gained one seat, adding a new district in the DC suburbs and making boundary adjustments elsewhere.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Virginia|1|X}}

| Edward J. Robeson Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|2|X}}

| Porter Hardy Jr.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Porter Hardy Jr. (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|3|X}}

| J. Vaughan Gary

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1945

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|4|X}}

| Watkins Abbitt

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Watkins Abbitt (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|5|X}}

| Thomas B. Stanley

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas B. Stanley (Democratic)
  • Uncontested

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|6|X}}

| Clarence G. Burton

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|7|X}}

| Burr Harrison

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Burr Harrison (Democratic) 79.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Glenn W. Ruebush (Republican) 20.9%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|8|X}}

| Howard W. Smith

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1930

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Howard W. Smith (Democratic) 75.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Independent (US)}}Homer G. Richey (Independent) 24.2%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|9|X}}

| Thomas B. Fugate

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William C. Wampler (Republican) 51.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}M. M. Long (Democratic) 48.3%

}}

{{ushr|Virginia|10|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | New seat.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joel Broyhill (Republican) 50.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edmund D. Campbell (Democratic) 49.8%

}}

Washington

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Washington}}

Washington gained one seat at reapportionment, adding it as an at-large district instead of redistricting.

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Washington|1|X}}

| Hugh B. Mitchell

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of Washington.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thomas Pelly (Republican) 51.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Stimson Bullitt (Democratic) 48.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}James A. McDaniel (Progressive) 0.3%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|2|X}}

| Henry M. Jackson

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1940

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent retired to run for U.S. senator.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Jack Westland (Republican) 54.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Harry F. Henson (Democratic) 45.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Elgar Houghton (Progressive) 0.2%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|3|X}}

| Russell V. Mack

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Russell V. Mack (Republican) 53.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Gordon M. Quarnstrom (Democratic) 46.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Progressive Party (US)}}Robert Dokter (Progressive) 0.1%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|4|X}}

| Hal Holmes

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Hal Holmes (Republican) 67.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William Bryan (Democratic) 32.5%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|5|X}}

| Walt Horan

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Walt Horan (Republican) 56.0%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert Dellwo (Democratic) 44.0%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|6|X}}

| Thor C. Tollefson

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1946

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Thor C. Tollefson (Republican) 59.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John J. O'Connell (Democratic) 40.2%

}}

{{ushr|Washington|AL|X}}

| colspan=3 | None (new district)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | New seat.
Democratic gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Donald H. Magnuson (Democratic) 50.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Al Canwell (Republican) 49.5%
  • {{Party stripe|Labor Party (US)}}Elmer R. Moork (Labor) 0.05%

}}

West Virginia

{{See also|List of United States representatives from West Virginia}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|West Virginia|1|X}}

| Robert L. Ramsay

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent lost renomination.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bob Mollohan (Democratic) 52.9%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Francis J. Love (Republican) 47.1%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|2|X}}

| Harley O. Staggers

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|3|X}}

| Cleveland M. Bailey

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Cleveland M. Bailey (Democratic) 53.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Frank Love (Republican) 46.6%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|4|X}}

| Maurice G. Burnside

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Incumbent lost re-election.
Republican gain.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Will E. Neal (Republican) 53.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Maurice G. Burnside (Democratic) 46.7%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|5|X}}

| Elizabeth Kee

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1951 West Virginia's 5th congressional district special election

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Elizabeth Kee (Democratic) 63.8%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Cyrus H. Gadd (Republican) 36.2%

}}

{{ushr|West Virginia|6|X}}

| E. H. Hedrick

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| {{Party shading/Democratic/Hold}} | Incumbent retired to run for Governor of West Virginia.
Democratic hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Wisconsin

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Wisconsin}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Wisconsin|1|X}}

| Lawrence H. Smith

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1941

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Lawrence H. Smith (Republican) 59.4%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Arnie W. Agnew (Democratic) 40.6%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|2|X}}

| Glenn Robert Davis

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1947

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|3|X}}

| Gardner R. Withrow

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Gardner R. Withrow (Republican) 75.1%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Edna Brown (Democratic) 24.9%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|4|X}}

| Clement J. Zablocki

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1948

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|5|X}}

| Charles J. Kersten

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|6|X}}

| William Van Pelt

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} William Van Pelt (Republican) 71.7%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ralph A. Norem (Democratic) 28.3%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|7|X}}

| colspan=3 | Vacant

| {{Party shading/Republican/Hold}} | Reid F. Murray (R) died April 29, 1952.
Republican hold.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Melvin Laird (Republican) 72.3%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Ernest Kluck (Democratic) 27.7%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|8|X}}

| John W. Byrnes

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} John W. Byrnes (Republican) 73.6%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Robert C. Schultz (Democratic) 26.4%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|9|X}}

| Merlin Hull

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1934

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Merlin Hull (Republican) 65.2%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Kent L. Pillsbury (Democratic) 34.8%

}}

{{ushr|Wisconsin|10|X}}

| Alvin E. O'Konski

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Wyoming

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Wyoming}}

class=wikitable
valign=bottom

! District

! Incumbent

! Party

! First
elected

! Result

! Candidates

{{ushr|Wyoming|AL|X}}

| William Henry Harrison III

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1950

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

}}

Non-voting delegates

= Alaska Territory =

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Alaska}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Representative

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Alaska Territory|AL|X}}

| Bob Bartlett

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Democratic

| 1944

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Bob Bartlett (Democratic) 56.62%
  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Robert C. Reeve (Republican) 43.38%{{Cite web|url=https://www.ourcampaigns.com/RaceDetail.html?RaceID=247215|title=Our Campaigns - AK Delegate Race - Nov 04, 1952|website=www.ourcampaigns.com}}

}}

= Hawaii Territory =

{{See also|List of United States representatives from Hawaii}}

class=wikitable
rowspan=2 | District

! colspan=3 | Incumbent

! colspan=2 | This race

Representative

! Party

! First elected

! Results

! Candidates

{{ushr|Hawaii Territory|AL|X}}

| Joseph Farrington

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Republican

| 1942

| Incumbent re-elected.

| nowrap | {{Plainlist |

  • {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Aye}} Joseph Farrington (Republican) 53.68%
  • {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Delbert Metzger (Democratic) 46.32%{{Cite journal|last=Melendy|first=H. Brett|title=Delbert E. Metzger, Hawai'i's Liberal Judge|journal=Hawaiian Journal of History|publisher=Hawaiian Historical Society|volume=35|number=1|page=59|year=2001|access-date=June 30, 2023|url=https://evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/ea421d94-7999-4449-a621-e476e461b05c/content

|quote=Popular Farrington's reelection was never in doubt but the ballots foresaw the coming of the Democratic party to power as Metzger carried Oahu's Fifth District and all Neighbor Islands. The vote was 67,748 to 58,445.}}

}}

See also

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{reflist}}{{1952 United States elections|state=collapsed}}{{Elections to the United States House of Representatives|state=expanded}}

{{Gerald Ford}}

Category:Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower

Category:United States in the Korean War

Category:Lloyd Bentsen

Category:Gerald Ford

Category:Carl Vinson

Category:Jamie Whitten