80th United States Congress

{{Short description|1947–1949 U.S. Congress}}

{{Use American English|date=March 2019}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2019}}

{{Infobox United States Congress

| image= USCapitol1956.jpg

| imagedate= 1956

|number = 80th

|start = January 3, 1947

|end = January 3, 1949

|vp = Vacant{{efn|President pro tempore Arthur Vandenberg, U.S. Senator from Michigan acted his duties as the President of the Senate.}}

|pro tem = Arthur Vandenberg (R)

|speaker = Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R)

|senators = 96

|reps = 435

|delegates = 3

|s-majority = Republican

|h-majority = Republican

|sessionnumber1 = 1st

|sessionstart1 = January 3, 1947

|sessionend1 = December 19, 1947

|sessionnumber2 = Special{{efn|Special session of the Senate.}}

|sessionstart2 = November 17, 1947

|sessionend2 = December 19, 1947

|sessionnumber3 = 2nd

|sessionstart3 = January 6, 1948

|sessionend3 = December 31, 1948

|sessionnumber4 = Special{{efn|Special session of the Senate; this is the most recent instance of the Senate holding a special session.}}

|sessionstart4 = July 26, 1948

|sessionend4 = August 7, 1948

|previous = 79th

|next = 81st

}}

The 80th United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, composed of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, D.C. from January 3, 1947, to January 3, 1949, during the third and fourth years of 33rd President Harry S. Truman's administration (1945–1952). This congressional term featured the most recent special Senate sessions. The apportionment of seats in this House of Representatives was based on the 1940 United States census.

The Republicans won the majority in both chambers, marking the first time since the 71st Congress of 1929–1931, that they held full control of Congress, and the first time since the 72nd Congress of 1931–1933, that they held control of either of the two chambers. This also ended a 14-year Democratic overall federal government trifecta period, dating back to the 73rd Congress (1933–1935). This ties with the previous 14-year Republican trifecta from 1897 to 1911 as the longest trifectas of Congress and is the last time, (as of the year 2024), that a trifecta was achieved that lasted longer than a decade.

Although the 80th Congress passed a total of 906 public bills,{{Cite web |title=Résumé of Congressional Activity Eightieth Congress |url=https://www.senate.gov/reference/resources/pdf/80res.pdf |publisher=United States Senate}} President Truman nicknamed it during his campaign speeches and remarks as the "Do Nothing Congress" and, during the 1948 elections, campaigned as much against it as against his formal opponent, Thomas E. Dewey of New York, the Republican presidential nominee. The 80th Congress did however pass several significant bills with bipartisan support, most famously the Truman Doctrine (on Greece-Turkey anti-communists aid in developing Cold War with former ally Soviet Union), the Marshall Plan (aid for devastated Europe after World War II), and the Taft–Hartley Act of 1947 on labor relations (over Truman's veto), but it opposed most of Truman's Fair Deal domestic programs bills.

{{TOClimit|2}}

Major events

{{See also|1947 in the United States|1948 in the United States|1949 in the United States}}

Major legislation

{{main|List of United States federal legislation, 1901-2001}}

Constitutional amendments

Party summary

File:Bernard Braskamp.jpg Bernard Braskamp delivering the opening prayer for the 80th Congress, 1947]]

= Senate =

{{US Congress party summary

| congress = 80

| party1 = Democratic

| party2 = Progressive

| partylink2 = Wisconsin Progressive Party

| party3 = Republican

| abb1 = D

| abb2 = P

| abb3 = R

| seats1_last = 53

| seats2_last = 1

| seats3_last = 42

| seats_vacant_last = 0

| seats1_begin = 45

| seats2_begin = 0

| seats3_begin = 51

| seats_vacant_begin = 0

| seats1_end = 45

| seats2_end = 0

| seats3_end = 51

| seats_vacant_end = 0

| seats1_next = 54

| seats2_next = 0

| seats3_next = 42

| seats_vacant_next = 0

}}

= House of Representatives =

From the beginning to the end of this Congress, there was no net change in party power. The Democrats lost one seat, which remained vacant until the next Congress.

class=wikitable style="text-align:center"
style="vertical-align:bottom;"

! rowspan=3 | Affiliation

! colspan=4 | Party

(Shading indicates majority caucus)

! rowspan=3 | Total

!

style="background-color:{{party color|Republican Party (United States)}}" |

| style="background-color:{{party color|Democratic Party (United States)}}" |

| style="background-color:{{party color|American Labor Party}}" |

| style="background-color:{{party color|Progressive Party (United States)}}" |

| style="background-color:black" |

style="height:5px"

! Republican

! Democratic

! American Labor

! Progressive

! Vacant

nowrap style="font-size:80%" | End of previous Congress

| 191

| {{party shading/Democratic}} | 236

| 1

| 1

! 429

| 6

colspan=7 |
nowrap | Begin

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | 245

| 187

| 1

| rowspan=2 | 0

! 433

| 2

nowrap | End

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | 242

| 186

| 2

! 430

| 5

Final voting share

! {{party shading/Republican}} | 56.7%

! 43.1%

! 0.2%

! 0.0%

| colspan=2 |

colspan=7 |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | Beginning of the next Congress

| 171

| {{party shading/Democratic}} | 262

| 1

| 0

! 434

| 1

Leadership

{{Congress leadership TOC|R|R}}

=Senate=

==Majority (Republican) leadership==

==Minority (Democratic) leadership==

=House of Representatives=

==Majority (Republican) leadership==

==Minority (Democratic) leadership==

Caucuses

Members

=Senate=

Senators are popularly elected statewide every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Preceding the names in the list below are Senate class numbers, which indicate the cycle of their election, In this Congress, Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1948; Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1950; and Class 1 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1952.

{{col-begin}}

{{col-break}}

==[[List of United States senators from Alabama|Alabama]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. John J. Sparkman (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. J. Lister Hill (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Arizona|Arizona]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Ernest McFarland (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Carl Hayden (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Arkansas|Arkansas]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. John L. McClellan (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. J. William Fulbright (D)

==[[List of United States senators from California|California]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. William Knowland (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Sheridan Downey (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Colorado|Colorado]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Edwin C. Johnson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Eugene Millikin (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Connecticut|Connecticut]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Raymond E. Baldwin (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Brien McMahon (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Delaware|Delaware]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. John J. Williams (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. C. Douglass Buck (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Florida|Florida]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Spessard Holland (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Claude Pepper (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Georgia|Georgia]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Walter F. George (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Richard Russell Jr. (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Idaho|Idaho]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Henry Dworshak (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Glen H. Taylor (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Illinois|Illinois]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Charles W. Brooks (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Scott W. Lucas (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Indiana|Indiana]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. William E. Jenner (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Homer E. Capehart (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Iowa|Iowa]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. George A. Wilson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Kansas|Kansas]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Arthur Capper (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Clyde M. Reed (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Kentucky|Kentucky]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. John Sherman Cooper (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Alben Barkley (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Louisiana|Louisiana]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Allen J. Ellender (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. John H. Overton (D), until May 14, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}William C. Feazel (D), May 18, 1948 – December 30, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Russell B. Long (D), from December 31, 1948

==[[List of United States senators from Maine|Maine]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Ralph Owen Brewster (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Wallace H. White Jr. (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Maryland|Maryland]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Herbert O'Conor (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Millard Tydings (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Leverett Saltonstall (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Michigan|Michigan]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Homer S. Ferguson (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Minnesota|Minnesota]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Edward John Thye (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Joseph H. Ball (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Mississippi|Mississippi]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Theodore G. Bilbo (D), until August 21, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John C. Stennis (D), from November 17, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. James Eastland (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Missouri|Missouri]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. James P. Kem (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Forrest C. Donnell (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Montana|Montana]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Zales Ecton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. James E. Murray (D)

{{col-break}}

==[[List of United States senators from Nebraska|Nebraska]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Hugh A. Butler (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Kenneth S. Wherry (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Nevada|Nevada]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. George W. Malone (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Patrick A. McCarran (D)

==[[List of United States senators from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Styles Bridges (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Charles W. Tobey (R)

==[[List of United States senators from New Jersey|New Jersey]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Howard Alexander Smith (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Albert W. Hawkes (R)

==[[List of United States senators from New Mexico|New Mexico]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Dennis Chávez (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Carl Hatch (D)

==[[List of United States senators from New York|New York]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Irving Ives (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Robert F. Wagner (D)

==[[List of United States senators from North Carolina|North Carolina]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. William B. Umstead (D), until December 30, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}J. Melville Broughton (D), from December 31, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Clyde R. Hoey (D)

==[[List of United States senators from North Dakota|North Dakota]]==

: {{Party stripe|Nonpartisan League}}1. William Langer (R-NPL)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Milton Young (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Ohio|Ohio]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. John W. Bricker (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Robert A. Taft (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Oklahoma|Oklahoma]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Edward H. Moore (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Elmer Thomas (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Oregon|Oregon]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Guy Cordon (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Wayne Morse (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Edward Martin (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Francis J. Myers (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. J. Howard McGrath (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Theodore F. Green (D)

==[[List of United States senators from South Carolina|South Carolina]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Burnet R. Maybank (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Olin D. Johnston (D)

==[[List of United States senators from South Dakota|South Dakota]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Harlan J. Bushfield (R), until September 27, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Vera C. Bushfield (R), October 6, 1948 – December 26, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Karl E. Mundt (R), from December 31, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. John Chandler Gurney (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Tennessee|Tennessee]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Kenneth McKellar (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. Tom Stewart (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Texas|Texas]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Tom T. Connally (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. W. Lee O'Daniel (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Utah|Utah]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Arthur Vivian Watkins (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Elbert D. Thomas (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Vermont|Vermont]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Ralph Flanders (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. George Aiken (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Virginia|Virginia]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Harry F. Byrd (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}2. A. Willis Robertson (D)

==[[List of United States senators from Washington|Washington]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Harry P. Cain (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}3. Warren G. Magnuson (D)

==[[List of United States senators from West Virginia|West Virginia]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Harley M. Kilgore (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Chapman Revercomb (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Wisconsin|Wisconsin]]==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}1. Joseph McCarthy (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}3. Alexander Wiley (R)

==[[List of United States senators from Wyoming|Wyoming]]==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}1. Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}2. Edward V. Robertson (R)

{{col-break}}

[[File:80th United States Congress Senators.svg|thumb|375px|Senators' party membership by state at the opening of the 80th Congress in January 1947

{{legend|#0044aa|2 Democrats}}

{{legend|#660080|1 Democrat and 1 Republican}}

{{legend|#aa0000|2 Republicans}}]]

{{col-end}}

File:80th US Congress House of Reps.png

=House of Representatives=

The names of members of the House of Representatives elected statewide at-large, are preceded by an "At-Large", and the names of those elected from districts, whether plural or single member, are preceded by their district numbers.

The congressional district numbers are linked to articles describing the district itself. Since the boundaries of the districts have changed often and substantially, the linked article may only describe the district as it exists today, and not as it was at the time of this Congress.

{{col-begin}}

{{col-break}}

== [[List of United States representatives from Alabama|Alabama]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|1|E}}. Frank W. Boykin (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|2|E}}. George M. Grant (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|3|E}}. George W. Andrews (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|4|E}}. Sam Hobbs (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|5|E}}. Albert Rains (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|6|E}}. Pete Jarman (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|7|E}}. Carter Manasco (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|8|E}}. Robert E. Jones Jr. (D), from January 28, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alabama|9|E}}. Laurie C. Battle (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Arizona|Arizona]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arizona|AL|E}}. John R. Murdock (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arizona|AL|E}}. Richard F. Harless (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Arkansas|Arkansas]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|1|E}}. Ezekiel C. Gathings (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|2|E}}. Wilbur Mills (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|3|E}}. James William Trimble (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|4|E}}. William Fadjo Cravens (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|5|E}}. Brooks Hays (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|6|E}}. William F. Norrell (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Arkansas|7|E}}. Oren Harris (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from California|California]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|1|E}}. Clarence F. Lea (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|2|E}}. Clair Engle (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|3|E}}. J. Leroy Johnson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|4|E}}. Franck R. Havenner (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|5|E}}. Richard J. Welch (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|6|E}}. George P. Miller (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|7|E}}. John J. Allen Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|8|E}}. Jack Z. Anderson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|9|E}}. Bertrand W. Gearhart (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|10|E}}. Alfred J. Elliott (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|11|E}}. Ernest K. Bramblett (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|12|E}}. Richard Nixon (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|13|E}}. Norris Poulson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|14|E}}. Helen Gahagan Douglas (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|15|E}}. Gordon L. McDonough (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|16|E}}. Donald L. Jackson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|17|E}}. Cecil R. King (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|18|E}}. Willis W. Bradley (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|19|E}}. Chester E. Holifield (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|20|E}}. John Carl Hinshaw (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|21|E}}. Harry R. Sheppard (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|22|E}}. John R. Phillips (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|California|23|E}}. Charles K. Fletcher (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Colorado|Colorado]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Colorado|1|E}}. John A. Carroll (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Colorado|2|E}}. William S. Hill (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Colorado|3|E}}. John Chenoweth (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Colorado|4|E}}. Robert F. Rockwell (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Connecticut|Connecticut]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Connecticut|1|E}}. William J. Miller (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Connecticut|2|E}}. Horace Seely-Brown Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Connecticut|3|E}}. Ellsworth Foote (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Connecticut|4|E}}. John Davis Lodge (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Connecticut|5|E}}. James T. Patterson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Connecticut|AL|E}}. Antoni Sadlak (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Delaware|Delaware]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Delaware|AL|E}}. J. Caleb Boggs (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Florida|Florida]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Florida|1|E}}. J. Hardin Peterson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Florida|2|E}}. Emory H. Price (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Florida|3|E}}. Robert L. F. Sikes (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Florida|4|E}}. George Smathers (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Florida|5|E}}. Joe Hendricks (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Florida|6|E}}. Dwight L. Rogers (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Georgia|Georgia]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|1|E}}. Prince Hulon Preston Jr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|2|E}}. Edward E. Cox (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|3|E}}. Stephen Pace (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|4|E}}. Albert Sidney Camp (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|5|E}}. James C. Davis (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|6|E}}. Carl Vinson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|7|E}}. Henderson Lovelace Lanham (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|8|E}}. William McDonald Wheeler (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|9|E}}. John S. Wood (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Georgia|10|E}}. Paul Brown (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Idaho|Idaho]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Idaho|1|E}}. Abe Goff (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Idaho|2|E}}. John C. Sanborn (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Illinois|Illinois]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|1|E}}. William L. Dawson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|2|E}}. Richard B. Vail (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|3|E}}. Fred E. Busbey (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|4|E}}. Martin Gorski (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|5|E}}. Adolph J. Sabath (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|6|E}}. Thomas J. O'Brien (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|7|E}}. Thomas L. Owens (R), until June 7, 1948, vacant thereafter

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|8|E}}. Thomas S. Gordon (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|9|E}}. Robert Twyman (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|10|E}}. Ralph E. Church (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|11|E}}. Chauncey W. Reed (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|12|E}}. Noah M. Mason (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|13|E}}. Leo E. Allen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|14|E}}. Anton J. Johnson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|15|E}}. Robert B. Chiperfield (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|16|E}}. Everett M. Dirksen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|17|E}}. Leslie C. Arends (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|18|E}}. Edward H. Jenison (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|19|E}}. Rolla C. McMillen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|20|E}}. Sid Simpson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|21|E}}. George Evan Howell (R), until October 5, 1947, vacant thereafter

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|22|E}}. Melvin Price (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|23|E}}. Charles W. Vursell (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|24|E}}. Roy Clippinger (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|25|E}}. C. W. Bishop (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Illinois|AL|E}}. William Stratton (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Indiana|Indiana]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|1|E}}. Ray Madden (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|2|E}}. Charles A. Halleck (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|3|E}}. Robert A. Grant (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|4|E}}. George W. Gillie (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|5|E}}. Forest Harness (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|6|E}}. Noble J. Johnson (R), until July 1, 1948, vacant for remainder of term

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|7|E}}. Gerald W. Landis (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|8|E}}. E. A. Mitchell (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|9|E}}. Earl Wilson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|10|E}}. Raymond S. Springer (R), until August 28, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Ralph Harvey (R), from November 4, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Indiana|11|E}}. Louis Ludlow (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Iowa|Iowa]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|1|E}}. Thomas E. Martin (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|2|E}}. Henry O. Talle (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|3|E}}. John W. Gwynne (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|4|E}}. Karl M. LeCompte (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|5|E}}. Paul H. Cunningham (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|6|E}}. James I. Dolliver (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|7|E}}. Ben F. Jensen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Iowa|8|E}}. Charles B. Hoeven (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Kansas|Kansas]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kansas|1|E}}. Albert M. Cole (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kansas|2|E}}. Errett P. Scrivner (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kansas|3|E}}. Herbert Alton Meyer (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kansas|4|E}}. Edward Herbert Rees (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kansas|5|E}}. Clifford R. Hope (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kansas|6|E}}. Wint Smith (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Kentucky|Kentucky]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|1|E}}. Noble J. Gregory (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|2|E}}. Earle C. Clements (D), until January 6, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}John A. Whitaker (D), from April 17, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|3|E}}. Thruston Ballard Morton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|4|E}}. Frank Chelf (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|5|E}}. Brent Spence (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|6|E}}. Virgil Chapman (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|7|E}}. Wendell H. Meade (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|8|E}}. Joe B. Bates (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Kentucky|9|E}}. John M. Robsion (R), until February 17, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William Lewis (R), from April 24, 1948

== [[List of United States representatives from Louisiana|Louisiana]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|1|E}}. F. Edward Hébert (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|2|E}}. Hale Boggs (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|3|E}}. James R. Domengeaux (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|4|E}}. Overton Brooks (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|5|E}}. Otto Passman (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|6|E}}. James H. Morrison (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|7|E}}. Henry D. Larcade Jr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Louisiana|8|E}}. A. Leonard Allen (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Maine|Maine]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maine|1|E}}. Robert Hale (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maine|2|E}}. Margaret Chase Smith (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maine|3|E}}. Frank Fellows (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Maryland|Maryland]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|1|E}}. Edward Tylor Miller (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|2|E}}. Hugh Meade (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|3|E}}. Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. (D), until May 16, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|3|E}}. Edward Garmatz (D), from July 15, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|4|E}}. George Hyde Fallon (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|5|E}}. Lansdale G. Sasscer (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Maryland|6|E}}. James Glenn Beall (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|1|E}}. John W. Heselton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|2|E}}. Charles Clason (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|3|E}}. Philip J. Philbin (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|4|E}}. Harold Donohue (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|5|E}}. Edith Nourse Rogers (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|6|E}}. George J. Bates (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|7|E}}. Thomas J. Lane (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|8|E}}. Angier Goodwin (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|9|E}}. Charles L. Gifford (R), until August 23, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|9|E}}. Donald W. Nicholson (R), from November 18, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|10|E}}. Christian Herter (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|11|E}}. John F. Kennedy (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|12|E}}. John W. McCormack (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|13|E}}. Richard B. Wigglesworth (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Massachusetts|14|E}}. Joseph W. Martin Jr. (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Michigan|Michigan]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|1|E}}. George G. Sadowski (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|2|E}}. Earl C. Michener (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|3|E}}. Paul W. Shafer (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|4|E}}. Clare E. Hoffman (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|5|E}}. Bartel J. Jonkman (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|6|E}}. William W. Blackney (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|7|E}}. Jesse P. Wolcott (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|8|E}}. Fred L. Crawford (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|9|E}}. Albert J. Engel (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|10|E}}. Roy O. Woodruff (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|11|E}}. Fred Bradley (R), until May 24, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Charles E. Potter (R), from August 26, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|12|E}}. John B. Bennett (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|13|E}}. Howard A. Coffin (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|14|E}}. Harold F. Youngblood (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|15|E}}. John Dingell Sr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|16|E}}. John Lesinski Sr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Michigan|17|E}}. George Anthony Dondero (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Minnesota|Minnesota]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|1|E}}. August H. Andresen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|2|E}}. Joseph P. O'Hara (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|3|E}}. George MacKinnon (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|4|E}}. Edward Devitt (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|5|E}}. Walter Judd (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|6|E}}. Harold Knutson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|7|E}}. Herman Carl Andersen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|8|E}}. John Blatnik (DFL){{efn | name=DFL | The Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL) is the Minnesota affiliate of the U.S. Democratic Party and are counted as Democrats.}}, until August 13, 1946

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Minnesota|9|E}}. Harold Hagen (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Mississippi|Mississippi]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|1|E}}. John E. Rankin (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|2|E}}. Jamie L. Whitten (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|3|E}}. William M. Whittington (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|4|E}}. Thomas Abernethy (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|5|E}}. W. Arthur Winstead (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|6|E}}. William M. Colmer (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Mississippi|7|E}}. John Bell Williams (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Missouri|Missouri]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|1|E}}. Samuel W. Arnold (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|2|E}}. Max Schwabe (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|3|E}}. William Clay Cole (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|4|E}}. C. Jasper Bell (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|5|E}}. Albert L. Reeves Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|6|E}}. Marion T. Bennett (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|7|E}}. Dewey Short (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|8|E}}. Parke M. Banta (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|9|E}}. Clarence Cannon (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|10|E}}. Orville Zimmerman (D), until April 7, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Paul C. Jones (D), from November 2, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|11|E}}. Claude I. Bakewell (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|12|E}}. Walter C. Ploeser (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Missouri|13|E}}. Frank M. Karsten (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Montana|Montana]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Montana|1|E}}. Mike Mansfield (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Montana|2|E}}. Wesley A. D'Ewart (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Nebraska|Nebraska]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Nebraska|1|E}}. Carl Curtis (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Nebraska|2|E}}. Howard Buffett (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Nebraska|3|E}}. Karl Stefan (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Nebraska|4|E}}. Arthur L. Miller (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Nevada|Nevada]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Nevada|AL|E}}. Charles H. Russell (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Hampshire|1|E}}. Chester Earl Merrow (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Hampshire|2|E}}. Norris Cotton (R)

{{col-break}}

== [[List of United States representatives from New Jersey|New Jersey]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|1|E}}. Charles A. Wolverton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|2|E}}. T. Millet Hand (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|3|E}}. James C. Auchincloss (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|4|E}}. Frank A. Mathews Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|5|E}}. Charles A. Eaton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|6|E}}. Clifford P. Case (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|7|E}}. J. Parnell Thomas (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|8|E}}. Gordon Canfield (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|9|E}}. Harry L. Towe (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|10|E}}. Fred A. Hartley Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|11|E}}. Frank Sundstrom (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|12|E}}. Robert Kean (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|13|E}}. Mary T. Norton (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Jersey|14|E}}. Edward J. Hart (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from New Mexico|New Mexico]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Mexico|AL|E}}. Georgia Lee Lusk (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New Mexico|AL|E}}. Antonio M. Fernández (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from New York|New York]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|1|E}}. W. Kingsland Macy (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|2|E}}. Leonard W. Hall (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|3|E}}. Henry J. Latham (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|4|E}}. Gregory McMahon (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|5|E}}. Robert Tripp Ross (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|6|E}}. Robert Nodar Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|7|E}}. John J. Delaney (D), until November 18, 1948

:: Vacant thereafter

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|8|E}}. Joseph L. Pfeifer (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|9|E}}. Eugene J. Keogh (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|10|E}}. Andrew L. Somers (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|11|E}}. James J. Heffernan (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|12|E}}. John J. Rooney (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|13|E}}. Donald L. O'Toole (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|14|E}}. Leo F. Rayfiel (D), until September 13, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Abraham J. Multer (D), from November 4, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|15|E}}. Emanuel Celler (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|16|E}}. Ellsworth B. Buck (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|17|E}}. Frederic René Coudert Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}{{Ushr|New York|18|E}}. Vito Marcantonio (AL)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|19|E}}. Arthur George Klein (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|20|E}}. Sol Bloom (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|21|E}}. Jacob Javits (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|22|E}}. Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|23|E}}. Walter A. Lynch (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|24|E}}. Benjamin J. Rabin (D), until December 31, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|American Labor Party}}Leo Isacson (AL), from February 17, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|25|E}}. Charles A. Buckley (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|26|E}}. David M. Potts (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|27|E}}. Ralph W. Gwinn (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|28|E}}. Ralph A. Gamble (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|29|E}}. Katharine St. George (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|30|E}}. Jay Le Fevre (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|31|E}}. Bernard W. Kearney (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|32|E}}. William T. Byrne (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|33|E}}. Dean P. Taylor (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|34|E}}. Clarence E. Kilburn (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|35|E}}. Hadwen C. Fuller (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|36|E}}. R. Walter Riehlman (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|37|E}}. Edwin Arthur Hall (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|38|E}}. John Taber (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|39|E}}. W. Sterling Cole (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|40|E}}. Kenneth Keating (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|41|E}}. James W. Wadsworth Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|42|E}}. Walter G. Andrews (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|43|E}}. Edward J. Elsaesser (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|44|E}}. John Cornelius Butler (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|New York|45|E}}. Daniel A. Reed (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from North Carolina|North Carolina]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|1|E}}. Herbert Covington Bonner (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|2|E}}. John H. Kerr (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|3|E}}. Graham A. Barden (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|4|E}}. Harold D. Cooley (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|5|E}}. John Hamlin Folger (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|6|E}}. Carl T. Durham (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|7|E}}. J. Bayard Clark (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|8|E}}. Charles B. Deane (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|9|E}}. Robert L. Doughton (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|10|E}}. Hamilton C. Jones (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|11|E}}. Alfred L. Bulwinkle (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Carolina|12|E}}. Monroe Minor Redden (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from North Dakota|North Dakota]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Nonpartisan League}}{{Ushr|North Dakota|AL|E}}. William Lemke (R-NPL)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|North Dakota|AL|E}}. Charles R. Robertson (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Ohio|Ohio]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|1|E}}. Charles H. Elston (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|2|E}}. William E. Hess (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|3|E}}. Raymond H. Burke (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|4|E}}. Robert Franklin Jones (R), until September 2, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}William Moore McCulloch (R), from November 4, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|5|E}}. Cliff Clevenger (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|6|E}}. Edward Oscar McCowen (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|7|E}}. Clarence J. Brown (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|8|E}}. Frederick Cleveland Smith (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|9|E}}. Homer A. Ramey (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|10|E}}. Thomas A. Jenkins (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|11|E}}. Walter E. Brehm (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|12|E}}. John M. Vorys (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|13|E}}. Alvin F. Weichel (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|14|E}}. Walter B. Huber (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|15|E}}. Percy W. Griffiths (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|16|E}}. Henderson H. Carson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|17|E}}. J. Harry McGregor (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|18|E}}. Earl R. Lewis (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|19|E}}. Michael J. Kirwan (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|20|E}}. Michael A. Feighan (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|21|E}}. Robert Crosser (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|22|E}}. Frances P. Bolton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Ohio|AL|E}}. George H. Bender (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Oklahoma|Oklahoma]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|1|E}}. George B. Schwabe (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|2|E}}. William G. Stigler (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|3|E}}. Carl Albert (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|4|E}}. Glen D. Johnson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|5|E}}. A. S. Mike Monroney (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|6|E}}. Toby Morris (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|7|E}}. Preston E. Peden (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oklahoma|8|E}}. Ross Rizley (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Oregon|Oregon]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oregon|1|E}}. A. Walter Norblad (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oregon|2|E}}. Lowell Stockman (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oregon|3|E}}. Homer D. Angell (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Oregon|4|E}}. Harris Ellsworth (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|1|E}}. James A. Gallagher (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|2|E}}. Robert N. McGarvey (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|3|E}}. Hardie Scott (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|4|E}}. Franklin J. Maloney (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|5|E}}. George W. Sarbacher Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|6|E}}. Hugh Scott (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|7|E}}. E. Wallace Chadwick (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|8|E}}. Charles L. Gerlach (R), until May 5, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Franklin H. Lichtenwalter (R), from September 9, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|9|E}}. Paul B. Dague (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|10|E}}. James P. Scoblick (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|11|E}}. Mitchell Jenkins (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|12|E}}. Ivor D. Fenton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|13|E}}. Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|14|E}}. Wilson D. Gillette (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|15|E}}. Robert F. Rich (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|16|E}}. Samuel K. McConnell Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|17|E}}. Richard M. Simpson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|18|E}}. John C. Kunkel (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|19|E}}. Leon H. Gavin (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|20|E}}. Francis E. Walter (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|21|E}}. Chester H. Gross (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|22|E}}. James E. Van Zandt (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|23|E}}. William J. Crow (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|24|E}}. Thomas E. Morgan (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|25|E}}. Louis E. Graham (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|26|E}}. Harve Tibbott (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|27|E}}. Augustine B. Kelley (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|28|E}}. Carroll D. Kearns (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|29|E}}. John McDowell (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|30|E}}. Robert J. Corbett (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|31|E}}. James G. Fulton (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|32|E}}. Herman P. Eberharter (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Pennsylvania|33|E}}. Frank Buchanan (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Rhode Island|1|E}}. Aime Forand (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Rhode Island|2|E}}. John E. Fogarty (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from South Carolina|South Carolina]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Carolina|1|E}}. L. Mendel Rivers (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Carolina|2|E}}. John J. Riley (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Carolina|3|E}}. William Jennings Bryan Dorn (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Carolina|4|E}}. Joseph R. Bryson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Carolina|5|E}}. James P. Richards (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Carolina|6|E}}. John L. McMillan (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from South Dakota|South Dakota]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Dakota|1|E}}. Karl E. Mundt (R), until December 30, 1948, vacant thereafter

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|South Dakota|2|E}}. Francis H. Case (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Tennessee|Tennessee]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|1|E}}. Dayton E. Phillips (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|2|E}}. John Jennings Jr. (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|3|E}}. Estes Kefauver (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|4|E}}. Albert Gore Sr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|5|E}}. Joe L. Evins (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|6|E}}. Percy Priest (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|7|E}}. W. Wirt Courtney (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|8|E}}. Tom J. Murray (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|9|E}}. Jere Cooper (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Tennessee|10|E}}. Clifford Davis (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Texas|Texas]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|1|E}}. Wright Patman (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|2|E}}. Jesse M. Combs (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|3|E}}. Lindley Beckworth (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|4|E}}. Sam Rayburn (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|5|E}}. Joseph Franklin Wilson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|6|E}}. Olin E. Teague (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|7|E}}. Tom Pickett (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|8|E}}. Albert Thomas (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|9|E}}. Joseph J. Mansfield (D), until July 12, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Clark W. Thompson (D), from August 23, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|10|E}}. Lyndon B. Johnson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|11|E}}. William R. Poage (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|12|E}}. Wingate H. Lucas (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|13|E}}. Ed Gossett (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|14|E}}. John E. Lyle Jr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|15|E}}. Milton H. West (D), until October 28, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Lloyd Bentsen (D), from December 4, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|16|E}}. R. Ewing Thomason (D), until July 31, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Kenneth M. Regan (D), from August 23, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|17|E}}. Omar Burleson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|18|E}}. Eugene Worley (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|19|E}}. George H. Mahon (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|20|E}}. Paul J. Kilday (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Texas|21|E}}. O. C. Fisher (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Utah|Utah]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Utah|1|E}}. Walter K. Granger (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Utah|2|E}}. William A. Dawson (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Vermont|Vermont]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Vermont|AL|E}}. Charles A. Plumley (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Virginia|Virginia]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|1|E}}. S. Otis Bland (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|2|E}}. Porter Hardy Jr. (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|3|E}}. J. Vaughan Gary (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|4|E}}. Patrick H. Drewry (D), until December 21, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D), from February 17, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|5|E}}. Thomas B. Stanley (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|6|E}}. J. Lindsay Almond (D), until April 17, 1948

:: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}Clarence G. Burton (D), from November 2, 1948

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|7|E}}. Burr Harrison (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|8|E}}. Howard W. Smith (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Virginia|9|E}}. John W. Flannagan Jr. (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Washington|Washington]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Washington|1|E}}. Homer Jones (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Washington|2|E}}. Henry M. Jackson (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Washington|3|E}}. Fred B. Norman (R), until April 18, 1947

:: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}Russell V. Mack (R), from June 7, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Washington|4|E}}. Hal Holmes (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Washington|5|E}}. Walt Horan (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Washington|6|E}}. Thor C. Tollefson (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from West Virginia|West Virginia]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|West Virginia|1|E}}. Francis J. Love (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|West Virginia|2|E}}. Melvin C. Snyder (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|West Virginia|3|E}}. Edward G. Rohrbough (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|West Virginia|4|E}}. Hubert S. Ellis (R)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|West Virginia|5|E}}. John Kee (D)

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|West Virginia|6|E}}. E. H. Hedrick (D)

== [[List of United States representatives from Wisconsin|Wisconsin]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|1|E}}. Lawrence H. Smith (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|2|E}}. Glenn Robert Davis (R), from April 22, 1947

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|3|E}}. William H. Stevenson (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|4|E}}. John C. Brophy (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|5|E}}. Charles J. Kersten (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|6|E}}. Frank Bateman Keefe (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|7|E}}. Reid F. Murray (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|8|E}}. John W. Byrnes (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|9|E}}. Merlin Hull (R)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wisconsin|10|E}}. Alvin O'Konski (R)

== [[List of United States representatives from Wyoming|Wyoming]] ==

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Wyoming|AL|E}}. Frank A. Barrett (R)

== Non-voting members ==

: {{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Alaska Territory|AL|Alaska Territory}}. Bob Bartlett (D)

: {{Party stripe|Republican Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Hawaii Territory|AL|Hawaii Territory}}. Joseph Rider Farrington (R)

: {{Party stripe|Popular Democratic Party (Puerto Rico)}}{{Party stripe|Democratic Party (US)}}{{Ushr|Puerto Rico|AL|Puerto Rico}}. Antonio Fernós-Isern (PPD/D)

{{col-end}}

Changes in membership

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

= Senate =

There were three deaths, two resignations, and one lost mid-term election.

{{see also|List of special elections to the United States Senate}}

{{Ordinal US Congress change|Senate}}

|-

| Mississippi
(1)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Theodore G. Bilbo (D)

| Died August 21, 1947.
Successor was elected November 17, 1947.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | John C. Stennis (D)

| November 17, 1947

|-

| Louisiana
(3)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | John H. Overton (D)

| Died May 14, 1948.
Successor was appointed to continue the term.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | William C. Feazel (D)

| May 18, 1948

|-

| South Dakota
(2)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Harlan J. Bushfield (R)

| Died September 27, 1948.
Successor was appointed to finish the term.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Vera C. Bushfield (R)

| October 6, 1948

|-

| South Dakota
(2)

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Vera C. Bushfield (R)

| Interim appointee resigned December 26, 1948.
Successor was appointed to finish the term.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Karl E. Mundt (R)

| December 31, 1948

|-

| Louisiana
(3)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | William C. Feazel (D)

| Interim appointee retired when successor elected.
Successor was elected December 31, 1948.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Russell B. Long (D)

| December 31, 1948

|-

| North Carolina
(2)

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | William B. Umstead (D)

| Interim appointee lost election to finish the term.
Successor was elected December 31, 1948.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | J. Melville Broughton (D)

| December 31, 1948

|}

= House of Representatives =

There were nine deaths and seven resignations.

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

{{Ordinal US Congress change|House}}

|-

| {{ushr|Alabama|8|Alabama
8th}}

| Vacant

| style="font-size:80%" | John Sparkman resigned in previous Congress after being elected to the US Senate having been re-elected as well.

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Robert E. Jones Jr. (D)

| Seated January 28, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Wisconsin|2|Wisconsin
2nd}}

| Vacant

| style="font-size:80%" | Representative Robert Kirkland Henry died during previous Congress having been previously re-elected.

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Glenn Robert Davis (R)

| Seated April 22, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Washington|3|Washington
3rd}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Fred B. Norman (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died April 18, 1947

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Russell V. Mack (R)

| Seated June 7, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Pennsylvania|8|Pennsylvania
8th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Charles L. Gerlach (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died May 5, 1947

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Franklin H. Lichtenwalter (R)

| Seated September 9, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Maryland|3|Maryland
3rd}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned May 16, 1947, after being elected Mayor of Baltimore

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Edward Garmatz (D)

| Seated July 15, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Michigan|11|Michigan
11th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Frederick Van Ness Bradley (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died May 24, 1947

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Charles E. Potter (R)

| Seated August 26, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Texas|9|Texas
9th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Joseph J. Mansfield (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died July 12, 1947

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Clark W. Thompson (D)

| Seated August 23, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Texas|16|Texas
16th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | R. Ewing Thomason (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned July 31, 1947, after being appointed as a judge of the US District Court for the Western District of Texas

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Kenneth M. Regan (D)

| Seated August 23, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Massachusetts|9|Massachusetts
9th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Charles L. Gifford (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died August 23, 1947

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Donald W. Nicholson (R)

| Seated November 18, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Indiana|10|Indiana
10th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Raymond S. Springer (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died August 28, 1947

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Ralph Harvey (R)

| Seated November 4, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Ohio|4|Ohio
4th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Robert Franklin Jones (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 2, 1947, to become a member of the Federal Communications Commission

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | William Moore McCulloch (R)

| Seated November 4, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|New York|14|New York
14th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Leo F. Rayfiel (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned September 13, 1947, having been appointed a judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Abraham J. Multer (D)

| Seated November 4, 1947

|-

| {{ushr|Illinois|21|Illinois
21st}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | George Evan Howell (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned October 5, 1947, after being appointed judge of the US Court of Claims

| colspan=2 | Vacant until next Congress

|-

| {{ushr|Virginia|4|Virginia
4th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Patrick H. Drewry (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died December 21, 1947

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Watkins Moorman Abbitt (D)

| Seated February 17, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|New York|24|New York
24th}}

| {{party shading/Democratic}} | Benjamin J. Rabin (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 31, 1947

| {{Party shading/Independent}} | Leo Isacson (AL)

| Seated February 17, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|Kentucky|2|Kentucky
2nd}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Earle Clements (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned January 6, 1948, to become Governor of Kentucky

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | John A. Whitaker (D)

| Seated April 17, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|Kentucky|9|Kentucky
9th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | John M. Robsion (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died February 17, 1948

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | William Lewis (R)

| Seated April 24, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|Missouri|10|Missouri
10th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Orville Zimmerman (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died April 7, 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Paul C. Jones (D)

| Seated November 2, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|Virginia|6|Virginia
6th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | J. Lindsay Almond (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned April 17, 1948, having been elected attorney General of Virginia

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Clarence G. Burton (D)

| Seated November 2, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|Illinois|7|Illinois
7th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Thomas L. Owens (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died June 7, 1948

| colspan=2 | Vacant until next Congress

|-

| {{ushr|Indiana|6|Indiana
6th}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Noble J. Johnson (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned July 1, 1948, after being appointed as judge of US Court of Customs & Patent Appeals

| colspan=2 | Vacant until next Congress

|-

| {{ushr|Texas|15|Texas
15th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Milton H. West (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died October 28, 1948

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | Lloyd Bentsen (D)

| Seated December 4, 1948

|-

| {{ushr|New York|7|New York
7th}}

| {{Party shading/Democratic}} | John J. Delaney (D)

| style="font-size:80%" | Died November 18, 1948

| colspan=2 | Vacant until next Congress

|-

| {{ushr|South Dakota|1|South Dakota
1st}}

| {{Party shading/Republican}} | Karl E. Mundt (R)

| style="font-size:80%" | Resigned December 30, 1948, after being appointed to the U.S. Senate having already been elected.

| colspan=2 | Vacant until next Congress

|}

Committees

{{List of Congressional Committees instructions}}

=Senate=

=House of Representatives=

=Joint committees=

Employees

=[[List of federal agencies in the United States#United States Congress|Legislative branch agency]] directors=

=Senate=

=House of Representatives=

See also

Explanatory notes

{{Notelist}}

Citations

{{Reflist}}