United States House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads

{{Short description| United States congressional committee}}

The United States House Committee on Post Office and Post Roads was a congressional committee that existed until 1946. A Select Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads was established in 1806 and made a standing committee in 1808 during the 10th Congress. The early membership of the committee consisted of one Member from each state.{{cite book|chapter-url=https://www.archives.gov/legislative/guide/house/chapter-16-post-office-and-post-roads.html|chapter=Chapter 16. Records of the Post Office and Civil Service Committee and Its Predecessors|title=Guide to the Records of the U.S. House of Representatives at the National Archives, 1789-1989 (Record Group 233)|publisher=National Archives and Records Administration|access-date=July 26, 2016}}

The jurisdiction of the committee extended to all proposed legislation relating to the carrying of the mails, both foreign and domestic. It included the determination of the location, construction, and maintenance of post offices and post roads; the acquisition, lease, or transfer of realty or facilities for postal purposes; and certain aspects of the employment and management of postal employees, such as the pay and leave of letter carriers, and the settlement of claims brought by employees or contractors. It included the regulation of the Postal Service, including postal rates, the franking privilege, and the printing of stamped envelopes. At various times the Railway Mail Service, ocean mail service, pneumatic tube service, postal savings banks, postal telegraphy, the Air Mail Service, and Rural Free Delivery were included in its jurisdiction.

As part of its responsibility the committee investigated the management of postal facilities, contracts for carrying the mail, and other subjects such as the forgery of postal money orders.

In 1885 the jurisdiction of the committee was expanded to include appropriation authority. The committee prepared Post Office appropriations bills from that time until 1920 when the authority was revoked under a rule change. The committee functioned until 1946 (the 79th Congress) when its jurisdiction was included in that of the new House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service.

Chairmen

class=wikitable
ChairPartyStateStart of ServiceEnd of Service
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}

| John Rhea

Democratic-RepublicanTennessee18071815
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}

| Samuel D. Ingham

Democratic-RepublicanPennsylvania18151818
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}

| Arthur Livermore

Democratic-RepublicanNew Hampshire18181821
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}

| Francis Johnson

Democratic-RepublicanKentucky18211823
{{Party shading/Democratic-Republican}}

| John Telemachus Johnson

Democratic-RepublicanKentucky18231825
{{Party shading/Jacksonian}}

| Samuel D. Ingham

JacksonianPennsylvania18251828
{{Party shading/Jacksonian}}

| Samuel McKean

JacksonianPennsylvania18281829
{{Party shading/Jacksonian}}

| Richard Mentor Johnson

JacksonianKentucky18291832
{{Party shading/Jacksonian}}

| Henry William Connor

JacksonianNorth Carolina18321839
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| James Iver McKay

DemocraticNorth Carolina18391841
{{Party shading/Whig}}

| George N. Briggs

WhigMassachusetts18411843
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| George Washington Hopkins

DemocraticVirginia18431847
{{Party shading/Whig}}

| William L. Goggin

WhigVirginia18471849
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Emery D. Potter

DemocraticOhio18491851
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Edson B. Olds

DemocraticOhio18511855
{{Party shading/Opposition}}

| Daniel Mace

OppositionIndiana18551857
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| William Hayden English

DemocraticIndiana18571859
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Schuyler Colfax

RepublicanIndiana18591863
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| John B. Alley

RepublicanMassachusetts18631867
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| John F. Farnsworth

RepublicanIllinois18671873
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| John Black Packer

RepublicanPennsylvania18731875
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| John Bullock Clark Jr.

DemocraticMissouri18751877
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Alfred Moore Waddell

DemocraticNorth Carolina18771879
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Hernando Money

DemocraticMississippi18791881
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Henry H. Bingham

RepublicanPennsylvania18811883
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Hernando Money

DemocraticMississippi18831885
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| James Henderson Blount

DemocraticGeorgia18851889
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Henry H. Bingham

RepublicanPennsylvania18891891
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| John S. Henderson

DemocraticNorth Carolina18911895
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Eugene F. Loud

RepublicanCalifornia18951903
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Jesse Overstreet

RepublicanIndiana19031909
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| John W. Weeks

RepublicanMassachusetts19091911
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| John A. Moon

DemocraticTennessee19111919
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Halvor Steenerson

RepublicanMinnesota19191923
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| William Walton Griest

RepublicanPennsylvania19231929
{{Party shading/Republican}}

| Archie D. Sanders

RepublicanNew York19291931
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| James M. Mead

DemocraticNew York19311938
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Milton A. Romjue

DemocraticMissouri19391943
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| Thomas G. Burch

DemocraticVirginia19431946
{{Party shading/Democratic}}

| George D. O'Brien

DemocraticMichigan19461947

References