34th United States Congress
The 34th United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government, consisting of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington, D.C., from March 4, 1855, to March 4, 1857, during the last two years of Franklin Pierce's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the Seventh Census of the United States in 1850. The Whig Party, one of the two major parties of the era, had largely collapsed, although many former Whigs ran as Republicans or as members of the "Opposition Party." The Senate had a Democratic majority, and the House was controlled by a coalition of Representatives led by Nathaniel P. Banks, a member of the American Party.
Major events
- March 30, 1855: Elections were held for the first Kansas Territory legislature. Missourians crossed the border in large numbers to elect a pro-slavery body.
- July 2, 1855: The Kansas territorial legislature convened in Pawnee and began enacting proslavery laws.
- November 21, 1855: Large-scale Bleeding Kansas violence began with events leading to the Wakarusa War between antislavery and proslavery forces.
- December 3, 1855 – February 2, 1856: The election for Speaker of the House was "the longest and most contentious Speaker election in its history," due to "Sectional conflict over slavery and a rising anti-immigrant mood in the nation contributed to a poisoned and deteriorating political climate." No party had controlled a majority of the seats, and more than 21 members vied for the post of Speaker. The election took 133 ballots and two months with Nathaniel P. Banks winning over William Aiken Jr. by 103 to 100 votes. "Banks, a member of both the nativist American Party and the Free Soil Party, served a term as Speaker before Democrats won control of the chamber in the 35th Congress."
- January 24, 1856: President Franklin Pierce declared the new Free-State Topeka government in Bleeding Kansas to be in rebellion.
- January 26, 1856: First Battle of Seattle: Marines from the USS Decatur drove off Indian attackers after an all-day battle with settlers.
- February, 1856: Tintic War broke out in Utah
- February 18, 1856: The American Party nominated their first Presidential candidate, former President Millard Fillmore.
- May 21, 1856: Lawrence, Kansas, captured and burned by pro-slavery forces.
- May 22, 1856: Representative Preston Brooks of South Carolina attacking Senator Charles Sumner, beating him with a cane in the hall of the Senate, for a speech Sumner had made attacking Southerners who sympathized with the pro-slavery violence in Kansas. Sumner was unable to return to duty for 3 years while he recovered; Brooks became a hero across the South.
- May 24, 1856: Pottawatomie massacre
- June 2, 1856: Battle of Black Jack
- August 30, 1856: Battle of Osawatomie
- November 4, 1856: U.S. presidential election, 1856: Democrat James Buchanan defeated former President Millard Fillmore, representing a coalition of "Know-Nothings" and Whigs, and John C. Frémont of the fledgling Republican Party.
- November 17, 1856: On the Sonoita River in present-day southern Arizona, the United States Army established Fort Buchanan to help control new land acquired in the Gadsden Purchase.
- January 9, 1857: The 7.9 Mw Fort Tejon earthquake affects Central and Southern California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of IX.
Major legislation
- August 18, 1856: Guano Islands Act, ch. 164,
Treaties
- January 26, 1855: Point No Point Treaty signed in the Washington Territory.
- July 1, 1855: Quinault Treaty signed, Quinault and Quileute ceded their land to the United States.
Party summary
The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of this Congress. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.During the elections for this Congress, opponents to the Democrats used the Whig party label inconsistently and not at all in some states. Hence in this Congress, and in accordance with the practice of the Senate and House, representatives not associated with the Democratic Party or the American Party are labeled as "Opposition." This is the first example in U.S. history of a form of coalition government in either house of Congress.
Senate
House of Representatives
The parties that opposed the Democrats joined a coalition and formed the majority. The Know Nothings caucused with the Opposition coalition.Leadership
Senate
- President: Vacant
- President pro tempore: Jesse D. Bright, until June 9, 1856
- * Charles E. Stuart, June 11, 1856 – January 6, 1857
- * James M. Mason, from January 6, 1857
House of Representatives
- Speaker: Nathaniel P. Banks
- Democratic Caucus Chairman: George Washington Jones
Members
Senate
Senators were elected by the state legislatures every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Preceding the names in the list below are Senate class numbers, which indicate the cycle of their election. In this Congress, Class 1 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1856; Class 2 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1858; and Class 3 meant their term began in this Congress, requiring reelection in 1860.[List of [United States Senators from Alabama|Alabama]]
- 2. Clement C. Clay Jr.
- 3. Benjamin Fitzpatrick, from November 26, 1855
Arkansas">List of United States Senators from Arkansas">Arkansas
- 2. William K. Sebastian
- 3. Robert W. Johnson
California">List of United States Senators from California">California
- 1. John B. Weller
- 3. William M. Gwin, from January 13, 1857
Connecticut">List of United States Senators from Connecticut">Connecticut
- 1. Isaac Toucey
- 3. Lafayette S. Foster
Delaware">List of United States Senators from Delaware">Delaware
- 1. James A. Bayard Jr.
- 2. John M. Clayton, until November 9, 1856
- * Joseph P. Comegys, November 19, 1856 – January 14, 1857
- * Martin W. Bates, from January 14, 1857
Florida">List of United States Senators from Florida">Florida
- 1. Stephen Mallory
- 3. David Levy Yulee
Georgia">List of United States Senators from Georgia">Georgia
- 2. Robert Toombs
- 3. Alfred Iverson, Sr.
Illinois">List of United States Senators from Illinois">Illinois
- 2. Stephen A. Douglas
- 3. Lyman Trumbull
Indiana">List of United States Senators from Indiana">Indiana
- 1. Jesse D. Bright
- 3. Graham N. Fitch, from February 4, 1857
Iowa">List of United States Senators from Iowa">Iowa
- 2. George Wallace Jones
- 3. James Harlan, until January 5, 1857
- * James Harlan, from January 29, 1857
Kentucky">List of United States Senators from Kentucky">Kentucky
- 2. John B. Thompson
- 3. John J. Crittenden
Louisiana">List of United States Senators from Louisiana">Louisiana
- 2. Judah P. Benjamin
- 3. John Slidell
Maine">List of United States Senators from Maine">Maine
- 1. Hannibal Hamlin, until January 7, 1857
- * Amos Nourse, from January 16, 1857
- 2. William P. Fessenden
Maryland">List of United States Senators from Maryland">Maryland
- 3. James Pearce
- 1. Thomas Pratt
Massachusetts">List of United States Senators from Massachusetts">Massachusetts
- 1. Charles Sumner
- 2. Henry Wilson
Michigan">List of United States Senators from Michigan">Michigan
- 1. Lewis Cass
- 2. Charles E. Stuart
Mississippi">List of United States Senators from Mississippi">Mississippi
- 1. Stephen Adams
- 2. Albert G. Brown
Missouri">List of United States Senators from Missouri">Missouri
- 1. Henry S. Geyer
- 3. James S. Green, from January 12, 1857
New Hampshire">List of United States Senators from New Hampshire">New Hampshire
- 2. John P. Hale, from July 30, 1855
- 3. James Bell, from July 30, 1855
New Jersey">List of United States Senators from New Jersey">New Jersey
- 1. John R. Thomson
- 2. William Wright
New York">List of United States Senators from New York">New York
- 3. William H. Seward
- 1. Hamilton Fish
North Carolina">List of United States Senators from North Carolina">North Carolina
- 2. David S. Reid
- 3. Asa Biggs
Ohio">List of United States Senators from Ohio">Ohio
- 1. Benjamin Wade
- 3. George E. Pugh
Pennsylvania">List of United States Senators from Pennsylvania">Pennsylvania
- 1. Richard Brodhead
- 3. William Bigler, from January 14, 1856
Rhode Island">List of United States Senators from Rhode Island">Rhode Island
- 1. Charles T. James
- 2. Philip Allen
South Carolina">List of United States Senators from South Carolina">South Carolina
- 3. Andrew Butler
- 2. Josiah J. Evans
Tennessee">List of United States Senators from Tennessee">Tennessee
- 2. John Bell
- 1. James C. Jones
Texas">List of United States Senators from Texas">Texas
- 2. Samuel Houston
- 1. Thomas J. Rusk
Vermont">List of United States Senators from Vermont">Vermont
- 1. Solomon Foot
- 3. Jacob Collamer
Virginia">List of United States Senators from Virginia">Virginia
- 1. James M. Mason
- 2. Robert M. T. Hunter
Wisconsin">List of United States Senators from Wisconsin">Wisconsin
- 1. Henry Dodge
- 3. Charles Durkee
House of Representatives
[List of [United States Representatives from Alabama|Alabama]]
- . Percy Walker
- . Eli S. Shorter
- . James F. Dowdell
- . William Russell Smith
- . George S. Houston
- . Williamson R. W. Cobb
- . Sampson W. Harris
Arkansas">List of United States Representatives from Arkansas">Arkansas
- . Alfred B. Greenwood
- . Albert Rust
California">List of United States Representatives from California">California
- . James W. Denver
- . Philemon T. Herbert
Connecticut">List of United States Representatives from Connecticut">Connecticut
- . Ezra Clark Jr.
- . John Woodruff
- . Sidney Dean
- . William W. Welch
Delaware">List of United States Representatives from Delaware">Delaware
- . Elisha D. Cullen
Florida">List of United States Representatives from Florida">Florida
- . Augustus Maxwell
Georgia">List of United States Representatives from Georgia">Georgia
- . James L. Seward
- . Martin J. Crawford
- . Robert P. Trippe
- . Hiram B. Warner
- . John H. Lumpkin
- . Howell Cobb
- . Nathaniel G. Foster
- . Alexander Stephens
Illinois">List of United States Representatives from Illinois">Illinois
- . Elihu B. Washburne
- . James H. Woodworth
- . Jesse O. Norton
- . James Knox
- . William A. Richardson, until August 25, 1856
- * Jacob C. Davis, from November 4, 1856
- . Thomas L. Harris
- . James C. Allen, until July 18, 1856, and from November 4, 1856
- . James L. D. Morrison, from November 4, 1856
- . Samuel S. Marshall
Indiana">List of United States Representatives from Indiana">Indiana
- . Smith Miller
- . William H. English
- . George G. Dunn
- . William Cumback
- . David P. Holloway
- . Lucien Barbour
- . Harvey D. Scott
- . Daniel Mace
- . Schuyler Colfax
- . Samuel Brenton
- . John U. Pettit
Iowa">List of United States Representatives from Iowa">Iowa
- . Augustus Hall
- . James Thorington
Kentucky">List of United States Representatives from Kentucky">Kentucky
- . Henry C. Burnett
- . John P. Campbell Jr.
- . Warner L. Underwood
- . Albert G. Talbott
- . Joshua Jewett
- . John M. Elliott
- . Humphrey Marshall
- . Alexander K. Marshall
- . Leander Cox
- . Samuel F. Swope
Louisiana">List of United States Representatives from Louisiana">Louisiana
- . George Eustis Jr.
- . Miles Taylor
- . Thomas G. Davidson
- . John M. Sandidge
Maine">List of United States Representatives from Maine">Maine
- . John M. Wood
- . John J. Perry
- . Ebenezer Knowlton
- . Samuel P. Benson
- . Israel Washburn Jr.
- . Thomas J. D. Fuller
Maryland">List of United States Representatives from Maryland">Maryland
- . James A. Stewart
- . James B. Ricaud
- . J. Morrison Harris
- . Henry Winter Davis
- . Henry William Hoffman
- . Thomas F. Bowie
Massachusetts">List of United States Representatives from Massachusetts">Massachusetts
- . Robert B. Hall
- . James Buffington
- . William S. Damrell
- . Linus B. Comins
- . Anson Burlingame
- . Timothy Davis
- . Nathaniel P. Banks
- . Chauncey L. Knapp
- . Alexander De Witt
- . Calvin C. Chaffee
- . Mark Trafton
Michigan">List of United States Representatives from Michigan">Michigan
- . William A. Howard
- . Henry Waldron
- . David S. Walbridge
- . George W. Peck
Mississippi">List of United States Representatives from Mississippi">Mississippi
- . Daniel B. Wright
- . Hendley S. Bennett
- . William Barksdale
- . William A. Lake
- . John A. Quitman
Missouri">List of United States Representatives from Missouri">Missouri
- . Luther M. Kennett
- . Gilchrist Porter
- . James J. Lindley
- . Mordecai Oliver
- . John G. Miller, until May 11, 1856
- * Thomas P. Akers, from August 18, 1856
- . John S. Phelps
- . Samuel Caruthers
New Hampshire">List of United States Representatives from New Hampshire">New Hampshire
- . James Pike
- . Mason Tappan
- . Aaron H. Cragin
New Jersey">List of United States Representatives from New Jersey">New Jersey
- . Isaiah D. Clawson
- . George R. Robbins
- . James Bishop
- . George Vail
- . Alexander C. M. Pennington
New York">List of United States Representatives from New York">New York
- . William Valk
- . James S. T. Stranahan
- . Guy R. Pelton
- . John Kelly
- . Thomas R. Whitney
- . John Wheeler
- . Thomas Child Jr.
- . Abram Wakeman
- . Bayard Clarke
- . Ambrose S. Murray
- . Rufus H. King
- . Killian Miller
- . Russell Sage
- . Samuel Dickson
- . Edward Dodd
- . George A. Simmons
- . Francis E. Spinner
- . Thomas R. Horton
- . Jonas A. Hughston
- . Orsamus B. Matteson, until February 27, 1857
- . Henry Bennett
- . Andrew Z. McCarty
- . William A. Gilbert, until February 27, 1857
- . Amos P. Granger
- . Edwin B. Morgan
- . Andrew Oliver
- . John M. Parker
- . William H. Kelsey
- . John Williams
- . Benjamin Pringle
- . Thomas T. Flagler
- . Solomon G. Haven
- . Francis S. Edwards, until February 28, 1857
North Carolina">List of United States Representatives from North Carolina">North Carolina
- . Robert T. Paine
- . Thomas H. Ruffin
- . Warren Winslow
- . Lawrence O'Bryan Branch
- . Edwin G. Reade
- . Richard C. Puryear
- . F. Burton Craige
- . Thomas L. Clingman
Ohio">List of United States Representatives from Ohio">Ohio
- . Timothy C. Day
- . John Scott Harrison
- . Lewis D. Campbell
- . Matthias H. Nichols
- . Richard Mott
- . Jonas R. Emrie
- . Aaron Harlan
- . Benjamin Stanton
- . Cooper K. Watson
- . Oscar F. Moore
- . Valentine B. Horton
- . Samuel Galloway
- . John Sherman
- . Philemon Bliss
- . William R. Sapp
- . Edward Ball
- . Charles J. Albright
- . Benjamin F. Leiter
- . Edward Wade
- . Joshua R. Giddings
- . John Bingham
Pennsylvania">List of United States Representatives from Pennsylvania">Pennsylvania
- . Thomas B. Florence
- . Job R. Tyson
- . William Millward
- . Jacob Broom
- . John Cadwalader
- . John Hickman
- . Samuel C. Bradshaw
- . J. Glancey Jones
- . Anthony E. Roberts
- . John C. Kunkel
- . James H. Campbell
- . Henry M. Fuller
- . Asa Packer
- . Galusha A. Grow
- . John J. Pearce
- . Lemuel Todd
- . David F. Robison
- . John R. Edie
- . John Covode
- . Jonathan Knight
- . David Ritchie
- . Samuel A. Purviance
- . John Allison
- . David Barclay
- . John Dick
Rhode Island">List of United States Representatives from Rhode Island">Rhode Island
- . Nathaniel B. Durfee
- . Benjamin B. Thurston
South Carolina">List of United States Representatives from South Carolina">South Carolina
- . John McQueen
- . William Aiken Jr.
- . Laurence M. Keitt, until July 15, 1856, and from August 6, 1856
- . Preston Brooks, until July 15, 1856, and from August 1, 1856, until January 27, 1857
- . James L. Orr
- . William W. Boyce
Tennessee">List of United States Representatives from Tennessee">Tennessee
- . Albert G. Watkins
- . William H. Sneed
- . Samuel A. Smith
- . John H. Savage
- . Charles Ready
- . George W. Jones
- . John V. Wright
- . Felix K. Zollicoffer
- . Emerson Etheridge
- . Thomas Rivers
Texas">List of United States Representatives from Texas">Texas
- . Lemuel D. Evans
- . Peter H. Bell
Vermont">List of United States Representatives from Vermont">Vermont
- . James Meacham, until August 23, 1856
- * George T. Hodges, from December 1, 1856
- . Justin S. Morrill
- . Alvah Sabin
Virginia">List of United States Representatives from Virginia">Virginia
- . Thomas H. Bayly, until June 23, 1856
- * Muscoe R. H. Garnett, from December 1, 1856
- . John S. Millson
- . John Caskie
- . William Goode
- . Thomas S. Bocock
- . Paulus Powell
- . William Smith
- . Charles J. Faulkner
- . John Letcher
- . Zedekiah Kidwell
- . John S. Carlile
- . Henry A. Edmundson
- . LaFayette McMullen
Wisconsin">List of United States Representatives from Wisconsin">Wisconsin
- . Daniel Wells Jr.
- . Cadwallader C. Washburn
- . Charles Billinghurst
Non-voting members
- . John W. Whitfield, until August 1, 1856, and from December 9, 1856
- . Henry M. Rice
- . Bird B. Chapman
- . José Manuel Gallegos, until July 23, 1856
- * Miguel A. Otero, from July 23, 1856
- . Joseph Lane
- . John M. Bernhisel
- . James P. Anderson
Changes in membership
The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.Senate
House of Representatives
- replacements: 6
- * Democrats: 2 seat net loss
- * Opposition: 4 seat net gain
- deaths: 4
- resignations: 5
- contested election: 1
- Total seats with changes: 10
Committees
Senate
- Agriculture
- American Association for the Promotion of Science
- Atmospheric Telegraph Between Washington and Baltimore
- Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate
- Claims
- Commerce
- Distributing Public Revenue Among the States
- District of Columbia
- Engrossed Bills
- Finance
- Foreign Relations
- French Spoilations
- Indian Affairs
- Judiciary
- Library
- Loss of Original Papers of Mark and Richard Bean
- Mexican Claims Commission
- Manufactures
- Military Affairs
- Militia
- Naval Affairs
- Ordnance and War Ships
- Pacific Railroad
- Patents and the Patent Office
- Pensions
- Post Office and Post Roads
- Printing
- Private Claims Commission
- Private Land Claims
- Protection of Life and Health in Passenger Ships
- Public Buildings
- Public Lands
- Retrenchment
- Revolutionary Claims
- Roads and Canals
- Sickness on Emigrant Ships
- Tariff Regulation
- Territories
- Whole
House of Representatives
- Accounts
- Agriculture
- Claims
- Commerce
- District of Columbia
- Elections
- Engraving
- Expenditures in the Navy Department
- Expenditures in the Post Office Department
- Expenditures in the State Department
- Expenditures in the Treasury Department
- Expenditures in the War Department
- Expenditures on Public Buildings
- Foreign Affairs
- Indian Affairs
- Invalid Pensions
- Judiciary
- Manufactures
- Mileage
- Military Affairs
- Militia
- Naval Affairs
- Patents
- Post Office and Post Roads
- Private Land Claims
- Public Buildings and Grounds
- Public Expenditures
- Public Lands
- Revisal and Unfinished Business
- Revolutionary Claims
- Revolutionary Pensions
- Roads and Canals
- Rules
- Standards of Official Conduct
- Territories
- Ways and Means
- Whole
Joint committees
- Amending the Constitution on Presidential and Vice Presidential Elections
- Enrolled Bills
- The Library
- Printing
- San Francisco Disaster
Caucuses
- Democratic
- Democratic
Employees
Legislative branch agency">List of federal agencies in the United States#Legislative branch">Legislative branch agency directors
- Architect of the Capitol: Thomas U. Walter
- Librarian of Congress: John Silva Meehan
Senate
- Chaplain: Henry Slicer, until December 4, 1855
- * Henry C. Dean, until December 8, 1856
- * Stephen P. Hill, elected December 8, 1856
- Secretary: Asbury Dickins
- Sergeant at Arms: Dunning R. McNair
House of Representatives
- Chaplain: None
- Clerk: John W. Forney, until February 4, 1856
- * William Cullom, elected February 4, 1856
- Doorkeeper: Nathan Darling
- Messenger: Thaddeus Morrice
- Postmaster: Robert Morris
- Sergeant at Arms: Adam J. Glossbrenner
- Reading Clerks: