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23rd United States Congress
1833-1835 U.S. Congress
1833-1835 U.S. Congress
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| number | 23rd |
| image | USCapitol1827A.gif |
| imagename | United States Capitol |
| imagedate | 1827 |
| start | March 4, 1833 |
| end | March 4, 1835 |
| vp | Martin Van Buren (J) |
| pro tem | Hugh L. White (NR) |
| George Poindexter (J) | |
| John Tyler (J) | |
| speaker | Andrew Stevenson (J) |
| John Bell (J) | |
| senators | 48 |
| reps | 240 |
| delegates | 3 |
| s-majority | National Republican |
| h-majority | Jacksonian |
| sessionnumber1 | 1st |
| sessionstart1 | December 2, 1833 |
| sessionend1 | June 30, 1834 |
| sessionnumber2 | 2nd |
| sessionstart2 | December 1, 1834 |
| sessionend2 | March 4, 1835 |
| previous | 22nd |
| next | 24th |
George Poindexter (J) John Tyler (J) John Bell (J) |s-majority = National Republican |h-majority = Jacksonian The 23rd 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, 1833, to March 4, 1835, during the fifth and sixth years of Andrew Jackson's presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1830 United States census. The Senate had an Anti-Jacksonian or National Republican majority, and the House had a Jacksonian or Democratic majority.
Major events
Main article: 1833 in the United States, 1834 in the United States, 1835 in the United States
- March 28, 1834: Senate censured President Andrew Jackson for defunding the Second Bank of the United States
- June 2, 1834: A special election for the House speakership takes 10 ballots.
- January 30, 1835: Richard Lawrence unsuccessfully tried to assassinate President Jackson in the United States Capitol; this was the first assassination attempt against a President of the United States.
Major legislation
Main article: List of United States federal legislation, 1789–1901#1821 to 1831
Party summary
The count below identifies party affiliations at the beginning of the first session of this congress. Changes resulting from subsequent replacements are shown below in the "Changes in membership" section.
Senate
House of Representatives
For the beginning of this congress, the size of the House was increased from 213 seats to 240 seats, following the 1830 United States census.
Leadership
Senate
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- President: Martin Van Buren (J)
- President pro tempore: Hugh Lawson White (J), until December 15, 1833
- George Poindexter (NR), June 28, 1834 – November 30, 1834
- John Tyler (NR), from March 3, 1835
House of Representatives
- Speaker: Andrew Stevenson (J), until June 2, 1834
- John Bell (J), after June 2, 1834, elected on the 10th ballot
Members
This list is arranged by chamber, then by state. Senators are listed by class, and representatives are listed by district.
:Skip to House of Representatives, below
Senate
Main article: List of United States senators in the 23rd Congress
Senators were elected by the state legislatures every two years, with one-third beginning new six-year terms with each Congress. Preceding the names in the list below are Senate class numbers, which indicate the cycle of their election. In this Congress, Class 1 meant their term began with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1838; Class 2 meant their term ended with this Congress, requiring reelection in 1834; and Class 3 meant their term began in the last Congress, requiring reelection in 1836.
[[List of United States senators from Alabama|Alabama]]
: 2. William R. King (J) : 3. Gabriel Moore (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Connecticut|Connecticut]]
: 1. Nathan Smith (NR) : 3. Gideon Tomlinson (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Delaware|Delaware]]
: 1. Arnold Naudain (NR) : 2. John M. Clayton (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Georgia|Georgia]]
: 2. George Troup (J), until November 8, 1833 :: John P. King (J), from November 21, 1833 : 3. John Forsyth (J), until July 27, 1834 :: Alfred Cuthbert (J), from January 12, 1835
[[List of United States senators from Illinois|Illinois]]
: 2. John M. Robinson (J) : 3. Elias K. Kane (J)
[[List of United States senators from Indiana|Indiana]]
: 1. John Tipton (J) : 3. William Hendricks (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Kentucky|Kentucky]]
: 2. George M. Bibb (J) : 3. Henry Clay (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Louisiana|Louisiana]]
: 2. George A. Waggaman (NR) : 3. Josiah S. Johnston (NR), until May 19, 1833 :: Alexander Porter (NR), from December 19, 1833
[[List of United States senators from Maine|Maine]]
: 1. Ether Shepley (J) : 2. Peleg Sprague (NR), until January 1, 1835 :: John Ruggles (J), from January 20, 1835
[[List of United States senators from Maryland|Maryland]]
: 1. Joseph Kent (NR) : 3. Ezekiel F. Chambers (NR), until December 20, 1834 :: Robert H. Goldsborough (NR), from January 13, 1835
[[List of United States senators from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]
: 1. Daniel Webster (NR) : 2. Nathaniel Silsbee (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Mississippi|Mississippi]]
: 1. John Black (NR), from November 22, 1833 : 2. George Poindexter (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Missouri|Missouri]]
: 1. Thomas H. Benton (J) : 3. Alexander Buckner (J), until June 5, 1833 :: Lewis F. Linn (J), from October 25, 1833
[[List of United States senators from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]
: 2. Samuel Bell (NR) : 3. Isaac Hill (J)
[[List of United States senators from New Jersey|New Jersey]]
: 1. Samuel L. Southard (NR) : 2. Theodore Frelinghuysen (NR)
[[List of United States senators from New York|New York]]
: 1. Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (J) : 3. Silas Wright Jr. (J)
[[List of United States senators from North Carolina|North Carolina]]
: 2. Bedford Brown (J) : 3. Willie P. Mangum (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Ohio|Ohio]]
: 1. Thomas Morris (J) : 3. Thomas Ewing (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]
: 1. Samuel McKean (J), from December 7, 1833 : 3. William Wilkins (J), until June 30, 1834 :: James Buchanan (J), from December 6, 1834
[[List of United States senators from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]
: 1. Asher Robbins (NR) : 2. Nehemiah R. Knight (NR)
[[List of United States senators from South Carolina|South Carolina]]
: 2. John C. Calhoun (N) : 3. William C. Preston (N), from November 26, 1833
[[List of United States senators from Tennessee|Tennessee]]
: 1. Felix Grundy (J) : 2. Hugh Lawson White (J)
[[List of United States senators from Vermont|Vermont]]
: 1. Benjamin Swift (NR) : 3. Samuel Prentiss (NR)
[[List of United States senators from Virginia|Virginia]]
: 1. John Tyler (NR) : 2. William Rives (J), until February 22, 1834 :: Benjamin W. Leigh (NR), from February 26, 1834
]]



House of Representatives
Main article: List of United States representatives in the 23rd Congress
[[List of United States representatives from Alabama|Alabama]]
: . Clement C. Clay (J) : . John McKinley (J) : . Samuel W. Mardis (J) : . Dixon H. Lewis (N) : . John Murphy (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Connecticut|Connecticut]]
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . Noyes Barber (NR) : . William W. Ellsworth (NR), until July 8, 1834 :: Joseph Trumbull (NR), from December 1, 1834 : . Jabez W. Huntington (NR), until August 16, 1834 :: Phineas Miner (NR), from December 1, 1834 : . Samuel A. Foote (NR), until May 9, 1834 :: Ebenezer Jackson Jr. (NR), from December 1, 1834 : . Samuel Tweedy (NR) : . Ebenezer Young (NR)
[[List of United States representatives from Delaware|Delaware]]
: . John J. Milligan (NR)
[[List of United States representatives from Georgia|Georgia]]
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . Augustin S. Clayton (J) : . John E. Coffee (J) : . Thomas F. Foster (J) : . Roger L. Gamble (J) : . George R. Gilmer (J) : . Seaborn Jones (J) : . William Schley (J) : . James M. Wayne (J), until January 13, 1835, vacant thereafter : . Richard Henry Wilde (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Illinois|Illinois]]
: . Charles Slade (J), until July 26, 1834 :: John Reynolds (J), from December 1, 1834 : . Zadok Casey (J) : . Joseph Duncan (J), until September 21, 1834 :: William L. May (J), from December 1, 1834
[[List of United States representatives from Indiana|Indiana]]
: . Ratliff Boon (J) : . John Ewing (NR) : . John Carr (J) : . Amos Lane (J) : . Johnathan McCarty (J) : . George L. Kinnard (J) : . Edward A. Hannegan (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Kentucky|Kentucky]]
: . Chittenden Lyon (J) : . Albert G. Hawes (J) : . Christopher Tompkins (NR) : . Martin Beaty (NR) : . Robert P. Letcher (NR), from August 6, 1834 : . Thomas Chilton (NR) : . Benjamin Hardin (NR) : . Patrick H. Pope (J) : . James Love (NR) : . Chilton Allan (NR) : . Amos Davis (NR) : . Thomas A. Marshall (NR) : . Richard M. Johnson (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Louisiana|Louisiana]]
: . Edward D. White (NR), until November 15, 1834 :: Henry Johnson (NR), from December 1, 1834 : . Philemon Thomas (J) : . Henry A. Bullard (NR), until January 4, 1834 :: Rice Garland (NR), from April 28, 1834
[[List of United States representatives from Maine|Maine]]
: . Rufus McIntire (J) : . Francis O. J. Smith (J) : . Edward Kavanagh (J) : . George Evans (NR) : . Moses Mason Jr. (J) : . Leonard Jarvis (J) : . Joseph Hall (J) : . Gorham Parks (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Maryland|Maryland]]
: . Littleton P. Dennis (NR), until April 14, 1834 :: John N. Steele (NR), from June 9, 1834 : . Richard B. Carmichael (J) : . James Turner (J) : . James P. Heath (J) : . Isaac McKim (J) : . William Cost Johnson (NR) : . Francis Thomas (J) : . John T. Stoddert (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Massachusetts|Massachusetts]]
: . Benjamin Gorham (NR) : . Rufus Choate (NR), until June 30, 1834 :: Stephen C. Phillips (NR), from December 1, 1834 : . Gayton P. Osgood (J) : . Edward Everett (NR) : . John Davis (NR), until January 14, 1834 :: Levi Lincoln Jr. (NR), from March 5, 1834 : . George Grennell Jr. (NR) : . George N. Briggs (NR) : . Isaac C. Bates (NR) : . William Jackson (AM) : . William Baylies (NR) : . John Reed Jr. (NR) : . John Quincy Adams (AM)
[[List of United States representatives from Mississippi|Mississippi]]
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . Harry Cage (J) : . Franklin E. Plummer (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Missouri|Missouri]]
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . William H. Ashley (J) : . John Bull (NR)
[[List of United States representatives from New Hampshire|New Hampshire]]
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . Benning M. Bean (J) : . Robert Burns (J) : . Joseph M. Harper (J) : . Henry Hubbard (J) : . Franklin Pierce (J)
[[List of United States representatives from New Jersey|New Jersey]]
All representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . Philemon Dickerson (J) : . Samuel Fowler (J) : . Thomas Lee (J) : . James Parker (J) : . Ferdinand S. Schenck (J) : . William N. Shinn (J)
[[List of United States representatives from New York|New York]]
There were five plural districts, the 8th, 17th, 22nd & 23rd had two representatives each, the 3rd had four representatives. : . Abel Huntington (J) : . Isaac B. Van Houten (J) : . Churchill C. Cambreleng (J) : . Cornelius V. Lawrence (J), until May 14, 1834 :: John J. Morgan (J), from December 1, 1834 : . Dudley Selden (J), until July 1, 1834 :: Charles G. Ferris (J), from December 1, 1834 : . Campbell P. White (J) : . Aaron Ward (J) : . Abraham Bockee (J) : . John W. Brown (J) : . Charles Bodle (J) : . John Adams (J) : . Aaron Vanderpoel (J) : . Job Pierson (J) : . Gerrit Y. Lansing (J) : . John Cramer (J) : . Henry C. Martindale (AM) : . Reuben Whallon (J) : . Ransom H. Gillet (J) : . Charles McVean (J) : . Abijah Mann Jr. (J) : . Samuel Beardsley (J) : . Joel Turrill (J) : . Daniel Wardwell (J) : . Sherman Page (J) : . Noadiah Johnson (J) : . Henry Mitchell (J) : . Nicoll Halsey (J) : . Samuel G. Hathaway (J) : . William K. Fuller (J) : . William Taylor (J) : . Rowland Day (J) : . Samuel Clark (J) : . John Dickson (AM) : . Edward Howell (J) : . Frederick Whittlesey (AM) : . George W. Lay (AM) : . Philo C. Fuller (AM) : . Abner Hazeltine (AM) : . Millard Fillmore (AM) : . Gideon Hard (AM)
[[List of United States representatives from North Carolina|North Carolina]]
: . William B. Shepard (NR) : . Jesse A. Bynum (J) : . Thomas H. Hall (J) : . Jesse Speight (J) : . James I. McKay (J) : . Micajah T. Hawkins (J) : . Edmund Deberry (NR) : . Daniel L. Barringer (NR) : . Augustine H. Shepperd (NR) : . Abraham Rencher (NR) : . Henry W. Connor (J) : . James Graham (NR) : . Lewis Williams (NR)
[[List of United States representatives from Ohio|Ohio]]
: . Robert T. Lytle (J), until March 10, 1834, and from December 27, 1834 : . Taylor Webster (J) : . Joseph H. Crane (NR) : . Thomas Corwin (NR) : . Thomas L. Hamer (J) : . Samuel F. Vinton (NR) : . William Allen (J) : . Jeremiah McLene (J) : . John Chaney (J) : . Joseph Vance (NR) : . James M. Bell (NR) : . Robert Mitchell (J) : . David Spangler (NR) : . William Patterson (J) : . Jonathan Sloane (AM) : . Elisha Whittlesey (AM) : . John Thomson (J) : . Benjamin Jones (J) : . Humphrey H. Leavitt (J), until July 10, 1834 :: Daniel Kilgore (J), from December 1, 1834
[[List of United States representatives from Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania]]
There were two plural districts, the 2nd had two representatives, the 4th had three representatives. : . Joel B. Sutherland (J) : . Horace Binney (NR) : . James Harper (NR) : . John G. Watmough (NR) : . Edward Darlington (AM) : . William Hiester (AM) : . David Potts Jr. (AM) : . Joel K. Mann (J) : . Robert Ramsey (J) : . David D. Wagener (J) : . Henry King (J) : . Henry A. P. Muhlenberg (J) : . William Clark (AM) : . Charles A. Barnitz (AM) : . George Chambers (AM) : . Jesse Miller (J) : . Joseph Henderson (J) : . Andrew Beaumont (J) : . Joseph B. Anthony (J) : . John Laporte (J) : . George Burd (NR) : . Richard Coulter (J) : . Andrew Stewart (AM) : . Thomas M. T. McKennan (AM) : . Harmar Denny (AM) : . Samuel S. Harrison (J) : . John Banks (AM) : . John Galbraith (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Rhode Island|Rhode Island]]
Both representatives were elected statewide on a general ticket. : . Tristam Burges (NR) : . Dutee J. Pearce (AM)
[[List of United States representatives from South Carolina|South Carolina]]
: . Henry L. Pinckney (N) : . William J. Grayson (N) : . Thomas D. Singleton (N), until November 25, 1833 :: Robert B. Campbell (N), from February 27, 1834 : . John Myers Felder (N) : . George McDuffie (N), until ????, 1834 :: Francis W. Pickens (N), from December 8, 1834 : . Warren R. Davis (N), until January 29, 1835, vacant thereafter : . William K. Clowney (N) : . James Blair (J), until April 1, 1834 :: Richard I. Manning (J), from December 8, 1834 : . John K. Griffin (N)
[[List of United States representatives from Tennessee|Tennessee]]
: . John Blair (J) : . Samuel Bunch (J) : . Luke Lea (J) : . James I. Standifer (J) : . John B. Forester (J) : . Balie Peyton (J) : . John Bell (J) : . David W. Dickinson (J) : . James K. Polk (J) : . William M. Inge (J) : . Cave Johnson (J) : . David Crockett (NR) : . William C. Dunlap (J)
[[List of United States representatives from Vermont|Vermont]]
: . Hiland Hall (NR) : . William Slade (AM) : . Horace Everett (NR) : . Heman Allen (NR) : . Benjamin F. Deming (AM), until July 11, 1834 :: Henry F. Janes (AM), from December 2, 1834
[[List of United States representatives from Virginia|Virginia]]
: . George Loyall (J) : . John Y. Mason (J) : . William S. Archer (J) : . James H. Gholson (NR) : . John Randolph (J), until May 24, 1833 :: Thomas T. Bouldin (J), from December 2, 1833, until February 11, 1834 :: James W. Bouldin (J), from March 28, 1834 : . Thomas Davenport (NR) : . Nathaniel H. Claiborne (J) : . Henry A. Wise (J) : . William P. Taylor (NR) : . Joseph W. Chinn (J) : . Andrew Stevenson (J), until June 2, 1834 :: John Robertson (NR), from December 1, 1834 : . William F. Gordon (J) : . John M. Patton (J) : . Charles F. Mercer (NR) : . Edward Lucas (J) : . James M. H. Beale (J) : . Samuel M. Moore (NR) : . John H. Fulton (J) : . William McComas (J) : . John J. Allen (NR) : . Edgar C. Wilson (NR)
Non-voting members
: . Ambrose H. Sevier (J) : . Joseph M. White (J) : . Lucius Lyon (J)


Changes in membership
The count below reflects changes from the beginning of the first session of this Congress.
Senate
Sorted Chronologically by date of vacancy
|- | South Carolina (3) Successor was elected November 26, 1833. | | William C. Preston (N) | November 26, 1833
|- | Mississippi (1) Appointee who had held the seat at the end of the previous Congress was elected November 22, 1833. | | John Black (NR) | November 22, 1833
|- | Pennsylvania (1) Successor was elected December 7, 1833. | | Samuel McKean (J) | December 7, 1833
|- | Louisiana (3) | | Josiah S. Johnston (NR) Successor was elected December 19, 1833. | | Alexander Porter (NR) | December 19, 1833
|- | Missouri (3) | | Alexander Buckner (J) Successor was appointed December 19, 1833, and subsequently elected to finish the term. | | Lewis F. Linn (J) | October 25, 1833
|- | Georgia (2) | | George Troup (J) Successor was elected November 21, 1833. | | John P. King (D) | November 21, 1833
|- | Virginia (2) | | William Rives (J) Successor was elected February 26, 1834. | | Benjamin W. Leigh (NR) | February 26, 1834
|- | Pennsylvania (3) | | William Wilkins (J) Successor elected December 6, 1834. | | James Buchanan (J) | December 6, 1834
|- | Georgia (3) | | John Forsyth (J) Successor elected January 12, 1835. | | Alfred Cuthbert (J) | January 12, 1835
|- | Maryland (3) | | Ezekiel F. Chambers (NR) Successor elected January 13, 1835. | | Robert H. Goldsborough (NR) | January 13, 1835
|- | Maine (2) | | Peleg Sprague (NR) Successor elected January 20, 1835. | | John Ruggles (J) | January 20, 1835 |}
House of Representatives
- Replacements: 18
- Jacksonian: 1 seat net loss
- National Republican: 1 seat net gain
- Deaths: 8
- Resignations: 15
- Contested election: 1
- Total seats with changes: 23
Sorted Chronologically by date of vacancy
Main article: List of special elections to the United States House of Representatives
|- | | Vacant | Contested election of Thomas P. Moore. House denied either party the seat and declared new election | | Robert P. Letcher (NR) | Seated August 6, 1834
|- | | | Joel B. Sutherland (J) | Resigned before the term to become a judge, but then left that judgeship to seek his old seat and re-elected October 8, 1833. | | Joel B. Sutherland (J) | Seated December 2, 1833
|- | | | John Randolph (J) | Died May 24, 1833 | | Thomas T. Bouldin (J)
| Seated December 2, 1833 |
|---|
| | | Thomas D. Singleton (N) | Died November 25, 1833 | | Robert B. Campbell (N)
| Seated February 27, 1834 |
|---|
| | | George McDuffie (N) | Resigned some time in 1834. | | Francis W. Pickens (N)
| Seated December 8, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Henry A. Bullard (NR) | Resigned January 4, 1834, after being appointed as a judge of the Supreme Court of Louisiana | | Rice Garland (NR)
| Seated April 28, 1834 |
|---|
| | | John Davis (NR) | Resigned January 14, 1834, after being elected Governor of Massachusetts | | Levi Lincoln (NR)
| Seated March 5, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Thomas T. Bouldin (J) | Died February 11, 1834 | | James W. Bouldin (J)
| Seated March 28, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Robert T. Lytle (J) | Resigned March 10, 1834 | | Robert T. Lytle (J)
| Re-seated December 27, 1834 |
|---|
| | | James Blair (J) | Died April 1, 1834 | | Richard I. Manning (J)
| Seated December 8, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Littleton P. Dennis (J) | Died April 14, 1834 | | John N. Steele (J)
| Seated June 9, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Samuel A. Foot (NR) | Resigned May 9, 1834, after becoming Governor of Connecticut | | Ebenezer Jackson Jr. (NR)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Cornelius V. Lawrence (J) | Resigned May 14, 1834, after becoming Mayor of New York City. This was a plural district with 4 representatives. | | John J. Morgan (J)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Andrew Stevenson (J) | Resigned June 2, 1834 | | John Robertson (NR)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Rufus Choate (NR) | Resigned June 30, 1834 | | Stephen C. Phillips (NR)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Dudley Selden (J) | Resigned July 1, 1834. This was a plural district with 4 representatives. | | Charles G. Ferris (J)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | William W. Ellsworth (NR) | Resigned July 8, 1834 | | Joseph Trumbull (NR)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Humphrey H. Leavitt (J) | Resigned July 10, 1834, after becoming judge of the US District Court of Ohio | | Daniel Kilgore (J)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Benjamin F. Deming (AM) | Died July 11, 1834 | | Henry F. Janes (AM)
| Seated December 2, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Charles Slade (J) | Died July 26, 1834 | | John Reynolds (J)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Jabez W. Huntington (NR) | Resigned August 16, 1834, after being appointed judge of the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors | | Phineas Miner (NR)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Joseph Duncan (J) | Resigned September 21, 1834, after being elected Governor of Illinois | | William L. May (J)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | Edward D. White (NR) | Resigned November 15, 1834, to become Governor of Louisiana | | Henry Johnson (NR)
| Seated December 1, 1834 |
|---|
| | | James M. Wayne (J)
| Resigned January 13, 1835, after being appointed an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court |
|---|
| | | Warren R. Davis (N) | Died January 29, 1835 |}
Committees
Lists of committees and their party leaders.
Senate
- Agriculture (Chairman: Bedford Brown)
- Amendments to the Constitution (Select)
- Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate (Chairman: Nehemiah Knight)
- Claims (Chairman: Samuel Bell)
- Commerce (Chairman: Nathaniel Silsbee)
- Distributing Public Revenue Among the States (Select)
- District of Columbia (Chairman: Ezekiel F. Chambers then John Tyler)
- Engrossed Bills (Chairman: Ether Shepley)
- Establishing Branches of the Mint (Select)
- Executive Patronage (Select)
- Finance (Chairman: Daniel Webster)
- Foreign Relations (Chairman: William Wilkins then Henry Clay)
- French Spoilations (Select)
- Indian Affairs (Chairman: Hugh Lawson White)
- Judiciary (Chairman: John M. Clayton)
- Manufactures (Chairman: Theodore Frelinghuysen)
- Michigan and Arkansas Admission to the Union (Select)
- Mileage of Members of Congress (Select)
- Military Affairs (Chairman: Nathaniel Silsbee)
- Militia (Chairman: John M. Robinson)
- Naval Affairs (Chairman: Samuel Southard)
- Pensions (Chairman: Gideon Tomlinson)
- Post Office and Post Roads (Chairman: Felix Grundy)
- President's Message Refusing to Furnish a Paper to Senate (Select)
- Private Land Claims (Chairman: William Hendricks)
- Public Lands (Chairman: George Poindexter)
- Purchasing Boyd Reilly's Gas Apparatus (Select)
- Revolutionary Claims (Chairman: Gabriel Moore)
- Roads and Canals (Chairman: William Hendricks)
- Shiloh National Park (Select)
- Tariff Regulation (Select)
- Whole
House of Representatives
- Accounts (Chairman: Joel K. Mann)
- Agriculture (Chairman: Abraham Bockee)
- Bank of the United States (Select)
- Biennial Register (Select)
- Boundary of the Chickasaw Indians (Select)
- Claims (Chairman: Elisha Whittlesey)
- Commerce (Chairman: Joel B. Sutherland)
- District of Columbia (Chairman: Joseph Chinn)
- Elections (Chairman: Nathaniel Claiborne)
- Establishing an Assay Office in the Gold Region (Select)
- Expenditures in the Navy Department (Chairman: Joseph Hall)
- Expenditures in the Post Office Department (Chairman: Albert G. Hawes)
- Expenditures in the State Department (Chairman: Augustine Henry Shepperd)
- Expenditures in the Treasury Department (Chairman: Heman Allen)
- Expenditures in the War Department (Chairman: Frederick Whittlesey)
- Expenditures on Public Buildings (Chairman: Reuben Whallon)
- Foreign Affairs (Chairman: William S. Archer then John Young Mason)
- Foreign Relations (Chairman: William S. Archer then John Young Mason)
- Indian Affairs (Chairman: Dixon H. Lewis)
- Invalid Pensions (Chairman: Tristam Burges)
- Judiciary (Chairman: John Bell then Thomas F. Foster)
- Manufactures (Chairman: John Quincy Adams)
- Military Affairs (Chairman: Richard M. Johnson)
- Naval Affairs (Chairman: Campbell P. White)
- Post Office and Post Roads (Chairman: Henry W. Connor)
- Private Land Claims (Chairman: Cave Johnson)
- Public Expenditures (Chairman: Thomas Davenport)
- Public Lands (Chairman: Clement C. Clay)
- Revisal and Unfinished Business (Chairman: John Dickson)
- Revolutionary Claims (Chairman: Henry A. P. Muhlenberg)
- Revolutionary Pensions (Chairman: Daniel Wardwell)
- Roads and Canals (Chairman: Charles F. Mercer)
- Rules (Select)
- Standards of Official Conduct
- Territories (Chairman: Lewis Williams)
- Ways and Means (Chairman: James K. Polk)
- Whole
Joint committees
- Enrolled Bills
- The Library
Employees
- Librarian of Congress: John Silva Meehan
Senate
- Secretary: Walter Lowrie
- Sergeant at Arms: Mountjoy Bayly, until December 9, 1833
- John Shackford, elected December 9, 1833
- Chaplain: Charles C. Pise (Roman Catholic), until December 10, 1833
- Frederick W. Hatch (Episcopalian), elected December 10, 1833
House of Representatives
- Clerk: Matthew St. Clair Clarke, until December 2, 1833
- Walter S. Franklin, elected December 2, 1833
- Sergeant at Arms: John O. Dunn, until December 6, 1833
- Thomas B. Randolph, elected December 6, 1833
- Doorkeeper: Overton Carr
- Postmaster: William J. McCormick
- Reading Clerks:
- Chaplain: William H. Hammett (Methodist), until December 9, 1833
- Thomas H. Stockton (Methodist), elected December 9, 1833
- Edward D. Smith (Presbyterian), elected December 10, 1834
Notes
References
References
- (January 30, 2007). "Trying to Assassinate President Jackson". [[American Heritage (magazine).
- {{USStat. 4. 516
- Parks, Joseph. (1950). "John Bell of Tennessee". Louisiana State University Press.
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