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United States congressional delegations from Mississippi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

United States congressional delegations from Mississippi
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These are tables of congressional delegations from Mississippi to the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate.

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Mississippi's congressional districts since 2023[1]

The current dean of the Mississippi delegation is Representative Bennie Thompson (MS-2), having served in the House since 1993.

United States Senate

More information Current U.S. senators from Mississippi, CPVI (2025): ...
More information Class I senators, Congress ...
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U.S. House of Representatives

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Current members

List of members, their terms in office, district boundaries, and the district political ratings according to the CPVI. The delegation has 4 members: 3 Republicans and 1 Democrat.

More information Current U.S. representatives from Mississippi, District ...

Mississippi Territory

On April 7, 1798, the Mississippi Territory was created. Starting in 1801, the Territory sent one non-voting delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives.

More information Congress, Delegate ...

State of Mississippi

On December 10, 1817, Mississippi was admitted into the Union as a state and sent one Representative to Congress, elected at-large statewide. After the 1830 census, Mississippi had two seats, elected statewide at-large on a general ticket. Starting in 1843, Mississippi's delegation was increased to four seats, still elected at-large statewide on a general ticket. After 1847, those seats were elected by representative districts. After the 1850 census, Mississippi gained a 5th seat. For the 33rd Congress, that fifth seat was elected at-large. Starting with the 34th Congress, the new seat was apportioned as a fifth district.

1817–1847: at-large elections

More information Congress, At-large seat A ...

1847–1853: 4 seats

More information Congress, 1st district ...

1853–1873: 5 seats

1873–1883: 6 seats

More information Congress, 1st district ...

1883–1903: 7 seats

More information Congress, District ...

1903–1953: 8, then 7 seats

More information Congress, District ...

1953–1963: 6 seats

More information Congress, 1st district ...

1963–present: 5, then 4 seats

More information Congress, 1st district ...
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Key

Democratic (D)
Democratic-Republican (DR)
Jacksonian (J)
Know Nothing (KN)
National Republican (NR)
Republican (R)
Union (U)
Whig (W)
Independent (I)

See also

References

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