United States Senate
See also: List of United States Senators from KansasClass 2 Senators | Congress | Class 3 Senators |
---|---|---|
James H. Lane (R) | 37th (1861–1863) | Samuel C. Pomeroy (R) |
38th (1863–1865) | ||
39th (1865–1867) | ||
Edmund G. Ross (R) | ||
40th (1867–1869) | ||
41st (1869–1871) | ||
Alexander Caldwell (R) | 42nd (1871–1873) | |
43rd (1873–1875) | John J. Ingalls (R) | |
Robert Crozier (R) | ||
James M. Harvey (R) | ||
44th (1875–1877) | ||
Preston B. Plumb (R) | 45th (1877–1879) | |
46th (1879–1881) | ||
47th (1881–1883) | ||
48th (1883–1885) | ||
49th (1885–1887) | ||
50th (1887–1889) | ||
51st (1889–1891) | ||
52nd (1891–1893) | William A. Peffer (Pop) | |
Bishop W. Perkins (R) | ||
John Martin (D) | 53rd (1893–1895) | |
Lucien Baker (R) | 54th (1895–1897) | |
55th (1897–1899) | William A. Harris (Pop) | |
56th (1899–1901) | ||
Joseph R. Burton (R) | 57th (1901–1903) | |
58th (1903–1905) | Chester I. Long (R) | |
59th (1905–1907) | ||
Alfred W. Benson (R) | ||
Charles Curtis (R) | 60th (1907–1909) | |
61st (1909–1911) | Joseph L. Bristow (R) | |
62nd (1911–1913) | ||
William H. Thompson (D) | 63rd (1913–1915) | |
64th (1915–1917) | Charles Curtis (R) | |
65th (1917–1919) | ||
Arthur Capper (R) | 66th (1919–1921) | |
67th (1921–1923) | ||
68th (1923–1925) | ||
69th (1925–1927) | ||
70th (1927–1929) | ||
71st (1929–1931) | Henry J. Allen (R) | |
George McGill (D) | ||
72nd (1931–1933) | ||
73rd (1933–1935) | ||
74th (1935–1937) | ||
75th (1937–1939) | ||
76th (1939–1941) | Clyde M. Reed (R) | |
77th (1941–1943) | ||
78th (1943–1945) | ||
79th (1945–1947) | ||
80th (1947–1949) | ||
Andrew F. Schoeppel (R) | 81st (1949–1951) | |
Harry Darby (R) | ||
Frank Carlson (R) | ||
82nd (1951–1953) | ||
83rd (1953–1955) | ||
84th (1955–1957) | ||
85th (1957–1959) | ||
86th (1959–1961) | ||
87th (1961–1963) | ||
James B. Pearson (R) | ||
88th (1963–1965) | ||
89th (1965–1967) | ||
90th (1967–1969) | ||
91st (1969–1971) | Bob Dole (R) | |
92nd (1971–1973) | ||
93rd (1973–1975) | ||
94th (1975–1977) | ||
95th (1977–1979) | ||
Nancy Landon Kassebaum (R) | ||
96th (1979–1981) | ||
97th (1981–1983) | ||
98th (1983–1985) | ||
99th (1985–1987) | ||
100th (1987–1989) | ||
101st (1989–1991) | ||
102nd (1991–1993) | ||
103rd (1993–1995) | ||
104th (1995–1997) | ||
Sheila Frahm (R) | ||
Sam Brownback (R) | ||
Pat Roberts (R) | 105th (1997–1999) | |
106th (1999–2001) | ||
107th (2001–2003) | ||
108th (2003–2005) | ||
109th (2005–2007) | ||
110th (2007–2009) | ||
111th (2009–2011) | ||
112th (2011–2013) | Jerry Moran (R) | |
113th (2013–2015) |
Read more about this topic: United States Congressional Delegations From Kansas
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“The popular colleges of the United States are turning out more educated people with less originality and fewer geniuses than any other country.”
—Caroline Nichols Churchill (1833?)
“It is a curious thing to be a woman in the Caribbean after you have been a woman in these United States.”
—Zora Neale Hurston (18911960)
“We cannot feel strongly toward the totally unlike because it is unimaginable, unrealizable; nor yet toward the wholly like because it is staleidentity must always be dull company. The power of other natures over us lies in a stimulating difference which causes excitement and opens communication, in ideas similar to our own but not identical, in states of mind attainable but not actual.”
—Charles Horton Cooley (18641929)
“We have been here over forty years, a longer period than the children of Israel wandered through the wilderness, coming to this Capitol pleading for this recognition of the principle that the Government derives its just powers from the consent of the governed. Mr. Chairman, we ask that you report our resolution favorably if you can but unfavorably if you must; that you report one way or the other, so that the Senate may have the chance to consider it.”
—Anna Howard Shaw (18471919)