United States Senate
See also: List of United States Senators from MichiganClass 1 Senators | Congress | Class 2 Senators |
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Lucius Lyon (D-R) | 24th (1835–1837) | John Norvell (D-R) |
25th (1837–1839) | ||
Augustus S. Porter (W) | 26th (1839–1841) | |
27th (1841–1843) | William Woodbridge (W) | |
28th (1843–1845) | ||
Lewis Cass (D) | 29th (1845–1847) | |
30th (1847–1849) | Alpheus Felch (D) | |
Thomas Fitzgerald (D) | ||
Lewis Cass (D) | 31st (1849–1851) | |
32nd (1851–1853) | ||
33rd (1853–1855) | Charles E. Stuart (D) | |
34th (1855–1857) | ||
Zachariah Chandler (R) | 35th (1857–1859) | |
36th (1859–1861) | Kinsley S. Bingham (R) | |
37th (1861–1863) | ||
Jacob M. Howard (R) | ||
38th (1863–1865) | ||
39th (1865–1867) | ||
40th (1867–1869) | ||
41st (1869–1871) | ||
42nd (1871–1873) | Thomas W. Ferry (R) | |
43rd (1873–1875) | ||
Isaac P. Christiancy (R) | 44th (1875–1877) | |
45th (1877–1879) | ||
Zachariah Chandler (R) | ||
46th (1879–1881) | ||
Henry P. Baldwin (R) | ||
Omar D. Conger (R) | 47th (1881–1883) | |
48th (1883–1885) | Thomas W. Palmer (R) | |
49th (1885–1887) | ||
Francis B. Stockbridge (R) | 50th (1887–1889) | |
51st (1889–1891) | James McMillan (R) | |
52nd (1891–1893) | ||
53rd (1893–1895) | ||
John Patton, Jr. (R) | ||
Julius C. Burrows (R) | ||
54th (1895–1897) | ||
55th (1897–1899) | ||
56th (1899–1901) | ||
57th (1901–1903) | ||
Russell A. Alger (R) | ||
58th (1903–1905) | ||
59th (1905–1907) | ||
William Alden Smith (R) | ||
60th (1907–1909) | ||
61st (1909–1911) | ||
Charles E. Townsend (R) | 62nd (1911–1913) | |
63rd (1913–1915) | ||
64th (1915–1917) | ||
65th (1917–1919) | ||
66th (1919–1921) | Truman H. Newberry (R) | |
67th (1921–1923) | ||
James Couzens (R) | ||
Woodbridge N. Ferris (D) | 68th (1923–1925) | |
69th (1925–1927) | ||
70th (1927–1929) | ||
Arthur H. Vandenberg (R) | ||
71st (1929–1931) | ||
72nd (1931–1933) | ||
73rd (1933–1935) | ||
74th (1935–1937) | ||
Prentiss M. Brown (D) | ||
75th (1937–1939) | ||
76th (1939–1941) | ||
77th (1941–1943) | ||
78th (1943–1945) | Homer Ferguson (R) | |
79th (1945–1947) | ||
80th (1947–1949) | ||
81st (1949–1951) | ||
82nd (1951–1953) | ||
A. E. Blair Moody (D) | ||
Charles E. Potter (R) | ||
83rd (1953–1955) | ||
84th (1955–1957) | Patrick V. McNamara (D) | |
85th (1957–1959) | ||
Philip A. Hart (D) | 86th (1959–1961) | |
87th (1961–1963) | ||
88th (1963–1965) | ||
89th (1965–1967) | ||
Robert P. Griffin (R) | ||
90th (1967–1969) | ||
91st (1969–1971) | ||
92nd (1971–1973) | ||
93rd (1973–1975) | ||
94th (1975–1977) | ||
Donald W. Riegle, Jr. (D) | ||
95th (1977–1979) | ||
96th (1979–1981) | Carl Levin (D) | |
97th (1981–1983) | ||
98th (1983–1985) | ||
99th (1985–1987) | ||
100th (1987–1989) | ||
101st (1989–1991) | ||
102nd (1991–1993) | ||
103rd (1993–1995) | ||
Spencer Abraham (R) | 104th (1995–1997) | |
105th (1997–1999) | ||
106th (1999–2001) | ||
Debbie Stabenow (D) | 107th (2001–2003) | |
108th (2003–2005) | ||
109th (2005–2007) | ||
110th (2007–2009) | ||
111th (2009–2011) | ||
112th (2011–2013) | ||
113th (2013–2015) |
Read more about this topic: United States Congressional Delegations From Michigan
Famous quotes containing the words united states, united, states and/or senate:
“Prior to the meeting, there was a prayer. In general, in the United States there was always praying.”
—Friedrich Dürrenmatt (19211990)
“Ethnic life in the United States has become a sort of contest like baseball in which the blacks are always the Chicago Cubs.”
—Ishmael Reed (b. 1938)
“I cannot say what poetry is; I know that our sufferings and our concentrated joy, our states of plunging far and dark and turning to come back to the worldso that the moment of intense turning seems still and universalall are here, in a music like the music of our time, like the hero and like the anonymous forgotten; and there is an exchange here in which our lives are met, and created.”
—Muriel Rukeyser (19131980)
“This is a Senate of equals, of men of individual honor and personal character, and of absolute independence. We know no masters, we acknowledge no dictators. This is a hall for mutual consultation and discussion; not an arena for the exhibition of champions.”
—Daniel Webster (17821852)