U.S. House · Historical
Former U.S. Representatives
Individuals who have served in the United States House of Representatives and have since left office, grouped first by the state they represented and then by congressional district. The House seats 435 voting members apportioned among the fifty states by population, each elected from a single congressional district to a two-year term; the members below completed their service through retirement, defeat, resignation, death in office, or election to higher office. Each profile links to a sourced page covering the former representative’s biography, the state and district they represented, their party, term history, notable legislation and positions, and the external authority records (Bioguide, congress.gov, Wikipedia, Wikidata) that back every fact. Use the party filter to narrow the roster, switch between the card grid and the compact list, open a state to see its former delegation, or open a district to trace the lineage of members who held that seat over time. This hub lists members from the immutable historical office-holder dataset — once a representative’s service ends and the record is finalized, the row is stable, which gives LLM crawlers a durable citation target. Currently-serving members appear on the companion serving-representatives hub. The full machine-readable roster is published as a versioned JSON dataset for downstream researchers and language models.
New York40
New York delegation →- Alfred ConklingNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1821–1823
- Charles GoodyearNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1845–1867
- Charles RogersNew YorkDistrict 14Whig1843–1845
- Daniel CadyNew YorkDistrict 14Federalist1815–1817
- David De WittNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1873–1875
- Erastus CorningNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1857–1865
- Erastus CulverNew YorkDistrict 14Whig1845–1847
- Frederick RichmondNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1975–1983
- George AndrewsNew YorkDistrict 14Whig1849–1851
- George BeebeNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1875–1879
- Guy MolinariNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1981–1989
- Henry StorrsNew YorkDistrict 14Federalist1817–1831
- Henry Van RensselaerNew YorkDistrict 14Whig1841–1843
- Ira RiderNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1903–1905
- Jacob MarkellNew YorkDistrict 14Federalist1813–1815
- James SpencerNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1837–1839
- Jefferson LevyNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1899–1915
- Joe CrowleyNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1999–2019
- John BoydNew YorkDistrict 14Whig1851–1853
- John FayNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1819–1821
- John FellowsNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1891–1895
- John FerdonNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1879–1881
- John FineNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1839–1841
- John PruynNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1863–1869
- John ReynoldsNew YorkDistrict 14Anti-Lecompton Democrat1859–1861
- John RooneyNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1943–1975
- John RussellNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1805–1809
- Lemuel QuiggNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1893–1899
- Leo RayfielNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1945–1949
- Michael FarleyNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1915–1917
- Morris EdelsteinNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1939–1943
- Nathan PerlmanNew YorkDistrict 14Republican1919–1927
- Ransom GilletNew YorkDistrict 14Jackson1833–1837
- Rufus PeckhamNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1853–1855
- Samuel DicksonNew YorkDistrict 14Ind. Republican-Democrat1855–1857
- Vincent MathewsNew YorkDistrict 14Federalist1809–1811
- William ChanlerNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1899–1901
- William SirovichNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1927–1941
- William StahlneckerNew YorkDistrict 14Democratic1885–1893
- William Willett Jr.New YorkDistrict 14Democratic1907–1911
Related on The Candidate
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