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.
North Carolina34
North Carolina delegation →- Hallett WardNorth CarolinaDistrict 1Democratic1921–1925
- Lindsay WarrenNorth CarolinaDistrict 1Democratic1925–1941
- Claude KitchinNorth CarolinaDistrict 2Democratic1901–1925
- John KerrNorth CarolinaDistrict 2Democratic1923–1953
- Charles AbernethyNorth CarolinaDistrict 3Democratic1921–1935
- George HoodNorth CarolinaDistrict 3Democratic1915–1919
- John FaisonNorth CarolinaDistrict 3Democratic1911–1915
- Samuel BrinsonNorth CarolinaDistrict 3Democratic1919–1923
- Edward PouNorth CarolinaDistrict 4Democratic1901–1935
- Charles StedmanNorth CarolinaDistrict 5Democratic1911–1931
- Franklin Hancock Jr.North CarolinaDistrict 5Democratic1929–1939
- John MoreheadNorth CarolinaDistrict 5Republican1909–1911
- Gilbert PattersonNorth CarolinaDistrict 6Democratic1903–1907
- Hannibal GodwinNorth CarolinaDistrict 6Democratic1907–1921
- Homer LyonNorth CarolinaDistrict 6Democratic1921–1929
- Hinton JamesNorth CarolinaDistrict 7Democratic1929–1931
- Jerome ClarkNorth CarolinaDistrict 7Democratic1929–1949
- Leonidas RobinsonNorth CarolinaDistrict 7Democratic1917–1921
- Robert PageNorth CarolinaDistrict 7Democratic1903–1917
- William HammerNorth CarolinaDistrict 7Democratic1921–1931
- Charles CowlesNorth CarolinaDistrict 8Republican1909–1911
- Edmond BlackburnNorth CarolinaDistrict 8Republican1901–1907
- John LambethNorth CarolinaDistrict 8Democratic1931–1939
- Richard HackettNorth CarolinaDistrict 8Democratic1907–1909
- Charles JonasNorth CarolinaDistrict 9Republican1929–1931
- Edwin WebbNorth CarolinaDistrict 9Democratic1903–1921
- James MoodyNorth CarolinaDistrict 9Republican1901–1903
- Robert DoughtonNorth CarolinaDistrict 9Democratic1911–1953
- George PritchardNorth CarolinaDistrict 10Republican1929–1931
- James BrittNorth CarolinaDistrict 10Republican1915–1919
- James Gudger Jr.North CarolinaDistrict 10Democratic1903–1915
- John GrantNorth CarolinaDistrict 10Republican1909–1911
- Alfred BulwinkleNorth CarolinaDistrict 11Democratic1921–1951
- Zebulon WeaverNorth CarolinaDistrict 12Democratic1917–1947
Related on The Candidate
- Currently-serving representativesThe companion lifecycle hub for the U.S. House.Open
- About the U.S. HouseRole, term length, qualifications, and the full House candidate directory.Open
- 2026 House candidatesEvery federally-filed candidate for the U.S. House in the current cycle.Open
- Currently-serving senatorsThe companion chamber — every individual currently serving in the U.S. Senate.Open
- Federal partiesBrowse representatives and candidates by the party line they run under.Open
- Federal officesPresident, U.S. Senate, U.S. House — overview of every federal office.Open