Tennessee's 1st congressional district
Tennessee's 1st congressional district | ||
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Tennessee's 1st congressional district - since January 3, 2013. | ||
Current Representative | Phil Roe (R–Johnson City) | |
Population (2000) | 632,143 | |
Median income | $31,228 | |
Ethnicity | 95.8% White, 2.2% Black, 0.4% Asian, 1.5% Hispanic, 0.2% Native American, 0.0% other | |
Cook PVI | R+21[1] |
The Tennessee 1st Congressional District is the congressional district of northeast Tennessee, including all of Carter, Cocke, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock, Hawkins, Johnson, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington counties and parts of Jefferson County and Sevier County. Cities and towns represented within the district include Blountville, Bristol, Church Hill, Elizabethton, Erwin, Greeneville, Johnson City, Jonesborough, Kingsport, Morristown, Mountain City, Newport, Pigeon Forge, Roan Mountain, Rogersville, Sneedville, Sevierville and Tusculum. The 1st District's seat in the U.S. House of Representatives has been held by Republicans since 1881.
The district was created in 1805 when the At-large seat was divided among multiple districts.
The district's current Congressman, Phil Roe was first elected in 2008 after defeating one-term incumbent David Davis in the Republican primary[2]
Political characteristics
The 1st has generally been a very secure voting district for the Republican Party since the American Civil War, and is one of only two ancestrally Republican districts in the state (the other being the neighboring 2nd district).
Republicans (or their antecedents) have held the seat continuously since 1881 and for all but four years since 1859, while Democrats (or their antecedents) have held the congressional seat for all but eight years from when Andrew Jackson was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1796 (as the state's single at large representative) up to the term of Albert Galiton Watkins ending in 1859.
Andrew Johnson later ascended to the office of President of the United States.
The 1st was one of four districts in Tennessee whose congressmen did not resign when Tennessee seceded from the Union in 1861. Thomas Amos Rogers Nelson was reelected as a Unionist (the name used by a coalition of Republicans, northern Democrats and anti-Confederate Southern Democrats) to the Thirty-seventh Congress, but he was arrested by Confederate troops while en route to Washington, D.C. and taken to Richmond. Nelson was paroled and returned home to Jonesborough, where he kept a low profile for the length of his term.[3]
Like the rest of East Tennessee, slavery was not as common in this area as the rest of the state due to its mountain terrain, which was dominated by small farms instead of plantations.[4] The district was also the home of the first exclusively abolitionist periodicals in the nation, The Manumission Intelligencer and The Emancipator, founded in Jonesborough by Elihu Embree in 1819.[5]
Due to these factors, this area supported the Union over the Confederacy in the Civil War, and identified with the Republican Party after Tennessee was readmitted to the Union in 1867, electing candidates representing the Unionist Party--a merger of Republicans and pro-Union Democrats--both before and after the war. This allegiance continues to this day, with Republicans dominating every level of government. While a few Democratic pockets exist in the district's urban areas, they are not enough to sway the district.
The district typically gives its congressmen long tenures in Washington; indeed, it elected some of the few truly senior Republican congressmen from Southern districts before the 1950s. Only eight people have represented it since 1921.
List of representatives
Representative | Party | Years | Electoral history | |
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District created March 4, 1805 | ||||
John Rhea | Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1805 – March 3, 1815 |
Redistricted from the at-large district | |
Samuel Powell | Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1815 – March 3, 1817 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
John Rhea | Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1817 – March 3, 1823 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
John Blair | Jacksonian Democratic- Republican |
March 4, 1823 – March 3, 1825 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Jacksonian | March 4, 1825 – March 3, 1835 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | ||
William B. Carter | Anti- Jacksonian |
March 4, 1835 – March 3, 1837 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Whig | March 4, 1837 – March 3, 1841 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | ||
Thomas D. Arnold | Whig | March 4, 1841 – March 3, 1843 |
Retired | |
Andrew Johnson | Democratic | March 4, 1843 – March 3, 1853 |
Elected Governor of Tennessee | |
Brookins Campbell | Democratic | March 4, 1853 – December 25, 1853 |
Died | |
Vacant | December 25, 1853 – March 30, 1854 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | ||
Nathaniel G. Taylor | Whig | March 30, 1854 – March 3, 1855 |
Lost re-election | |
Albert G. Watkins | Democratic | March 4, 1855 – March 3, 1859 |
Redistricted from the 2nd district Retired | |
Thomas A. R. Nelson | Opposition | March 4, 1859 – March 3, 1861 |
Re-elected in 1860, but captured en route to Congress and failed to take his seat in 1861 | |
Civil War and Reconstruction | ||||
Nathaniel G. Taylor | Unionist | July 24, 1866 – March 3, 1867 | Retired | |
Roderick R. Butler | Republican | March 4, 1867 – March 3, 1875 |
Lost re-election | |
William McFarland | Democratic | March 4, 1875 – March 3, 1877 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
James H. Randolph | Republican | March 4, 1877 – March 3, 1879 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Robert L. Taylor | Democratic | March 4, 1879 – March 3, 1881 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Augustus H. Pettibone | Republican | March 4, 1881 – March 3, 1887 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Roderick R. Butler | Republican | March 4, 1887 – March 3, 1889 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Alfred A. Taylor | Republican | March 4, 1889 – March 3, 1895 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
William C. Anderson | Republican | March 4, 1895 – March 3, 1897 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
Walter P. Brownlow | Republican | March 4, 1897 – July 8, 1910 |
Died | |
Vacant | July 9, 1910 – November 7, 1910 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | ||
Zachary D. Massey | Republican | November 8, 1910 – March 3, 1911 |
Retired | |
Sam R. Sells | Republican | March 4, 1911 – March 3, 1921 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | |
B. Carroll Reece | Republican | March 4, 1921 – March 3, 1931 |
Lost renomination to Oscar Lovette | |
Oscar B. Lovette | Republican | March 4, 1931 – March 3, 1933 |
Lost renomination | |
B. Carroll Reece | Republican | March 4, 1933 – January 3, 1947 |
Retired to serve as chairman of the Republican National Committee | |
Dayton E. Phillips | Republican | January 3, 1947 – January 3, 1951 |
Lost renomination | |
B. Carroll Reece | Republican | January 3, 1951 – March 19, 1961 |
Died | |
Vacant | March 20, 1961 – May 15, 1961 |
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] | ||
Louise Reece | Republican | May 16, 1961 – January 3, 1963 |
Elected to finish her husband's term Retired | |
Jimmy Quillen | Republican | January 3, 1963 – January 3, 1997 |
Retired | |
William L. Jenkins | Republican | January 3, 1997 – January 3, 2007 |
Retired | |
David Davis | Republican | January 3, 2007 – January 3, 2009 |
Lost renomination | |
Phil Roe | Republican | January 3, 2009 – present |
First elected in 2008 |
Historical district boundaries
See also
Source
References
- ↑ "Partisan Voting Index Districts of the 113th Congress: 2004 & 2008" (PDF). The Cook Political Report. 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-10.
- ↑ "Roe defeats incumbent Davis for 1st Congressional District nomination", Johnson City Press, August 8, 2008.
- ↑ "A Patriot's Voice", Neal O'Steen, Tennessee Alumnus Summer 1997
- ↑ Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture: Slavery
- ↑ Waymarking: First Abolition Publications
- Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
- Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
- Congressional Biographical Directory of the United States 1774–present
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Coordinates: 36°12′45″N 82°48′00″W / 36.21250°N 82.80000°W