Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district: Difference between revisions
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| [[Joe Sestak]] || [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat]] || 2007 – 2009 || [[Springfield, PA|Springfield]] || Elected on November 7, 2006; was sworn in on January 4, 2007 |
| [[Joe Sestak]] || [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat]] || 2007 – 2009 || [[Springfield, PA|Springfield]] || Elected on November 7, 2006; was sworn in on January 4, 2007 |
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|- {{party shading/Republican}} |
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| [[Craig Williams]] || [[Republican (United States)|Republican]] || 2007 – Incumbent || |
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Revision as of 03:45, 22 October 2008
Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district | |
---|---|
Representative | |
Population (2000) | 646,522 |
Median household income | 56,126 |
Ethnicity |
|
Cook PVI | D + 4 |
Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district is one of Pennsylvania's voting districts for the United States House of Representatives, incorporating parts of the Philadelphia suburbs, including most of Delaware County. It is currently represented by Democrat Joe Sestak, who defeated longtime Republican incumbent Curt Weldon in the 2006 midterm elections in this once safely Republican district.
Geography
Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district, is located in Southeast Pennsylvania. It contains the western and northwestern suburbs of Philadelphia. It consists of the majority of Delaware County (except for the City of Chester and some of the eastern boroughs), a portion of Chester County east of West Chester, and a portion of southern Montgomery County in the affluent Main Line area.
Demographics
The PA 7th Congressional District encompasses an area of diverse wealth, ranging from blue collar and working class households in the southeastern portions of Delaware County (mostly around in the oil refinery areas of Marcus Hook and Trainer) to the southern and western portions of the affluent Main Line area of Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery Counties. The PA 7th Congressional District is the home of several major colleges and universities, including Widener University, Haverford College, Villanova University, and Cheyney University, the first traditionally black college in the U.S. The district is also the home of Boeing's helicopter facility in Ridley Park. Chester, the largest municipality in Delaware County, is not represented by the PA 7th Congressional District (it is under the Pennsylvania 1st Congressional District, which also includes South Philadelphia), but receives attention from the PA 7th due to Chester's influence to the rest of the county.
Representatives
Representative | Party | Years | District home | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|
District created in 1795 from Pennsylvania's At-large congressional district | ||||
John W. Kittera | Federalist | 1795 - 1801 | ||
Thomas Boude | Federalist | 1801 - 1803 | ||
John Rea | Democratic-Republican | 1803 - 1811 | ||
William Piper | Democratic-Republican | 1811 - 1813 | ||
John M. Hyneman | Democratic-Republican | 1813 | Resigned from office on August 2, 1813 | |
Daniel Udree | Democratic-Republican | 1813 – 1815 | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection | |
Joseph Hiester | Democratic-Republican | 1815 – 1820 | Resigned to become Governor of Pennsylvania | |
Daniel Udree | Democratic-Republican | 1820 – 1821 | ||
Ludwig Worman | Federalist | 1821 – 1822 | Earl Township | Died in office |
Daniel Udree | Democratic-Republican | 1822 – 1823 | ||
District reorganized in 1831 to have two seats | ||||
Henry Wilson Daniel Udree |
Democratic-Republican | 1823 – 1825 | ||
Henry Wilson Jacob Krebs |
Jacksonian | 1825 – 1826 | Henry Wilson died in office | |
William Addams Jacob Krebs |
Jacksonian | 1826 – 1827 | ||
William Addams Joseph Fry, Jr. |
Jacksonian | 1827 – 1829 | ||
Henry A. P. Muhlenberg Joseph Fry, Jr. |
Jacksonian | 1829 – 1831 | ||
District reorganized in 1831 to have one seat | ||||
Henry A. P. Muhlenberg | Jacksonian | 1831 – 1833 | ||
David D. Wagener | Jacksonian | 1833 – 1837 | Easton | |
Democrat | 1837 – 1841 | |||
John Westbrook | Democrat | 1841 – 1843 | Dingmans Ferry | Declined to be a candidate for reelection |
Abraham R. McIlvaine | Whig | 1843 – 1849 | Downingtown | Unsuccessful candidate for renomination |
Jesse C. Dickey | Whig | 1849 – 1851 | New London | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection |
John A. Morrison | Democrat | 1851 – 1853 | Cochranville | |
Samuel A. Bridges | Democrat | 1853 – 1855 | Allentown | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection |
Samuel C. Bradshaw | Opposition | 1855 – 1857 | Quakertown | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection |
Henry Chapman | Democrat | 1857 – 1859 | Doylestown | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
Henry C. Longnecker | Republican | 1859 – 1861 | Allentown | |
Thomas B. Cooper | Democrat | 1861 – 1862 | Coopersburg | Died in office |
John D. Stiles | Democrat | 1862 – 1863 | Allentown | Moved to Pennsylvania's 6th congressional district |
John M. Broomall | Republican | 1863 – 1869 | Media | Not a candidate for renomination |
Washington Townsend | Republican | 1869 – 1875 | West Chester | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
Alan Wood, Jr. | Republican | 1875 – 1877 | Philadelphia | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
Isaac N. Evans | Republican | 1877 – 1879 | Doylestown | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
William Godshalk | Republican | 1879 – 1883 | Hatboro | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
Isaac N. Evans | Republican | 1883 – 1887 | Hatboro | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
Robert M. Yardley | Republican | 1887 – 1891 | Doylestown | Declined to be a candidate for renomination |
Edwin Hallowell | Democrat | 1891 – 1893 | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection | |
Irving P. Wanger | Republican | 1893 – 1903 | Moved to Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district | |
Thomas S. Butler | Republican | 1903 – 1923 | Uwchlan Township | Moved to Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district |
George P. Darrow | Republican | 1923 – 1937 | Philadelphia | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1936 |
Ira W. Drew | Democrat | 1937 – 1939 | Philadelphia | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1938 |
George P. Darrow | Republican | 1939 – 1941 | Philadelphia | Not a candidate for renomination in 1940 |
Hugh Scott | Republican | 1941 – 1945 | Philadelphia | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1944 |
James Wolfenden | Republican | 1945 – 1947 | Upper Darby Township | Did not run in 1946 |
E. Wallace Chadwick | Republican | 1947 – 1949 | Radnor Township | Unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1948 |
Benjamin F. James | Republican | 1949 – 1959 | Radnor Township | Not a candidate for renomination in 1958 |
William H. Milliken, Jr. | Republican | 1959 – 1965 | Sharon Hill | Not a candidate for renomination in 1964 |
G. Robert Watkins | Republican | 1965 – 1967 | West Chester | Moved to Pennsylvania's 9th congressional district |
Lawrence G. Williams | Republican | 1967 – 1975 | Springfield | Unsuccessful candidate for reelection |
Robert W. Edgar | Democrat | 1975 – 1987 | Philadelphia | Did not seek reelection to the House in 1986 |
Curt Weldon | Republican | 1987 – 2007 | Thornbury Township | Defeated for Reelection on November 7, 2006 |
Joe Sestak | Democrat | 2007 – 2009 | Springfield | Elected on November 7, 2006; was sworn in on January 4, 2007 |