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'''The 7th Congressional District of Tennessee''' is a congressional district located in the middle and southwestern parts of the state, connecting suburbs of [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]] and [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]]. It is the state's wealthiest district in terms of [[per capita income]], as well as the third-largest in area.
'''The 7th Congressional District of Tennessee''' is a congressional district located in the middle and southwestern parts of the state, connecting suburbs of [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]] and [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]]. It is the state's wealthiest district in terms of [[per capita income]], as well as the third-largest in area.

Revision as of 08:02, 25 November 2008

Tennessee's 7th congressional district
Representative
Population (2000)632,143
Median household
income
50,090
Ethnicity
Cook PVIR+10

The 7th Congressional District of Tennessee is a congressional district located in the middle and southwestern parts of the state, connecting suburbs of Memphis and Nashville. It is the state's wealthiest district in terms of per capita income, as well as the third-largest in area.

Cities in the district include Germantown, Brentwood, Bolivar, Lexington, and Savannah. It also includes most of Clarksville, as well as Tennessee's share of nearby Fort Campbell. Also in the district are portions of Nashville, Memphis and Collierville.

The district's current configuration dates from 1983, when Tennessee gained a district as a result of the 1980 Census. At that time, large portions of the old 6th District were shifted to the 4th and 9th districts, and the remaining territory of the old 6th was renumbered the 7th. Prior to the reapportionment that resulted from the 2000 Census, the district's boundaries generally coincided with county lines[1], but in Middle Tennessee, the 7th district's current geography resembles a gerrymander (see image).

The 7th is a very safe seat for the Republican Party. In fact, it is the state's most Republican area outside the party's traditional heartland in East Tennessee. Democrats have made only two serious bids for the district since it took on its current form in 1983, and came within single digits only once. Most of the district's residents have not been represented by a Democrat since 1973.

The district's politics are dominated by the wealthy suburbs of Memphis (e.g., Germantown, Collierville, Cordova) and Nashville (e.g., Brentwood, Franklin). These areas boast some of the highest median incomes in the nation, and have swelled with former Nashville and Memphis residents since the late 1960s. At first, this was due to anger over court-ordered desegregation. Since the late 1970s, the motivation has been a desire to seek more "family-friendly," religious environments (as opposed to the urbane liberal orientations of Nashville and Memphis). They give the 7th a character similar to other highly affluent suburban districts in the South (e.g., those around Birmingham, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Antonio, Houston and Atlanta). Many of the state's most politically active churches are located in the suburban areas of the district, giving the 7th a strong social conservative tint typical of most affluent Southern suburban districts. Republicans dominate every level of government in the suburban areas, which tend to elect some of Tennessee's most conservative state legislators.

The rural areas of the district are demographically similar to the neighboring 8th District, and mostly send Democrats to the General Assembly. However, most of the Democrats in the 7th's rural areas are as conservative on social issues as their suburban counterparts. They have long been more willing to support Republicans at the national level than their counterparts in the 8th. Many of the rural counties now in the district, for instance, voted overwhelmingly for George Wallace's (then governor of nearby Alabama) 1968 presidential candidacy, making Tennessee the strongest-performing state for him that he did not win.

The only significant blocs of reliably Democratic voters left in the district are African-Americans who reside in Fayette and Hardeman counties (bordering Mississippi), mostly descendants of slaves who worked on the area's plantations in the 19th century, as well as in portions of Clarksville; Fayette County, in fact, supported Bill Clinton during both of his runs for president. At the ballot box, however, they are no match for the coalition of wealthy suburbanites and rural conservatives. This factor inhibits the development of anything like a political community enjoyed by their neighbors in Memphis' 9th District.

Marsha Blackburn, a Republican and the first-ever woman to represent this part of Tennessee in Washington, assumed the 7th District's seat in 2003.

Representatives

Name Years Party District Residence Note
James B. Reynolds March 4 1823March 3 1825 Democratic-Republican Clarksville Did not seek re-election
Sam Houston March 4 1825March 3 1827 Democrat Lebanon Elected Governor of Tennessee
John Bell March 4 1827March 3 1835 Jacksonian Nashville Resigned upon appointment as U.S. Secretary of War
March 4 1835March 3 1837 Anti-Jacksonian
March 4 1837March 3 1841 Whig
Robert L. Caruthers March 4 1841March 3 1843 Whig Lebanon Did not seek re-election
David W. Dickinson March 4 1843March 3 1845 Whig Murfreesboro Did not seek re-election
Meredith P. Gentry March 4 1845March 3 1853 Whig Franklin Did not seek re-election
Robert M. Bugg March 4 1853March 3 1855 Whig Giles County Did not seek re-election
John V. Wright March 4 1855March 3 1861 Democrat Purdy Secession of Tennessee
American Civil War
Isaac Roberts Hawkins July 24 1866March 3 1867 Unionist Huntingdon Did not seek re-election
March 4 1867March 3 1871 Republican
Robert Porter Caldwell March 4 1871March 3 1873 Democrat Trenton Defeated for renomination
John DeWitt Clinton Atkins March 4 1873March 3 1875 Democrat Paris Redistricted to 8th district
Washington C. Whitthorne March 4 1875March 3 1883 Democrat Columbia Did not seek re-election
John G. Ballentine March 4 1883March 3 1887 Democrat Pulaski Did not seek re-election
Washington C. Whitthorne March 4 1887March 3 1891 Democrat Columbia Did not seek re-election
Nicholas N. Cox March 4 1891March 3 1901 Democrat Franklin Did not seek re-election
Lemuel P. Padgett March 4 1901August 2 1922 Democrat Columbia Died in office
Vacant August 2 1922November 6 1922
Clarence W. Turner November 7 1922March 3 1923 Democrat Waverly Served remainder of term as caretaker
William C. Salmon March 4 1923March 3 1925 Democrat Columbia Did not seek re-election
Edward E. Eslick March 4 1925June 14 1932 Democrat Pulaski Died in office
Vacant June 14 1932August 12 1932
Willa Eslick August 13 1932March 3 1933 Democrat Pulaski Served remainder of term as caretaker
Gordon Browning March 4 1933January 3 1935 Democrat Huntingdon Ran for U.S. Senate
Herron C. Pearson January 3 1935January 3 1943 Democrat Jackson Did not seek re-election
W. Wirt Courtney January 3, 1943January 3 1949 Democrat Franklin Defeated for renomination
James Patrick Sutton January 3, 1949January 3, 1953 Democrat Wartrace Redistricted to 6th district
Tom J. Murray January 3, 1953December 30, 1966 Democrat Jackson Defeated for renomination and resigned
Vacant December 31, 1966January 2, 1967
Ray Blanton January 3, 1967January 3, 1973 Democrat Adamsville Ran for U.S. Senate
Ed Jones January 3, 1973January 3, 1983 Democrat Yorkville Redistricted to 8th district
Don Sundquist January 3, 1983January 3, 1995 Republican Memphis Elected Governor
Ed Bryant January 3, 1995January 3, 2003 Republican Henderson Ran for U.S. Senate
Marsha Blackburn January 3, 2003 – present Republican Brentwood Incumbent

References

  1. ^ 106th Congress Congressional Districts in Tennessee Electronic Atlas