New York's 33rd congressional district
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The 33rd Congressional District of New York was a congressional district for the United States House of Representatives in New York. It was eliminated as a result of the 1990 Census. It was last represented by Henry J. Nowak. Much of this area became part of 30th District during the 1990s, and is now largely in the 27th district.
Contents |
[edit] Past Components
1983-1993:
- Parts of Erie
1973-1983:
1971-1973:
1963-1971:
1953-1963:
- All of Franklin, Lewis, Jefferson, Oswego, St. Lawrence
1945-1953:
- All of Clinton, Essex, Saratoga, Warren, Washington
- Parts of Rensselaer
1913-1945:
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
[edit] Representatives
- Charles A. Talcott, Democrat, March 4, 1913 - March 3, 1915 (redistricted from 27th district)
- Homer P. Snyder, Republican, March 4, 1915 - March 3, 1925
- Frederick M. Davenport, Republican, March 4, 1925 - March 3, 1933
- Fred J. Sisson, Democrat, March 4, 1933 - January 3, 1937
- Fred J. Douglas, Republican, January 3, 1937 - January 3, 1945
- Dean P. Taylor, Republican, January 3, 1945 - January 3, 1953 (redistricted from 29th district, redistricted to 31st district)
- Clarence E. Kilburn, Republican, January 3, 1953 - January 3, 1963 (redistricted from 34th district, redistricted to 31st district)
- Howard W. Robison, Republican, January 3, 1963 - January 3, 1973 (redistricted from 37th district, redistricted to 27th district)
- William F. Walsh, Republican, January 3, 1973 - January 3, 1979
- Gary A. Lee, Republican, January 3, 1979 - January 3, 1983
- Henry J. Nowak, Democrat, January 3, 1983 - January 3, 1993 (redistricted from 37th district)
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
[edit] Election results
The following chart shows historic election results. Bold type indicates victor. Italic type indicates incumbent.
Year | Democratic | Republican | Other |
---|---|---|---|
1990 | Henry J. Nowak: 84,905 | Thomas K. Kepfer: 18,181 | Louis P. Corrigan, Jr. (Conservative): 6,460 |
1988 | Henry J. Nowak: 139,604 | ||
1986 | Henry J. Nowak: 109,256 | Charles A. Walker: 19,147 | |
1984 | Henry J. Nowak: 155,198 | David S. Lewandowski: 44,880 | |
1982 | Henry J. Nowak: 126,091 | Walter J. Pillich: 19,791 | James F. Gallagher (Right to Life): 4,095 |
1980 | Dolores M. Reed: 39,542 | Gary A. Lee: 132,831 | William L. Jones (Right to Life): 2,898 |
1978 | Roy A. Bernardi: 58,286 | Gary A. Lee: 82,501 | Robert J. Byrne (Conservative): 4,972 Lynne Budzinski (Liberal): 1,695 |
1976 | Charles R. Welch: 48,855 | William F. Walsh: 125,163 | William C. Elkins (Conservative): 5,980 Lillian Reiner (Liberal): 2,757 |
1974 | Robert H. Bockman: 45,043 | William F. Walsh: 97,380 | Francis H. Aspinwall (Conservative): 4,866 Bessie C. Noble (Liberal): 1,802 |
1972 | Clarence Kadys: 53,039 | William F. Walsh: 132,139 | |
1970 | David Bernstein: 45,373 | Howard W. Robison: 90,196 | |
1968 | Benjamin Nichols: 50,549 | Howard W. Robison: 110,080 | |
1966 | Blair G. Ewing: 45,761 | Howard W. Robison: 88,378 | Joe Griffith (Write-in): 432 |
1964 | John L. Joy: 69,277 | Howard W. Robison: 97,213 | |
1962 | Theodore W. Maurer: 41,412 | Howard W. Robison: 92,460 | Harrop Freeman (Liberal): 4,519 |
1960 | Edward J. Gosier: 53,130 | Clarence E. Kilburn: 91,710 | Winfred Harberson (Liberal): 3,334 |
1958 | Robert P. McDonald: 40,010 | Clarence E. Kilburn: 73,698 | |
1956 | Louis C. Britton: 38,793 | Clarence E. Kilburn: 103,419 | |
1954 | Harold Blake: 31,279 | Clarence E. Kilburn: 70,708 | William J. Delo (Liberal): 1,851 |
1952 | Maurice N. McGrath: 41,803 | Clarence E. Kilburn: 98,653 | William J. Delo (Liberal): 2,522 |
1950 | Joseph T. Hammer: 42,680 | Dean P. Taylor: 100,425 | George LaFortune (American Labor): 1,874 John H. Sullivan (Liberal): 676 |
1948 | Joseph T. Hammer: 52,059 | Dean P. Taylor: 98,618 | Rockwell Kent (American Labor): 4,257 |
1946 | David J. Fitzgerald: 38,666 | Dean P. Taylor: 89,778 | |
1944 | Thomas P. McLoughlin: 52,354 | Dean P. Taylor: 95,299 | Henry G. Bell (American Labor): 4,530 |
1942 | Stanard Dow Butler: 34,965 | Fred J. Douglas: 53,030 | |
1940 | Samuel H. Miller: 52,469 | Fred J. Douglas: 72,412 | Edward G. Cluney (American Labor): 3,405 |
1938 | Ralph A. Peters: 37,195 | Fred J. Douglas: 63,857 | Stanley C. Walewski (American Labor): 2,882 Albert R. Tully (Socialist): 344 |
1936 | Fred J. Sisson: 45,969 | Fred J. Douglas: 63,281 | William D. Arquint (Prosperity): 8,479 Peter Hansen (Socialist): 1,428 |
1934 | Fred J. Sisson: 45,831 | Frederick M. Davenport: 45,579 | Anthony Spadafora (Socialist): 1,682 Fred C. Foster (Law Preservation): 205 |
1932 | Fred J. Sisson: 53,427 | Frederick M. Davenport: 52,398 | Otto L. Endres (Socialist): 1,119 |
1930 | James J. Loftis: 39,340 | Frederick M. Davenport: 39,810 | |
1928 | Fred J. Sisson: 48,380 | Frederick M. Davenport: 62,746 | |
1926 | Isaac C. Flint: 30,265 | Frederick M. Davenport: 40,845 | Otto L. Endres (Socialist): 1,572 |
1924 | Albert R. Kessinger: 33,068 | Frederick M. Davenport: 48,591 | Otto L. Endres (Socialist): 1,979 |
1922 | Fred J. Sisson: 30,118 | Homer P. Snyder: 31,978 | Charles L. Letson (Socialist): 1,431 William Harrison (Prohibition): 987 |
1920 | Roger W. Huntington: 21,732 | Homer P. Snyder: 47,251 | Harvey P. Brucker (Socialist): 2,887 Olin S. Bishop (Prohibition): 1,320 |
[edit] Source
New York's congressional districts |
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 The 30th – 45th districts are obsolete. See also: New York's past & present Representatives, Senators, and Delegations All U.S. districts - Apportionment - Redistricting - Gerrymandering - Maps |