Meet the players of the 1916 National Defense Act
Pictured on the left is the 28th President of the United States
Woodrow Wilson
Served 1913 - 1921
Pictured on the right is the SECRETARY OF WAR who resigned as a result of a dispute between himself and Woodrow Wilson on February 10th, 1916.
Lindley Miller Garrison
Served 1913-1916
Pictured on the Left is the Georgist Secretary of War Who replaced Garrison.
Newton Diehl Baker
Served 1916-1921
Traitor
MAJOR LEGISLATION
Major legislation
May 15, 1916: Kern Amendment
May 29, 1916: Fraudulent Advertising Act of 1916
May 31, 1916: Tillman Act
June 3, 1916: National Defense Act of 1916
June 9, 1916: Chamberlain–Ferris Act
July 11, 1916: Federal Aid Road Act of 1916 (Bankhead–Shackleford Act, also known as Federal "Good Roads" Act)
July 11, 1916: Terminal Inspection Act of 1916
July 17, 1916: Federal Farm Loan Act (Hollis–Lever Act)
July 27, 1916: River and Harbors Act of 1916
July 28, 1916: Post Office Appropriation Act of 1916
August 9, 1916: Uniform Bill of Lading Act of 1916
August 11, 1916: Irrigation District Act of 1916 (Smith Act)
August 11, 1916: Wildlife Game Refuges Act of 1916
August 11, 1916: Grain Standards Act of 1916
August 11, 1916: Cotton Futures Act of 1916
August 11, 1916: Brush Disposal Act of 1916
August 11, 1916: Warehouse Act of 1916
August 25, 1916: National Park Service Act (Kent–Smoot Act)
August 29, 1916: 2nd Uniform Bill of Lading Act of 1916
August 29, 1916: Jones Act (Philippines)
August 29, 1916: Federal Possession and Control Act of 1916
August 29, 1916: Army Appropriations Act of 1916
August 29, 1916: Naval Act of 1916
August 29, 1916: Naval Reserve Force Act
August 31, 1916: Federal Standard Container Act
August 31, 1916: Standard Fruits and Vegetable Baskets and Containers Act of 1916
September 1, 1916: Keating–Owen Act
September 3, 1916: Adamson Act
September 7, 1916: Merchant Marine Act of 1916 (Alexander Act)
September 7, 1916: Workingmen's Compensation Act (Kern–McGillicuddy Act)
September 8, 1916: Anti-Dumping Act of 1916
September 8, 1916: Emergency Revenue Act of 1916
October 20, 1916: Special Air Preparedness Act
December 29, 1916: Stock-Raising Homestead Act
February 5, 1917: Immigration Act of 1917
February 22, 1917: Federal Interpleader Act of 1917
February 23, 1917: Smith–Hughes Act
February 26, 1917: Mount McKinley National Park Act of 1917
March 1, 1917: Flood Control Act of 1917 (Ransdell–Humphreys Act)
March 2, 1917: Jones–Shafroth Act
March 3, 1917: Reed Amendment
March 3, 1917: Sheppard Bone-Dry Act
March 3, 1917: Special Preparedness Fund Act of 1917
March 4, 1917: Timber Export Act
NON-VOTING MEMBERS OF THE SIXTY-FOURTH CONGRESS
Alaska Territory. James Wickersham
Philippines. Manuel Earnshaw
Hawaii Territory. Jonah Kuhio Kalanianaole
Philippines. Manuel L. Quezon
Puerto Rico. Luis Muñoz Rivera
The sell of our Second amendment rights.
In the middle of World War 1 there was an American movement that aimed to increase military powers. A move that would end up creating the standing American standing army that we know today. World War 1 began by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria- Hungary in June of 1914.
At home there was a storm brewing between then Secretary of War Lindley Miller Garisson, congress, and the President. What was this feud about that led Garrison to eventually resign on February 10th, 1916? Let me explain this briefly. The National Defense act was in the full swing of debate starting after German U-boats started sinking US ships in 1915 until it passed congress on June 3rd, 1916.
Why the fallout and resignation? Garrison was championing his version of the “Continental Army” as a trained force of 140,000 Regular Army, 130,000 National Guard (the name that most states Militia’s had adopted in that era.), and a voluntary “Continental Army Reserve” of 400,000 – 500,000 volunteers obligated to serve 6 years, training annually. He met opposition from both sides. One side warning that it was the precursor to the standing army that the forefathers warned of. The other side debated that it wasn’t large enough. Garrison in frustration with no support from either side nor the president he Resigned from office.
Let me introduce you to the new, at the time, successor the Georgist Newton Diehl Baker.
As World War 1 rages on there is minor shift in the defenses of the nation and the National Defense act was passed in congress on June 3rd, 1916.
Around January 16th, 1917, the Zimmerman telegram was intercepted indicating that there was an attempted alliance between Mexico and Germany. This sparked American outrage driven by propaganda causing the American people to support the President in declaring war. The interception of this telegram was of significant importance at the time.
For those of you who do not know what a Georgist is, I will give you the breakdown here. A Georgist is a follower of the philosophy of Henry George. Henry George was an American Political economist translating to the idea of georgism. His philosophy advocated that individuals should own what they produce, but the economic rent from land and its natural resources belongs to the whole community and should fund public services via a land tax “replacing” other taxes. He proposed that through this mechanism you could end poverty.
What I am fairly certain a supermajority of Americans and the World still have not caught is the following set of facts:
Romania started World War 1 fighting alongside Russia, Britain, and France (allies) against Germany, Austria, Hungary, etc. (central powers). However, they were defeated and forced to sign an armistice in late 1917. In 1883 (decades before World War 1) Romania entered a secret pact with Germany and Austria-Hungary. All public knowledge what makes this so significant? The National Liberal Party was a Romanian political group otherwise known as Georgists. May be a coincidence but interesting none the less.
The Major fact is that the 1916 National Defense Act (52 pages) as it passed resulted in the current standing army of approximately 1.3 million. Congress at the time made some provisions that favor someone specific and some that are downright treasonous.
Sec. 8 has a provision for a certain judge with 10 years a supreme court judge in the Philippine Islands. 45-50 years old. At least 2 years in the army and be proficient in the Spanish language. Oddly specific to fill a vacant seat in the Judge Advocate Generals Department. By 1918 that department exploded in numbers and were the first department using enlisted men as clerks.
Sec. 10 Established a Military medical department consisting of a Surgeon General, a medical corps, a medical reserve corps, a dental corps, a veterinary corps, and a nurse corps. Sections 11-56 lists several more organizations and their provisions.
Sec. 57 Is ultra important because it creates a standing army and gives federal control over the citizens militia and is the first strike of the invasion of the constitutional militia.
Sec 57. Composition of the Militia- “The militia of the of the United States shall consist of all able bodied males who have or shall have declared their intentions to become citizens of the United states, who shall have declared their intention to become citizens of the United States, who shall be more than eighteen years of age and, except as hereinafter provided, not more than forty-five years of age, and said militia shall be divided into three classes, the National Guard, the Naval Militia, and the Unorganized militia.” THESE ARE THE TRUE WORDS OF THE 1916 NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT BEFORE IT PASSED THEREFORE, NOT LAW NOR DID THESE OREGINIZATIONS, DEPARTMENTS, NOR BRANCHES OF THE MILITIA EXIST PRIOR TO THIS ACT.
Sections. 58 – 119 Cover the structure and the composition of the NEW militia and outlines the infiltration of the constitutional militia referred to as the Organized Militia. Sec. 62 says in it, “Militia, shall be allowed to retain it’s ancient privileges.” “The Adjutant general shall be appointed by the president.” Creates a Militia division, Abolishes the Militia Bureau of the War Department- the National Militia Board established in 1908 and renames it the Militia bureau and places it under the secretary of wars authority. A provision for an ex officio member to be chief of the militia. States that, “nothing in this act shall prevent the organization and maintenance of state police or constabulary.” Funds the secretary of war to buy provisions for the new national guard. Imposes fines for non-compliance to the federal government. Outlines pay and education. Sec. 116 guarantees the disbarment of any state’s National guard in consequence of non-compliance. Sec. 117 says that the militia in this act applies to land forces only and that the naval militia may be prescribed by the President for each state. Sec. 118 says the president sets up the rules for the Naval Militias. Sec. 119 provides that the Georgist Secretary of war decides the estimated yearly amount needed for provisions to sustain this new standing army.
Sec 118 – 123 acquires all public and private ammunition and arms manufactures. Imposes a 50,000 dollar fine for those who refuse to comply as outlined by this act. Gives the secretary of war power over the President in purchasing matters of arms and ammunition.
Sec. 121 is the exact moment in time the world’s largest army was robbed of its power. They conquered the United States by disabling the Organized Militia as it is the single most vital mechanism to maintain a free state. The government has had no fear of the People since. Section 121 of the 1916 National Defense Act reads:
Sec.121- “INVESTIGATION AS TO GOVERNMENT MANUFACTURE OF ARMS AND SO FORTH. The Secretary of War is here by authorized to appoint a board of five citizens, two of whom shall be civilians and three of whom shall be officers of the army.” It goes on to explain that the purpose of the investigation is to identify usefulness of civilian arms manufactures. (Casing the joint) Report back to Secretary of war and the Secretary of War reports back to the President. Sec. 123 Makes a provision that if anything in the Act prevents the purchasing of all arms, making supplies basically ignore it for the best interest in public service.
Sec. 124 Allows the president to secure a nitrate supply and allocates funds for the Panama Canal.
Sec. 125-127 Cover the uniform and service.
The final section Sec. 128 reads: “All laws and parts of laws in so far as they are inconsistent with this act are hereby repealed.”
Did I mention that this bill includes adding national guards in the Philippines and other territories and Sec. 86 starts by stating, “Any state, Territory, or the District of Columbia may, with the approval of the Secretary of War, purchase for CASH from the War Department for the USE of the National guard.” These are just the most significant thefts in the 1916 National Defense Authorization Act. There are thousands of Bills out there hiding theft and fraud out there. Time to hold them accountable.
It is in my humble self-evident conclusion that Woodrow Wilson and the Georgist Newton Diehl Baker with the help of the Sixty-fourth congress used Sess. 1 chapter 134 1916 The National Defense Authorization Act as a mechanism to Infiltrate the Organized Militia of the states, take it over for the purpose of monetizing it, and then using it for personal gain. What is also self-evident that the Georgism mindset, common amongst democrats at the time, has been the single most financially destructive mechanism to the American family. Though the georgists are known historically as the single tax movement their campaign slogan was Free Land, Free Trade, Free Men in 1890.
It is also in my Humble opinion that Woodrow Wilson, Newton Diehl Baker and the entire Sixty-Fourth congress be investigated and charged posthumously for treason and that all living congress persons and presidents should turn themselves in immediately and comply with any investigation that would clear them of being beneficiaries of this despicable Act. If they do not they shall be arrested until they can be cleared of any wrong doing.
It is absolutely self-evident that the Unredacted Epstein Files need to be released.
I swear this to be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth so help me God.
-Michael Pedersen
Sources: Original and current forms of Original 13 colonies. Oregon constitution of 1859 and 2024 version. The Constitution of the United States. The 1916 National Defense Authorization Act otherwise known as SIXTY-FOURTH CONGRESS Sess. I Ch. 134 1916.
Securing a method of communication between the people and our local and federal government
✳︎
Providing a volunteer force to recovering our missing children
✳︎
Securing freedom for ALL as the US Constitution intended
✳︎
Offering neutral perspective into current events through the input of the People
✳︎
Give the people the means to stand against Evil
Securing a method of communication between the people and our local and federal government ✳︎ Providing a volunteer force to recovering our missing children ✳︎ Securing freedom for ALL as the US Constitution intended ✳︎ Offering neutral perspective into current events through the input of the People ✳︎ Give the people the means to stand against Evil
Senate of the Sixty-Fourth Congress
John H Bankhead
Oscar Underwood
Henry F Ashurst
Marcus A Smith
Joseph Taylor Robinson
James P. Clark
William F Kirby
John D Works
James D Phelan
John F. Shafroth
Charles S Thomas
George P Mclean
Frank B Brandegee
Henry A Du Pont
William Saulsbury Jr.
Nathan P Brian
Duncan U Fletcher
Thomas W Hardwick
Hoke Smith
William E Borah
James H brady
James Hamilton Lewis
Lawrence Y Sherman
John W Kern
Benjamin F Shively
Thomas Taggart
William S Kinyon
Albert B Cummins
William H Thompson
Charles Curtis
Ollie M James
John C.W. Beckham
Joseph E Randsdell
Robert F Broussard
Charles Fletcher Johnson
Edward C Burleigh
Blair Lee
John W Smith
Henry Cabot Lodge
John W Weeks
Charles E Townsend
William Alden Smith
Moses E Clapp
Knute Nelson
John Sharp Williams
James K Vadaman
James A Reed
William J Stone
Henry L Meyers
Thomas J Walsh
Gilbert M Hitchcock
George W Norris
Key Pittman
Francis G Newlands
Henry F Hollis
Jacob H Gallinger
James E Martine
William Hughes
Thomas B Catron
Albert B Fall
James A O’Gorman
James W Wadsworth Jr.
Furnifold M Simmons
Lee S. Overman
Porter J McCumber
Asle Gronna
Atlee Pomerene
Warren G Harding
Robert L Owen
Thomas P Gore
Harry Lane
George E Chamberlain
George T Oliver
Boies Penrose
Henry F Lippitt
LeBaron B Colt
Benjamin R Tillman
Ellison D Smith
Thomas Sterling
Edwin S Johnson
Luke Lea
John K Shields
Charles A Culberson
Morris Sheppard
George Sutherland
Reed Smoot
Carroll S Page
William P Dillingham
Claude A Swanson
Thomas M Martin
Miles Poindexter
Wesley L Jones
William E Chilton
Nathan Goff
Robert M La Follette Sr.
Paul O Husting
Clarence D Clark
Francis E Warren
House of Representatives for the Sixty-Fourth Congress
Alabama
1. Oscar Lee Gray (D)
2. S. Hubert Dent Jr. (D)
3. Henry B. Steagall (D)
4. Fred L. Blackmon (D)
5. J. Thomas Heflin (D)
6. William B. Oliver (D)
7. John L. Burnett (D)
8. Edward B. Almon (D)
9. George Huddleston (D)
At-large. John Abercrombie (D)
Arizona
At-large. Carl Hayden (D)
Arkansas
1. Thaddeus H. Caraway (D)
2. William A. Oldfield (D)
3. John N. Tillman (D)
4. Otis Wingo (D)
5. Henderson M. Jacoway (D)
6. Samuel M. Taylor (D)
7. William S. Goodwin (D)
California
1. William Kent (I)
2. John E. Raker (D)
3. Charles F. Curry (R)
4. Julius Kahn (R)
5. John I. Nolan (R)
6. John A. Elston (Prog.)
7. Denver S. Church (D)
8. Everis A. Hayes (R)
9. Charles H. Randall (Proh.)
10. William Stephens (Prog.), until July 22, 1916
Henry S. Benedict (R), from November 7, 1916
11. William Kettner (D)
Colorado
1. Benjamin Clark Hilliard (D)
2. Charles Bateman Timberlake (R)
3. Edward Keating (D)
4. Edward T. Taylor (D)
Connecticut
1. P. Davis Oakey (R)
2. Richard P. Freeman (R)
3. John Q. Tilson (R)
4. Ebenezer J. Hill (R)
5. James P. Glynn (R)
Delaware
At-large. Thomas W. Miller (R)
Florida
1. Stephen M. Sparkman (D)
2. Frank Clark (D)
3. Emmett Wilson (D)
4. William J. Sears (D)
Georgia
1. Charles G. Edwards (D)
2. Frank Park (D)
3. Charles R. Crisp (D)
4. William C. Adamson (D)
5. William S. Howard (D)
6. James W. Wise (D)
7. Gordon Lee (D)
8. Samuel J. Tribble (D), until December 8, 1916
Tinsley W. Rucker Jr. (D), from January 11, 1917
9. Thomas Montgomery Bell (D)
10. Carl Vinson (D)
11. John R. Walker (D)
12. Dudley M. Hughes (D)
Idaho
At-large. Addison T. Smith (R)
At-large. Robert M. McCracken (R)
Illinois
1. Martin B. Madden (R)
2. James R. Mann (R)
3. William W. Wilson (R)
4. James T. McDermott (D)
5. Adolph J. Sabath (D)
6. James McAndrews (D)
7. Frank Buchanan (D)
8. Thomas Gallagher (D)
9. Frederick A. Britten (R)
10. George E. Foss (R)
11. Ira C. Copley (Prog.)
12. Charles Eugene Fuller (R)
13. John C. McKenzie (R)
14. Clyde H. Tavenner (D)
15. Edward John King (R)
16. Claude U. Stone (D)
17. John A. Sterling (R)
18. Joseph G. Cannon (R)
19. William B. McKinley (R)
20. Henry T. Rainey (D)
21. Loren E. Wheeler (R)
22. William A. Rodenberg (R)
23. Martin D. Foster (D)
24. Thomas S. Williams (R)
25. Edward E. Denison (R)
At-large. Burnett M. Chiperfield (R)
At-large. William E. Williams (D)
Indiana
1. Charles Lieb (D)
2. William A. Cullop (D)
3. William E. Cox (D)
4. Lincoln Dixon (D)
5. Ralph Wilbur Moss (D)
6. Finly H. Gray (D)
7. Merrill Moores (R)
8. John A. M. Adair (D)
9. Martin A. Morrison (D)
10. William R. Wood (R)
11. George W. Rauch (D)
12. Cyrus Cline (D)
13. Henry A. Barnhart (D)
Iowa
1. Charles A. Kennedy (R)
2. Harry E. Hull (R)
3. Burton E. Sweet (R)
4. Gilbert N. Haugen (R)
5. James W. Good (R)
6. C. William Ramseyer (R)
7. Cassius C. Dowell (R)
8. Horace M. Towner (R)
9. William R. Green (R)
10. Frank P. Woods (R)
11. Thomas J. Steele (D)
Kansas
1. Daniel Read Anthony Jr. (R)
2. Joseph Taggart (D)
3. Philip P. Campbell (R)
4. Dudley Doolittle (D)
5. Guy T. Helvering (D)
6. John R. Connelly (D)
7. Jouett Shouse (D)
8. William A. Ayres (D)
Kentucky
1. Alben Barkley (D)
2. David Hayes Kincheloe (D)
3. Robert Y. Thomas Jr. (D)
4. Ben Johnson (D)
5. J. Swagar Sherley (D)
6. Arthur B. Rouse (D)
7. J. Campbell Cantrill (D)
8. Harvey Helm (D)
9. William Jason Fields (D)
10. John W. Langley (R)
11. Caleb Powers (R)
Louisiana
1. Albert Estopinal (D)
2. Henry Garland Dupré (D)
3. Whitmell P. Martin (Prog.)
4. John Thomas Watkins (D)
5. Riley Joseph Wilson (D)
6. Lewis Lovering Morgan (D)
7. Ladislas Lazaro (D)
8. James Benjamin Aswell (D)
Maine
1. Asher C. Hinds (R)
2. Daniel J. McGillicuddy (D)
3. John A. Peters (R)
4. Frank E. Guernsey (R)
Maryland
1. Jesse D. Price (D)
2. J. Frederick C. Talbott (D)
3. Charles P. Coady (D)
4. J. Charles Linthicum (D)
5. Sydney Emanuel Mudd II (R)
6. David J. Lewis (D)
Massachusetts
1. Allen T. Treadway (R)
2. Frederick H. Gillett (R)
3. Calvin D. Paige (R)
4. Samuel E. Winslow (R)
5. John J. Rogers (R)
6. Augustus P. Gardner (R)
7. Michael F. Phelan (D)
8. Frederick W. Dallinger (R)
9. Ernest W. Roberts (R)
10. Peter F. Tague (D)
11. George H. Tinkham (R)
12. James A. Gallivan (D)
13. William H. Carter (R)
14. Richard Olney II (D)
15. William S. Greene (R)
16. Joseph Walsh (R)
Michigan
1. Frank E. Doremus (D)
2. Samuel Beakes (D)
3. John M. C. Smith (R)
4. Edward L. Hamilton (R)
5. Carl Mapes (R)
6. Patrick H. Kelley (R)
7. Louis C. Cramton (R)
8. Joseph W. Fordney (R)
9. James C. McLaughlin (R)
10. George A. Loud (R)
11. Frank D. Scott (R)
12. W. Frank James (R)
13. Charles Archibald Nichols (R)
Minnesota
1. Sydney Anderson (R)
2. Franklin Ellsworth (R)
3. Charles Russell Davis (R)
4. Carl Van Dyke (D)
5. George Ross Smith (R)
6. Charles August Lindbergh (R)
7. Andrew Volstead (R)
8. Clarence B. Miller (R)
9. Halvor Steenerson (R)
10. Thomas D. Schall (Prog.)
Mississippi
1. Ezekiel S. Candler Jr. (D)
2. Hubert D. Stephens (D)
3. Benjamin G. Humphreys II (D)
4. Thomas U. Sisson (D)
5. Samuel Andrew Witherspoon (D), until November 24, 1915
William Webb Venable (D), from January 4, 1916
6. Pat Harrison (D)
7. Percy E. Quin (D)
8. James W. Collier (D)
Missouri
1. James T. Lloyd (D)
2. William W. Rucker (D)
3. Joshua Willis Alexander (D)
4. Charles F. Booher (D
5. William Patterson Borland (D)
6. Clement C. Dickinson (D)
7. Courtney W. Hamlin (D)
8. Dorsey W. Shackleford (D)
9. James Beauchamp Clark (D)
10. Jacob Edwin Meeker (R)
11. William Leo Igoe (D)
12. Leonidas C. Dyer (R)
13. Walter Lewis Hensley (D)
14. Joseph J. Russell (D)
15. Perl D. Decker (D)
16. Thomas L. Rubey (D)
Montana
At-large. John M. Evans (D)
At-large. Tom Stout (D)
Nebraska
1. C. Frank Reavis (R)
2. Charles O. Lobeck (D)
3. Dan V. Stephens (D)
4. Charles Henry Sloan (R)
5. Ashton C. Shallenberger (D)
6. Moses P. Kinkaid (R)
Nevada
At-large. Edwin E. Roberts (R)
New Hampshire
1. Cyrus A. Sulloway (R)
2. Edward Hills Wason (R)
1. William J. Browning (R)
2. Isaac Bacharach (R)
3. Thomas J. Scully (D)
4. Elijah C. Hutchinson (R)
5. John H. Capstick (R)
6. Archibald C. Hart (D)
7. Dow H. Drukker (R)
8. Edward W. Gray (R)
9. Richard Wayne Parker (R)
10. Frederick R. Lehlbach (R)
11. John J. Eagan (D)
12. James A. Hamill (D)
New Mexico
At-large. Benigno C. Hernández (R)
NEW YORK
1. Frederick C. Hicks (R) from January 4, 1916
2. C. Pope Caldwell (D)
3. Joseph V. Flynn (D)
4. Harry H. Dale (D)
5. James P. Maher (D)
6. Frederick W. Rowe (R)
7. John J. Fitzgerald (D)
8. Daniel J. Griffin (D)
9. Oscar W. Swift (R)
10. Reuben L. Haskell (R)
11. Daniel J. Riordan (D)
12. Meyer London (Soc.)
13. George W. Loft (D)
14. Michael F. Farley (D)
15. Michael F. Conry (D), until March 2, 1917
16. Peter J. Dooling (D)
17. John F. Carew (D)
18. Thomas G. Patten (D)
19. Walter M. Chandler (Prog.)
20. Isaac Siegel (R)
21. G. Murray Hulbert (D)
22. Henry Bruckner (D)
23. Joseph A. Goulden (D), until May 3, 1915
William S. Bennet (R), from November 2, 1915
24. Woodson R. Oglesby (D)
25. James W. Husted (R)
26. Edmund Platt (R)
27. Charles B. Ward (R)
28. Rollin B. Sanford (R)
29. James S. Parker (R)
30. William B. Charles (R)
31. Bertrand H. Snell (R), from November 2, 1915
32. Luther W. Mott (R)
33. Homer P. Snyder (R)
34. George W. Fairchild (R)
35. Walter W. Magee (R)
36. Norman J. Gould (R), from November 2, 1915
37. Harry H. Pratt (R)
38. Thomas B. Dunn (R)
39. Henry G. Danforth (R)
40. S. Wallace Dempsey (R)
41. Charles B. Smith (D)
42. Daniel A. Driscoll (D)
43. Charles M. Hamilton (R)
North Carolina
1. John Humphrey Small (D)
2. Claude Kitchin (D)
3. George E. Hood (D)
4. Edward W. Pou (D)
5. Charles M. Stedman (D)
6. Hannibal L. Godwin (D)
7. Robert N. Page (D)
8. Robert L. Doughton (D)
9. Edwin Y. Webb (D)
10. James Jefferson Britt (R)
North Dakota
1. Henry Thomas Helgesen (R)
2. George M. Young (R)
3. Patrick Daniel Norton (R)
Pennsylvania
1. William S. Vare (R)
2. George S. Graham (R)
3. J. Hampton Moore (R)
4. George W. Edmonds (R)
5. Peter E. Costello (R)
6. George P. Darrow (R)
7. Thomas S. Butler (R)
8. Henry Winfield Watson (R)
9. William W. Griest (R)
10. John R. Farr (R)
11. John J. Casey (D)
12. Robert D. Heaton (R)
13. Arthur G. Dewalt (D)
14. Louis T. McFadden (R)
15. Edgar R. Kiess (R)
16. John V. Lesher (D)
17. Benjamin K. Focht (R)
18. Aaron S. Kreider (R)
19. Warren W. Bailey (D)
20. C. William Beales (R)
21. Charles H. Rowland (R)
22. Abraham L. Keister (R)
23. Robert F. Hopwood (R)
24. Henry W. Temple (R), from November 2, 1915
25. Michael Liebel Jr. (D)
26. Henry J. Steele (D)
27. Solomon T. North (R)
28. Samuel H. Miller (R)
29. Stephen G. Porter (R)
30. William Henry Coleman (R)
31. John M. Morin (R)
32. Andrew J. Barchfeld (R)
At-large. Thomas S. Crago (R)
At-large. John R. K. Scott (R)
At-large. Daniel F. Lafean (R)
At-large. Mahlon M. Garland (R)
Rhode Island
1. George Francis O'Shaunessy (D)
2. Walter Russell Stiness (R)
3. Ambrose Kennedy (R)
South Carolina
1. Richard S. Whaley (D)
2. James F. Byrnes (D)
3. Wyatt Aiken (D)
4. Joseph T. Johnson (D), until April 19, 1915
Samuel J. Nicholls (D), from September 14, 1915
5. David E. Finley (D), until January 26, 1917
Paul G. McCorkle (D), from February 21, 1917
6. J. Willard Ragsdale (D)
7. Asbury F. Lever (D)
South Dakota
1. Charles H. Dillon (R)
2. Royal C. Johnson (R)
3. Harry L. Gandy (D)
Tennessee
1. Sam R. Sells (R)
2. Richard W. Austin (R)
3. John A. Moon (D)
4. Cordell Hull (D)
5. William C. Houston (D)
6. Joseph W. Byrns (D)
7. Lemuel P. Padgett (D)
8. Thetus W. Sims (D)
9. Finis J. Garrett (D)
10. Kenneth McKellar (D)
Texas
1. Eugene Black (D)
2. Martin Dies (D)
3. James Young (D)
4. Sam Rayburn (D)
5. Hatton W. Sumners (D)
6. Rufus Hardy (D)
7. Alexander W. Gregg (D)
8. Joe H. Eagle (D)
9. George Farmer Burgess (D)
10. James P. Buchanan (D)
11. Robert L. Henry (D)
12. Oscar Callaway (D)
13. John H. Stephens (D)
14. James L. Slayden (D)
15. John Nance Garner (D)
16. William R. Smith (D)
At-large. James H. Davis (D)
At-large. A. Jeff McLemore (D)
Utah
1. Joseph Howell (R)
2. James Henry Mays (D)
Vermont
1. Frank L. Greene (R)
2. Porter H. Dale (R)
Virginia
1. William A. Jones (D)
2. Edward Everett Holland (D)
3. Andrew Jackson Montague (D)
4. Walter Allen Watson (D)
5. Edward W. Saunders (D)
6. Carter Glass (D)
7. James Hay (D), until October 1, 1916
Thomas W. Harrison (D), from November 7, 1916
8. Charles Creighton Carlin (D)
9. C. Bascom Slemp (R)
10. Henry D. Flood (D)
Washington
1. William E. Humphrey (R)
2. Lindley H. Hadley (R)
3. Albert Johnson (R)
4. William Leroy La Follette (R)
5. Clarence Cleveland Dill (D)
West Virginia
1. Matthew M. Neely (D)
2. William Gay Brown Jr. (D), until March 9, 1916
George M. Bowers (R), from May 9, 1916
3. Adam B. Littlepage (D)
4. Hunter H. Moss Jr. (R), until July 15, 1916
Harry C. Woodyard (R), from November 7, 1916
5. Edward Cooper (R)
At-large. Howard Sutherland (R)
Wisconsin
1. Henry Allen Cooper (R)
2. Michael Edmund Burke (D)
3. John M. Nelson (R)
4. William J. Cary (R)
5. William H. Stafford (R)
6. Michael K. Reilly (D)
7. John J. Esch (R)
8. Edward E. Browne (R)
9. Thomas Frank Konop (D)
10. James A. Frear (R)
11. Irvine L. Lenroot (R)
Wyoming
At-large. Franklin W. Mondell (R)