Dates of Sessions
1793-1795
Major Political Events The first time proceedings of the U.S. Senate opened to the public, February 11 , 1794 Naval Act of 1794 authorizes construction of the first ships that became the U.S. Navy , March 27 , 1794 Whiskey Rebellion begins as farmers in the Monongahela Valley of Pennsylvania rebel against the federal tax on liquor and distilled drinks, August 7 , 1794 General Anthony Wayne and U.S. troops rout native forces in the Battle of Fallen Timbers , August 20 , 1794 The U.S. and the Kingdom of Great Britain sign Jay's Treaty , which attempts to clear up some of the lingering problems left over from the American Revolutionary War , November 19 , 1794 The 11th amendment to the U.S. Constitution , passed by Congress on March 4 , 1794, is ratified, February 7 , 1795
Officers
Senate
House of Representatives
Members of the Third United States Congress
Senate
Connecticut
Delaware
Georgia
Kentucky John Brown (Anti-Administration) John Edwards (Anti-Administration)
Maryland John Henry (Pro-Administration) Richard Potts (Pro-Administration)
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Vermont Stephen R. Bradley (Anti-Administration) Moses Robinson (Anti-Administration)
Virginia
House of Representatives
Connecticut
Delaware
Georgia
Kentucky Christopher Greenup (Anti-Administration), At-Large Alexander D. Orr (Anti-Administration), At-Large
Maryland George Dent (Pro-Administration), 1st District John F. Mercer (Anti-Administration) and then Gabriel Duvall (Anti-Administration), 2nd District Uriah Forrest and then Benjamin Edwards , 3rd District Thomas Sprigg (Anti-Administration), 4th District Gabriel Christie (Anti-Administration), 5th District Samuel Smith (Anti-Administration), 5th District William Hindman (Pro-Administration), 6th District William Vans Murray (Pro-Administration), 7th District
Massachusetts Fisher Ames (Pro-Administration), 1st Distrcit Shearjashub Bourne, 1st District Peleg Coffin, Jr., 1st District Samuel Dexter (Pro-Administration), 1st District Benjamin Goodhue (Pro-Administration), 1st District Samuel Holten , 1st District Dwight Foster (Pro-Administration), 2nd District William Lyman (Anti-Administration), 2nd District Theodore Sedgwick (Pro-Administration), 2nd District Artemas Ward , 2nd District David Cobb , 3rd District Henry Dearborn (Anti-Administration), 4th District George Thatcher (Pro-Administration), 4th District Peleg Wadsworth (Pro-Administration), 4th District
New Hampshire Nicholas Gilman (Anti-Administration), At-Large John S. Sherburne (Anti-Administration), At-Large Jeremiah Smith (Pro-Administration), At-Large Paine Wingate (Anti-Administration), At-Large
New Jersey
New York John Watts , 1st District Thomas Tredwell, 2nd District Philip Van Cortlandt (Anti-Administration), 3rd District Peter Van Gaasbeck, 4th District Theodorus Bailey (Anti-Administration), 5th District Ezekiel Gilbert (Pro-Administration), 6th District John E. Van Alen (Pro-Administration), 7th District Henry Glen (Pro-Administration), 8th District James Gordon , 9th District Silas Talbot , 10th District
North Carolina Thomas Blount (Anti-Administration), At-Large William J. Dawson , At-Large James Gillespie (Anti-Administration), At-Large William B. Grove (Pro-Administration), At-Large Matthew Locke (Anti-Administration), At-Large Joseph McDowell , At-Large Nathaniel Macon (Anti-Administration), At-Large Alexander Mebane , At-Large Benjamin Williams (Anti-Administration), At-Large Joseph Winston (Anti-Administration), At-Large
Pennsylvania Thomas Fitzsimons , 1st District John P. G. Muhlenberg (Anti-Administration), 1st District Andrew Gregg (Anti-Administration), 2nd District Frederick A. C. Muhlenberg (Anti-Administration), 3rd District Daniel Hiester (Anti-Administration), 4th District John W. Kittera (Pro-Administration), 5th District James Armstrong, 6th District William Montgomery , 6th District Thomas Hartley (Pro-Administration), 7th District William Irvine , 7th District William Findley (Anti-Administration), 8th District Thomas Scott , 8th District John Smilie (Anti-Administration), 8th District
Rhode Island Benjamin Bourne (Pro-Administration), At-Large Francis Malbone (Pro-Administration), At-Large
South Carolina John Hunter , 1st District William L. Smith (Pro-Administration), 1st District Alexander Gillon and then Robert G. Harper, 2nd District Lemuel Benton (Anti-Administration), 3rd District Richard Winn (Anti-Administration), 4th District Andrew Pickens , 5th District
Vermont Israel Smith (Anti-Administration), 1st District Nathaniel Niles (Anti-Administration), 2nd District
Virginia Robert Rutherford, 1st District Andrew Moore, 2nd District Joseph Neville, 3rd District George Hancock , 5th District Francis Preston, 5th District Isaac Coles (Anti-Administration), 6th District Abraham B. Venable, 7th District Thomas Claiborne (Anti-Administration), 8th District William B. Giles (Anti-Administration), 9th District Josiah Parker (Pro-Administration), 11th District Anthony New (Anti-Administration), 12th District John Page (Anti-Administration), 12th District Carter B. Harrison, 13th District John Heath (Anti-Administration), 13th District Francis Walker, 14th District James Madison (Anti-Administration), 15th District John Nicholas (Anti-Administration), 15th District Richard B. Lee, 17th District Samuel Griffin, 19th District
External links Acts of 3rd Congress (http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsl&fileName=001/llsl001.db&recNum=26 )
Results from FactBites:
Communist Party of Vietnam - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (964 words)
The Congress was held in territory in north Vietnam controlled by the Viet Minh during the First Indochina War.
The Third National Congress , held in Hanoi in 1960 formalized the tasks of constructing socialism in what was by then North Vietnam, or the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) and committed the party to carrying out the revolution of liberation in the South.
At the Sixth National Party Congress , held in December 1986, Nguyen Van Linh was elected to be the General Secretary while a Politburo of fourteen members was elected and the Central Committee was expanded to 173 members.
More results at FactBites »