Iowa's 5th State Senate district | |||
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Senator |
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The 5th district of the Iowa Senate is located in Northwestern Iowa. It is currently composed of Dickinson, Emmet, Kossuth and Palo Alto counties and part of Clay County.
[1]
Current elected officials
David Rowley is the senator currently representing the 5th District.
The area of the 5th District contains two Iowa House of Representatives districts:[2]
- The 9th District (represented by Henry Stone)
- The 10th District (represented by John Wills)
The district is also located in Iowa's 4th congressional district, which is represented by U.S. Representative Randy Feenstra.[3]
List of representatives
Representative | Party | Dates | Residence | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Baker | Democrat | 1846-1847 | Polk County | Served as first President of the Iowa State Senate | |
Phineas Casady | Democrat | 1848-1851 | Des Moines | ||
Archibald McKinney | Whig | 1852-1853 | Henry County | ||
Alvin Saunders | Whig | 1854-1855 | Mt. Pleasant | ||
Henry Trimble | Democrat | 1856-1859 | Bloomfield | ||
William Taylor | Democrat | 1860-1863 | Wayne County | It is unclear as to the reason of the overlap between Senator Taylor and Senator Esteb. | |
Elijah Esteb | Democrat | 1862-1863 | Wayne County | ||
Ziba Brown | Republican | 1864-1865 | Clarke County | ||
Eugene Edwards | Republican | 1866-1867 | Chariton | ||
James D. Wright | Republican | 1868-1869 | Chariton | ||
Edward Bill | Republican | 1870-1871 | Albia | ||
Martin Read | Republican | 1872-1873 | Corydon | ||
Lloyd Selby | Anti-Monopoly | 1874-1875 | Corydon | ||
Henry Dashiell | Republican | 1876-1877 | Monroe County | ||
Samuel Bestow | Republican | 1878-1879 | Chariton, Iowa | ||
William Wilson | Republican | 1880-1883 | Osceola, Iowa | ||
John McDonough | Republican | 1884-1887 | Clarke County | ||
James Harsh | Republican | 1888-1895 | Creston, Iowa | ||
George Allyn | Republican | 1896-1903 | Mount Ayr, Iowa | ||
Marion Stookey | Republican | 1904-1908 | Leon, Iowa | ||
John Brown | Republican | 1909-1912 | Decatur County | ||
Charles Thomas | Republican | 1913-1916 | Creston, Iowa | ||
James Stephenson | Democrat | 1917-1920 | Mount Ayr, Iowa | ||
John McIntosh | Republican | 1921-1924 | Decatur County | ||
Henry Roberts | Republican | 1925-1928 | Mount Ayr, Iowa | ||
Frank Ickis | Republican | 1929-1932 | Creston, Iowa | ||
Frank Stevens | Democrat | 1933-1936 | Garden Grove, Iowa | ||
Howard Edwards | Republican | 1936-1940 | Tingley, Iowa | Records indicate that there was an overlap between Senators Stevens and Edwards. Likely due to political appointment of Senator Stevens at the end of his term. | |
Stephen Emerson | Republican | 1941-1943 | Creston, Iowa | ||
Theodore Thompson | Republican | 1944 | Creston, Iowa | Thompson was elected for the 50th Extraordinary Session in 1944, and then resigned to accept appointment as federal district court reporter for the southern Iowa district. [5] | |
Roy Hawkins | Republican | 1945-1948 | Decatur County | ||
Xavier Thomas Prentis | Republican | 1949-1962 | Mount Ayr, Iowa | Prentis' given name was X T, his grandfather's initials. Some sources list his name as Xavier Thomas Prentis, a name likely given to him by the Army.[6] | |
Franklin Main | Democrat | 1963-1964 | Mount Ayr, Iowa | ||
James Briles | Republican | 1965-1970 | Corning, Iowa | ||
Vernon Kyhl | Republican | 1971-1972 | Parkersburg, Iowa | Senator Kyhl died while in office in 1973.[7] | |
Ray Taylor | Republican | 1973-1982 | Steamboat Rock, Iowa | ||
Arne Waldstein | Republican | 1983-1986 | Buena Vista County | ||
Linn Fuhrman | Republican | 1987-1994 | Buena Vista County | Senator Fuhrman died in office in 1994.[8] | |
Mary Lou Freeman | Republican | 1993-2002 | Storm Lake, Iowa | ||
Stewart Iverson | Republican | 2003-2006 | Dows, Iowa | ||
Rich Olive | Democrat | 2007-2010 | Story City, Iowa | ||
Robert Bacon | Republican | 2011-2012 | Maxwell, Iowa | ||
Daryl Beall | Democrat | 2013-2014 | Fort Dodge, Iowa | ||
Tim Kraayenbrink | Republican | 2015-2022 | Fort Dodge, Iowa | ||
David Rowley | Republican | 2023- | Dickinson County | ||
Map | Description | Years Effective | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Dallas County |
1846-1849 | From 1846 to 1857, District numbering was not utilized by the Iowa State Legislature. This convention was added with the passing of the 1857 Iowa Constitution. Numbering of districts pre-1857 is done as a matter of historic convenience.[9] | |
Boone County Dallas County |
1850-1851 | ||
Henry County | 1852-1855 | ||
Davis County | 1856-1859 | ||
Decatur County |
1860-1863 | ||
Clarke County |
1864-1869 | ||
Wayne County |
1870-1877 | ||
Clarke County |
1878-1883 | ||
Clarke County |
1884-1887 | ||
Decatur County |
1888-1962 | ||
Adams County |
1963-1966 | ||
Adams County |
1967-1970 | ||
Butler County |
1971-1972 | In 1970, the Iowa Legislature passed an amendment to the Iowa Constitution setting forth the rules for legislative redistricting in order to abide by the rules established by the Reynolds v. Sims Supreme Court Case. The first reapportionment map created by the Republican controlled legislature was deemed Unconstitutional, but was still used for the 1970 Election.[10] | |
Cerro Gordo County (partial) Franklin County (partial) |
1973-1982 | ||
Buena Vista Calhoun County |
1983-1992 | ||
Buena Vista Cherokee County |
1993-2002 | ||
Hamilton County Story County (partial)
Webster County (partial) |
2003-2012 | ||
Calhoun County
Humboldt County |
2013-2022 | ||
Clay County (partial)
Dickinson County |
2023-Present |
See also
References
- ↑ "2023 Iowa Senate District 5" (PDF). Iowa State Legislator.
- ↑ https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/Resources/Redist/2011/2011-03-31/HouseStatewide8x11_color.pdf
- ↑ https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/Resources/Redist/2011/2011-03-31/CongressStatewide8x11_color.pdf
- ↑ "Table of Iowa Senate District 5 Historic Senators".
- ↑ "Legislator Fact Sheet Theodore Thompson".
- ↑ "Legislator Fact Sheet X T Prentis".
- ↑ "Legislator Fact Sheet Kyhl".
- ↑ "Legislator Fact Sheet Fuhrman".
- ↑ "1846 Iowa Constitution" (PDF).
- ↑ "Reapportionment in Iowa".