The founders designed the House of Representatives to represent the people rather
than the states, which each send two Members to the U.S. Senate. Article I,
Section II of the Constitution provides each state at least one U.S. Representative,
while the size of a state’s delegation to the House depends on its total population.
Based on the 1787 national population, each House Member in the First Federal Congress
(1789–1791) represented 30,000 citizens. As U.S. territory expanded
and the population grew, the Membership of House of Representatives increased and
individual Members’ constituencies were enlarged.
Determining Apportionment
The Constitution assigned the original apportionment of the Representatives between
the different states based on population in 1787. These numbers remained in effect
for the 1st and 2nd Congresses (1789–1793). Using five different methods over
time, all with the aim of dividing representation among the states proportionately,
Congress based subsequent apportionments on changes in state population as recorded
in each decennial census since 1790.1 Up to
and including the 13th Census in 1910, Congress enacted a law designating the specific
changes in the actual number of Representatives as well as the increase in the representation
ratio. In 1941, Congress permanently adopted the “Method of Equal Proportion”
to determine apportionment. The U.S. Census Bureau provides more information on
this method of computing apportionment.
In order to keep the House at a manageable number, Congress twice set the size of
the House at 435 voting Members—the then-existing number of Representatives.
In 1911,
Congress designated the number of Representatives to be 433, with provisions
made for two additional Members when Arizona and New Mexico were admitted to the
Union (see Act of August 8, 1911, ch. 5, 37 Stat 13). The 63rd Congress (1913–1915)
was the first to have 435 Members. The Permanent Apportionment Act
of 1929 capped the Membership at that level, creating a procedure for reapportioning
state delegations in the House under “the then existing number of Representatives”
(see Act of June 18, 1929, ch. 28, 46 Stat 21).
The total membership of the House of Representatives is 441 Members. There are 435
Representatives from the 50 states. In addition, five, non-voting Delegates represent
the District of Columbia and the U.S. territories of Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. A non-voting
Resident Commissioner, serving a four-year term, represents the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico.
Floor of the House of Representatives of the United States 29th Congress, 1845,
Print, 12.5 x 19 inchesCollection of the U.S. House of Representatives