Illinois's 3rd congressional district

Illinois's 3rd congressional district
Illinois's 3rd congressional district - since January 3, 2013.
Current Representative Dan Lipinski (DWestern Springs)
Area 125 mi2
Distribution 99.6% urban, 0.4% rural
Population (2011 est.) 713,092
Median income $56,579
Ethnicity 78.8% White, 3.8% Black, 3.3% Asian, 29.4% Hispanic, 0.3% Native American, 11.7% other
Cook PVI D+5[1][2]

The 3rd Congressional District of Illinois includes part of Cook County, and has been represented by Democrat Dan Lipinski since January 2005. The district was previously represented by his father Bill Lipinski beginning in 1993.

The district includes west and southwest suburbs of Chicago as far as the DuPage County border, as well as a portion of the southwest side of the city of Chicago itself, and covers 124.5 square miles (322 km2), making it one of the 50 smallest districts in the U.S., although there are five smaller districts in Illinois. It is adjacent to the 1st District to the east and south, the 4th District to the north, and the 13th District to the west, and also borders the 6th and 7th Districts at its northwest and northeast corners respectively. The district was created following the 1830 Census and came into being in 1833, five months before Chicago was organized as a town; it initially included northern and western Illinois[3] before representing areas of east central and northwestern Illinois from 1843 to 1873.[4][5][6] The district has included part of Chicago since 1873, and part of the city's southwest side since 1895; the district has been primarily suburban since 1973.

Although the district has elected Democrats to Congress in 24 of the last 25 elections, and has voted for the Democratic nominee in the last four presidential races, there is also a strong tradition of social conservatism in the area which has resulted in the election of conservative Democrats, as well as greater support for Republicans than might be expected based on voter identification by party.

2011 redistricting

The district covers parts of Cook, Du Page and Will counties, as of the 2011 redistricting which followed the 2010 census. All or parts of Chicago, Bridgeview, Burbank, Crest Hill, Hickory Hills, Homer Glen, Justice, La Grange, Lemont, Lockport, Oak Lawn, Palos Heights, Palos Hills, Romeoville, Summit, Western Springs and Worth are included.[7] The representatives for these districts were elected in the 2012 primary and general elections, and the boundaries became effective on January 3, 2013.

Geography

The District includes the municipalities of Bedford Park, Bridgeview, Burbank, Chicago Ridge, Countryside, Forest View, Hickory Hills, Hodgkins, Hometown, Indian Head Park, Justice, La Grange, La Grange Park, Lyons, McCook, Merrionette Park, Oak Lawn, Palos Hills, Riverside, Stickney and Summit, nearly all of Berwyn, Brookfield, Western Springs and Willow Springs, and parts of Alsip, Burr Ridge, Cicero, Forest Park, Hillside, North Riverside, Palos Heights, Palos Park, Westchester and Worth.

In the City of Chicago, it includes the communities of Bridgeport (home of mayor Richard M. Daley until he relocated in the late 1990s to the Near South Side's Central Station development), Clearing, Garfield Ridge, Mount Greenwood and West Lawn; almost all of Beverly; those portions of Archer Heights and West Elsdon west of Pulaski Road; the western portions of Ashburn, Chicago Lawn and Morgan Park; the portion of McKinley Park south of Archer Avenue; parts of Gage Park and New City; and a small section (1/16 m²) of Armour Square.

Demographics

The District, situated between the Hispanic-majority 4th District to the north and the black-majority 1st and 7th Districts to the east, is the home of numerous sizable and historic ethnic groups including Irish, Polish, Arab, German, Italian and Czech immigrants and their descendants. At 14.2%, the Irish make up the largest ethnic group in the district,[8][9] most prominently in the Bridgeport area (the ancestral neighborhood of the Daley family and other Chicago Irish politicians) and the Mount Greenwood-Beverly area; it is the largest Irish population in any district west of Philadelphia's suburbs.[10] The Polish form the next largest white ethnic group at 13.5%,[8] tying the northwest side's 5th District for the second highest percentage of any district, behind only New York's 27th congressional district.[10] The next largest ethnic groups are Germans (11.0%) and Italians (6.9%).[8] Of the suburbs primarily south of 87th Street (in Palos and Worth Townships), 9 of 10 have larger Irish than Polish populations, usually by large margins; but north of 87th Street, in those areas in Lyons Township south of Interstate 55 or in the townships to the east of Harlem Avenue, 9 of 10 suburbs have greater Polish populations than Irish, again by large margins. In Oak Lawn, the district's largest suburb, Irish outnumber Polish 30%-19%; in neighboring Burbank, the district's third largest suburb, Polish outnumber Irish by an identical margin.

More recently a large Mexican community has moved to the district, notably in Berwyn, Cicero, Hodgkins and Summit where they represent over 30% of the population, and along Archer Avenue, a major Chicago artery that runs through the district's northern section.[9] There is also a sizable Greek community in Oak Lawn and Palos Hills. In the last two decades, there has been notable Arab settlement in the vicinity of Bridgeview, and by the 2000 Census, Arabs represented one of the five largest non-Hispanic ethnic groups in Bridgeview and three adjacent suburbs. Approximately 41% of the district's residents live in Chicago. Roughly 21% of the district's population is Hispanic, 68% are Caucasian, 6% are African American and 3% are Asian; redistricting following the 2000 Census and the continued influx of Hispanics tripled the minority population from a decade earlier, as the district in its previous configuration had a population that was 7% Hispanic, 2% African American and 1% Asian.[11] The more affluent areas of the district are generally located in its northwestern portion.

Economy

The district is a historic U.S. transportation and shipping hub; not only does it include Chicago Midway International Airport, but it is also traversed by the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, the Calumet Sag Channel, and the Des Plaines River, earning national designations for the Chicago Portage National Historic Site in Forest View and the Illinois and Michigan Canal National Heritage Corridor. The path of historic Route 66 runs southwest through the district from its eastern end in Chicago. Interstate 55 intersects with both the Tri-State Tollway (Interstate 294) and the Dan Ryan Expressway (Interstate 90/94) in the district, and in 2001 since which time the district has shifted slightly to the northwest it was noted as likely having more freight yards and railroad crossings than any other district.[9]

The district includes Toyota Park, home of the Chicago Fire team in Major League Soccer, and the Chicago Red Stars team in Women's Professional Soccer, as well as Hawthorne Race Course; the area also benefits from Chicago White Sox home games at U.S. Cellular Field, which is less than 1,000 feet (300 m) beyond the district's border. Portions of the Cook County Forest Preserves cover several square miles in the district's southwest corner. Cultural attractions include Brookfield Zoo and the Balzekas Museum of Lithuanian Culture in West Lawn; educational institutions include St. Xavier University in Mount Greenwood, Moraine Valley Community College in Palos Hills, Morton College in Cicero, and Richard J. Daley College, a Chicago city college, in West Lawn; and medical facilities include Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, Adventist La Grange Memorial Hospital in La Grange and MacNeal Hospital in Berwyn. A Ronald McDonald House adjacent to Advocate Christ opened in December 2008.[12][13] Industrial and business presences in the district include: Tootsie Roll Industries; Electro-Motive Diesel; a Nabisco bakery which is the largest biscuit bakery in the world;[14] the Chicago Area Consolidation Hub of United Parcel Service and adjacent BNSF Railway yard;[15] an ACH Food manufacturing plant (formerly part of Corn Products Company) in Summit;[16] an Owens Corning roofing and asphalt plant in Summit; and a Nalco Chemical plant in Bedford Park. The former site of the International Amphitheatre, now an Aramark plant, is within the district. Organizations based in the district include the American Nuclear Society in La Grange Park. Among the federal facilities in the district is the Great Lakes Regional Headquarters of the National Archives and Records Administration [17] in West Lawn.

Other district sites on the National Register of Historic Places include:

Politics

The District has been described as "ancestrally Democratic, culturally conservative, multiethnic and viscerally patriotic."[18] It earned a reputation as being home to Reagan Democrats when in the 1980 presidential election it was one of only two Chicago districts (out of nine) to be won by Republican Ronald Reagan, along with the 6th District (an almost entirely suburban district which also included Chicago's O'Hare Airport); the district simultaneously reelected Democratic congressman Marty Russo with nearly 69% of the vote.[19] The Reagan Democrat description became even more appropriate when Reagan received 65% of the vote here in 1984, as Russo again won with 64%.[20] Redistricting for the 1990s shifted the district into more reliably Democratic territory, but Bill Clinton won the district in 1992 by just a 41%-39% margin despite receiving at least 65% of the vote in four other south side districts; he won the district with 53% in 1996 although his totals in the other south side districts were all between 80-85%. George W. Bush received 41% of the vote here in both 2000 and 2004 despite not exceeding 21% in any of the other four south side districts; it was his best performance in any district located primarily within Cook County. Much of the district's current suburban territory was in the 4th District from the 1950s to the 1970s, when that was a solidly Republican suburban district represented by Ed Derwinski; more recently, Lyons, Palos and Riverside Townships, which together approximately correspond with the district's western half, all voted for Bush in 2000.[21] Over the last eight presidential elections, the Democratic nominee for Congress has run an average of 20 points ahead of the party's nominee for president in the district.[22]

Redistricting which took effect for the 1992 elections kept only 40% of the district's previous area, and pitted nine-term incumbent Russo who changed his residence rather than run in the 2nd District, which now included his previous home against five-term incumbent Bill Lipinski, who had previously represented the neighboring 5th District, in the Democratic primary. Lipinski ran close to Russo in the suburbs but easily won the Chicago areas, and won the primary 58%-37%.[23] Lipinski was decidedly the most conservative Democrat in the Illinois delegation,[18] opposing abortion and gays in the military, supporting school prayer, tuition vouchers, the Defense of Marriage Act and the death penalty, and helping to write a proposed constitutional amendment in 1997 prohibiting flag desecration.[24][25] A member of the Blue Dog Democrats,[25] he was one of just 30 Democrats to vote for the Republican welfare reform plan.[9] He clashed often with the Clinton administration, opposing the president's position over half the time in the 1997-98 Congress.[26] He was one of 31 Democrats to vote in favor of a Judiciary Committee inquiry during the leadup to Clinton's impeachment; he eventually voted against impeachment, but simultaneously called on Clinton to resign.[27] In 1999, Lipinski stated that Clinton "doesn't have credibility on military issues," adding that "the American people feel Clinton is unsure."[25] He was a consistent opponent of U.S. free trade agreements, arguing that they were disastrous for American manufacturing.[9][25] Lipinski received higher approval ratings from the American Conservative Union than from the ACLU in 12 of his last 13 years in office, though his highest ratings generally came from labor and consumer groups[24][26] and the Christian Coalition.[28] He received a 0 rating from the ACLU for the 1997-98 term,[26] and also compiled an overall 0 rating from the National Abortion Rights Action League.[28] His policies enabled him to work easily with Republicans; he was a candidate to become Transportation Secretary in the Bush administration, and collaborated with House Speaker Dennis Hastert of the 14th District to design the state's redistricting plan following the 2000 Census.[27] Lipinski's positions were generally in line with those of district residents,[27] and after surviving with a 54%-46% win amid the Republican gains of 1994 he was reelected by increasing margins in each succeeding election; in 2002 he became the first unopposed candidate in the history of the District.[29]

Recent electoral history

Congress

2004 election

Rep. Dan Lipinski

The district's seat changed hands under somewhat controversial circumstances in 2004. Lipinski was renominated in the primary election, but in August announced his intention to withdraw from the race, just two weeks before the deadline for replacing a candidate on the ballot. Four days later, the district's ward and township committeemen including Lipinski himself as well as Mayor Daley's brother John and Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan met to choose a replacement; Lipinski nominated his son Dan, an assistant professor at the University of Tennessee, and he was approved without opposition despite not having lived in Illinois since 1989. In his initial campaign, the younger Lipinski stated that his policies made him "not really that different from" his father, and indicated that he would oppose same-sex marriage as well as abortion except when the mother's life was at stake. True to the district's heritage, he identified Reagan as his political hero.[30]

2012 election

Presidential elections

Year Results
2000 Gore 57 - 39%
2004 Kerry 59 - 41%
2008 Obama 64 - 35%

This table indicates how the District has voted in U.S. presidential elections; election results reflect voting in the district as it was configured at the time of the election, not as it is configured today. The candidate who received the most votes in the district is listed first; the candidate who won the election nationally is in CAPS, and the candidate who won the state of Illinois is indicated with a †.

Election District winner Runnerup Other candidates
1852[31] PIERCE† (D), 8,446 (46%) Scott (W), 7,889 (43%) Hale (Free Soil), 2,028 (11%)
1856[31] Frémont (R), 19,313 (58%) BUCHANAN† (D), 11,788 (36%) Fillmore (American), 1,921 (6%)
1860[31] LINCOLN† (R), 30,121 (60%) Douglas (D), 19,241 (38%) Breckinridge (D), 395 (1%); Bell (Constitutional Union), 236 (0.5%)
1864[31] LINCOLN† (R), 15,724 (68%) McClellan (D), 7,441 (32%)
1868[31] GRANT† (R), 18,805 (67%) Seymour (D), 9,454 (33%)
1952[32] EISENHOWER† (R), 105,513 (55%) Stevenson (D), 86,220 (45%)
1956[32] EISENHOWER† (R), 114,807 (61%) Stevenson (D), 72,862 (39%)
1968[33] Humphrey (D), 111,357 (56%) NIXON† (R), 69,344 (35%) Wallace (AIP), 16,665 (8%)
1972[34] NIXON† (R), 155,092 (70%) McGovern (D), 65,226 (30%)
1976[35] Ford† (R), 121,448 (58%) CARTER (D), 88,240 (42%)
1980[36] REAGAN† (R), 109,179 (52%) Carter (D), 87,091 (41%) Anderson (Indep.), 12,594 (6%)
1984[37] REAGAN† (R), 158,281 (65%) Mondale (D), 84,752 (35%)
1988[38] BUSH† (R), 130,606 (58%) Dukakis (D), 92,108 (41%)
1992[39] CLINTON† (D), 108,342 (41%) Bush (R), 102,632 (39%) Perot (Indep.), 52,905 (20%)
1996[11] CLINTON† (D), 114,089 (53%) Dole (R), 78,853 (37%) Perot (Reform), 19,441 (9%)
2000[27] Gore† (D), 118,342 (55%) BUSH (R), 88,458 (41%) Nader (Green), 5,537 (3%)
2004[40] Kerry† (D), 144,657 (59%) BUSH (R), 100,257 (41%)

List of representatives

Representative Party Years Electoral history Area
District created March 4, 1833
Joseph Duncan Jacksonian March 4, 1833 –
September 21, 1834
Redistricted from the At-large district
Resigned to become Governor of Illinois
Bulk of northern and western Illinois: Adams, Calhoun, Cook, Fulton, Greene, Hancock, Henry, Jo Daviess, Knox, LaSalle, Macon, McDonough, McLean, Mercer, Morgan, Peoria, Pike, Putnam, Sangamon, Schuyler, Tazewell and Warren counties (numerous additional counties were later created within this area).[3] During this period, Abraham Lincoln was a district resident, beginning his political career as a state legislator; the district's representative from 1839 to 1843 was Lincoln's law partner, John T. Stuart.
Vacant September 21, 1834 –
December 1, 1834
William L. May Jacksonian December 1, 1834 –
March 3, 1837
Retired
Democratic March 4, 1837 –
March 3, 1839
John T. Stuart Whig March 4, 1839 –
March 3, 1843
Retired
Orlando B. Ficklin Democratic March 4, 1843 –
March 3, 1849
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!] Shifted to the east central part of the state, taking in Christian, Clark, Clay, Coles, Crawford, Cumberland, DeWitt, Edgar, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Lawrence, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, Richland and Shelby counties.[4]
Timothy R. Young Democratic March 4, 1849 –
March 3, 1851
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Orlando B. Ficklin Democratic March 4, 1851 –
March 3, 1853
[Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Jesse O. Norton Whig March 4, 1853 –
March 3, 1855
Retired Shifted north to cover the twelve counties to the south and southwest of Cook County: Bureau, Champaign, DeWitt, Grundy, Iroquois, Kendall, LaSalle, Livingston, McLean, Putnam, Vermilion and Will counties.[5]
Opposition March 4, 1855 –
March 3, 1857
Owen Lovejoy Republican March 4, 1857 –
March 3, 1863
Redistricted to the 5th district
Elihu B. Washburne Republican March 4, 1863 –
March 6, 1869
Redistricted from the 1st district
Resigned to become United States Secretary of State
Relocated to include the six counties in the northwestern corner of the state: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson and Whiteside counties.[6]
Vacant March 6, 1869 –
December 6, 1869
Horatio C. Burchard Republican December 6, 1869 –
March 3, 1873
Redistricted to the 5th district
Charles B. Farwell Republican March 4, 1873 –
May 6, 1876
Redistricted from the 1st district
Lost contested election
Relocated to include Lake County, the sixteen townships comprising the northern half of Cook County (Barrington, Cicero, Elk Grove, Evanston, Hanover, Jefferson, Lake View, Leyden, Maine, New Trier, Niles, Northfield, Palatine, Proviso, Schaumburg, Wheeling), and the north side of Chicago (the city's northern boundary east of the river was then Fullerton Avenue).[41] During this period, the Near North Side was recovering from the devastation of the Great Chicago Fire of October 1871.
John V. Le Moyne Democratic May 6, 1876 –
March 3, 1877
Lost re-election
Lorenzo Brentano Republican March 4, 1877 –
March 3, 1879
Lost renomination
Hiram Barber, Jr. Republican March 4, 1879 –
March 3, 1881
Lost renomination
Charles B. Farwell Republican March 4, 1881 –
March 3, 1883
Retired
George R. Davis Republican March 4, 1883 –
March 3, 1885
Redistricted from the 2nd district
Retired
Parts of the west side between 12th Street (now Roosevelt Road) and the North Branch of the Chicago River, excluding a small area north of 12th Street near the river; as the city was still expanding westward, the western boundary was Western Avenue from the river to North Avenue, and Crawford Avenue (now Pulaski Road) from North to 12th.[42] Illinois gained two additional representatives following the 1890 Census, but they were elected on an at-large basis for the 1893-1895 term before redistricting occurred, and the previous decade's districting remained in effect.[43]
James H. Ward Democratic March 4, 1885 –
March 3, 1887
Retired
William E. Mason Republican March 4, 1887 –
March 3, 1891
Lost re-election
Allan C. Durborow, Jr. Democratic March 4, 1891 –
March 3, 1895
Retired
Lawrence E. McGann Democratic March 4, 1895 –
December 27, 1895
Lost contention after the 1894 election From the river south to 26th Street; West of the river and south of 12th Street bordered on the west by Johnson Street (now Peoria Street) from 12th to 22nd Street (now Cermak Road) and by Halsted Street from 22nd to the river; and South of the Illinois and Michigan Canal and the river as far south as 39th Street (now Pershing Road) between Western and Wentworth Avenues.[44] In the 1896 House election, Clarence Darrow lost by 590 votes (2.5%).[45]
Hugh R. Belknap Republican December 27, 1895 –
March 3, 1899
Lost re-election
George P. Foster Democratic March 4, 1899 –
March 3, 1903
Redistricted to the 4th district
William W. Wilson Republican March 4, 1903 –
March 3, 1913
Lost re-election Began to take on its modern territory, and included the nine southernmost townships of Cook County (Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Lemont, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton and Worth), as well as that part of Chicago west of State Street between 51st Street and 111th Street excepting one and a quarter square miles in the southeast corner. (Note: In 1903 the city's western limit at 111th Street was Western Avenue, and at 115th Street was Ashland Avenue; but during this period, various portions of Calumet and Worth townships were annexed by Chicago.)[46] Illinois' districts were not redrawn until 1947, taking effect for the 1948 elections.[47]
George E. Gorman Democratic March 4, 1913 –
March 3, 1915
Retired
William W. Wilson Republican March 4, 1915 –
March 3, 1921
Retired
Elliott W. Sproul Republican March 4, 1921 –
March 3, 1931
Lost re-election
Edward A. Kelly Democratic March 4, 1931 –
January 3, 1943
Lost re-election
Fred E. Busbey Republican January 3, 1943 –
January 3, 1945
Lost re-election
Edward A. Kelly Democratic January 3, 1945 –
January 3, 1947
Lost re-election
Fred E. Busbey Republican January 3, 1947 –
January 3, 1949
Lost re-election
Neil J. Linehan Democratic January 3, 1949 –
January 3, 1951
Lost re-election Included that part of Chicago bounded on the north by 65th Street (Cicero Avenue to Western Avenue), Marquette Road (Western to Damen), 59th Street (Damen to Wallace) and Garfield Boulevard (Wallace to the railroad between Wentworth and State Street), and bounded on the east by the railroad (Garfield to 59th), State Street (59th to 73rd Street), Indiana Avenue (73rd to 83rd Street), South Park Boulevard (later renamed King Drive, 83rd to 99th Street), Stewart Avenue (99th to 103rd Street) and Halsted (103rd to 123rd Street).[48] The same boundaries were maintained in the redistricting after 1950.[49]
Fred E. Busbey Republican January 3, 1951 –
January 3, 1955
Lost re-election
James C. Murray Democratic January 3, 1955 –
January 3, 1957
Lost re-election
Emmet F. Byrne Republican January 3, 1957 –
January 3, 1959
Lost re-election
William T. Murphy Democratic January 3, 1959 –
January 3, 1963
Retired
January 3, 1963 –
January 3, 1971
Included the village of Evergreen Park as well as that part of Chicago bounded on the north by 66th Street (Cicero to the railroad 1/2 mile east of Kedzie), Marquette (the railroad to Damen), 59th Street (Damen to Racine) and Garfield (Racine to the railroad 1/4 mile east of Halsted), and bounded on the east by the railroad (Garfield to 59th), Halsted (59th to 63rd Street), State Street (63rd to 83rd Street), Stewart (83rd to 99th Street), State Street (99th to 111th Street), Wentworth Avenue (111th to 113th Street) and Halsted (113th to 123rd Street).[50] There was additional redistricting in Illinois which took effect for the 1967-1969 term, but the 3rd District was not altered.[51]
Morgan F. Murphy Democratic January 3, 1971 –
January 3, 1973
Redistricted to the 2nd district
Robert P. Hanrahan Republican January 3, 1973 –
January 3, 1975
Lost re-election Shifted primarily into suburban areas to include Thornton and Calumet Townships, most of Worth Township (excepting the municipalities of Bridgeview, Chicago Ridge, Crestwood, Palos Heights and Worth), the Chicago communities of Ashburn and Mount Greenwood, those parts of West Lawn and Chicago Lawn south of 63rd Street, and those parts of Beverly and Morgan Park west of Western Avenue.[52]
Marty Russo Democratic January 3, 1975 –
January 3, 1983
Lost renomination
January 3, 1983 –
January 3, 1993
Parts of the district shifted to the west. The district now included: Bremen Township; Worth Township excepting that part between 111th Street and 135th Street west of Cicero Avenue as well as approximately 1/4 mi² of Worth north of 111th; that part of Calumet Township in Blue Island and Calumet Park northwest of the railroad running from 123rd and Laflin to the western township line; that part of Thornton Township west of the Calumet Expressway having as its northern boundary 167th Street (from the Bremen Township line to the eastern edge of Hazel Crest), 171st/172nd Street (Hazel Crest to Halsted Street), 167th (Halsted to State Street, which becomes Indiana Avenue) and the Little Calumet River (Indiana Avenue to the Calumet Expressway); the part of Stickney Township south of 65th Street; the Chicago communities of Clearing, West Lawn, Ashburn, Mount Greenwood and Beverly, the western part of Morgan Park, and the additional part of Chicago between 55th Street, 75th Street, Cicero Avenue and the railroad 1/4 mile east of Western excepting that portion from the railroad to Western between 63rd Street and 69th Street.[53]
Bill Lipinski Democratic January 3, 1993 –
January 3, 2003
Redistricted from the 5th district
Retired
Shifted significantly to the northwest, and now included: all of Lyons Township; all of Stickney Township except the portion north of Pershing Road; all of Berwyn and Riverside; approximately the eastern half of Brookfield and the western half of Cicero; those portions of Forest Park and North Riverside east of the Des Plaines River and south of Harrison Street; most of Oak Park south of the Eisenhower Expressway; those parts of Worth Township having as their eastern boundary Pulaski Road from 87th Street to 101st Street, and Cicero Avenue from 101st Street to 135th Street, with minor variations in Oak Lawn; those parts of Palos Township having as their western boundary Roberts Road (80th Avenue) from 87th Street to 120th Street and then southwest along the railroad to 135th Street, plus approximately 1/8 m² west of Roberts Road in the vicinity of Stagg High School; those parts of Bremen Township having as their eastern boundary Cicero Avenue from 135th Street to 143rd Street, the railroad and then Pulaski from 143rd Street to 159th Street, Cicero from 159th Street to 167th Street, Interstate 57 from 167th Street to 177th Street, and Central Avenue from 177th Street to 183rd Street; the Chicago communities of Garfield Ridge, Clearing, Archer Heights, West Elsdon and West Lawn, those parts of Gage Park, Chicago Lawn and Ashburn west of Kedzie Avenue, approximately those parts of Brighton Park northwest of 38th Street and St. Louis Avenue or southwest of 43rd Street and Kedzie, and nearly 1/8 m² in the southwest corner of Austin.[54]
January 3, 2003 –
January 3, 2005
See map and geography above. For a more detailed map, see the Census Bureau map linked below.
Dan Lipinski Democratic January 3, 2005 –
January 3, 2013
Incumbent
January 3, 2013 –
present

Living former Members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois's 3rd congressional district

As of May 2016, there are two former members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois's 3rd congressional district who are currently living at this time.

Representative Term of office Date of birth (and age)
Marty Russo 1975–1993 January 23, 1944
Bill Lipinski 1993–2005 October 30, 1925

Historical district boundaries

2003 - 2013

See also

References

  1. "Partisan Voting Index Districts of the 113th Congress: 2004 & 2008" (PDF). The Cook Political Report. 2012. Retrieved 2013-01-10.
  2. Barone, Michael; McCutcheon, Chuck (2013). The Almanac of American Politics 2014. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 558. ISBN 978-0-226-10544-4. Copyright National Journal.
  3. 1 2 Parsons, Stanley B.; William W. Beach; Dan Hermann (1978). United States Congressional Districts 1788-1841. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 302–304. ISBN 0-8371-9828-3.
  4. 1 2 Parsons, Stanley B.; William W. Beach; Michael J. Dubin (1986). United States Congressional Districts and Data, 1843-1883. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 7–8. ISBN 0-313-22045-X.
  5. 1 2 Parsons, et al. (1986), pp. 53-54.
  6. 1 2 Parsons, et al. (1986), pp. 102-103.
  7. Illinois Congressional District 3, Illinois Board of Elections
  8. 1 2 3 Tarr, David R. (ed.) (2003). Congressional Districts in the 2000s: A Portrait of America. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press. p. 301. ISBN 1-56802-849-0.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Barone, Michael; Richard E. Cohen; Charles E. Cook Jr (2001). The Almanac of American Politics 2002. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. pp. 511–513. ISBN 0-89234-099-1.
  10. 1 2 Based on district ethnic demographics in Congressional Districts in the 2000s: A Portrait of America.
  11. 1 2 Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa; Richard E. Cohen (1997). The Almanac of American Politics 1998. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. p. 480. ISBN 0-89234-081-9.
  12. "Ronald McDonald House near Hope Children's Hospital". Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana. Archived from the original on April 10, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-24.
  13. TRAINS Magazine - Inside Willow Springs
  14. ACH Food Companies, Inc
  15. Archived March 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  16. 1 2 Barone, Michael; Richard E. Cohen (2005). The Almanac of American Politics 2006. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. p. 567. ISBN 0-89234-111-4.
  17. Guide to U.S. Elections (5th ed.). Washington, D.C.: CQ Press. 2005. p. 1217. ISBN 1-56802-981-0.
  18. Guide to U.S. Elections, p. 1227.
  19. Congressional Districts in the 2000s: A Portrait of America, p. 300.
  20. Based on results from 1976 through 2004 in the Guide to U.S. Elections.
  21. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa (1993). The Almanac of American Politics 1994. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. p. 395. ISBN 0-89234-057-6.
  22. 1 2 Barone, Michael; Richard E. Cohen (2003). The Almanac of American Politics 2004. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. p. 542. ISBN 0-89234-105-X.
  23. 1 2 3 4 Nutting, Brian; H. Amy Stern, eds. (2002). Congressional Quarterly's Politics in America 2002. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly. pp. 312–313. ISBN 1-56802-655-2.
  24. 1 2 3 Sharp, J. Michael (2006). Directory of Congressional Voting Scores and Interest Group Ratings. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press. p. 941. ISBN 1-56802-970-5.
  25. 1 2 3 4 Barone, et al. (2001), p. 512.
  26. 1 2 "William Lipinski on VoteMatch". Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-27.
  27. Based on results from 1832 through 2002 in the Guide to U.S. Elections.
  28. Barone, et al. (2005), pp. 567-568.
  29. 1 2 3 4 5 Vote totals from 1852 to 1868 are based on cumulative county totals as listed in Illinois: Historical and Statistical (1892), John Moses, Chicago: Fergus Printing Co., pp. 1208-1209.
  30. 1 2 Congressional District Data Book: Districts of the 87th Congress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1961. p. 17.
  31. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa; Douglas Matthews (1972). The Almanac of American Politics. Boston: Gambit. p. 199. ISBN 0-87645-053-2.
  32. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa; Douglas Matthews (1973). The Almanac of American Politics. Boston: Gambit. p. 267. ISBN 0-87645-077-X.
  33. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa; Douglas Matthews (1977). The Almanac of American Politics 1978. New York City: E. P. Dutton. p. 228. ISBN 0-87690-255-7.
  34. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa (1981). The Almanac of American Politics 1982. Washington, D.C.: Barone & Co. p. 299. ISBN 0-940702-00-2.
  35. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa (1985). The Almanac of American Politics 1986. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. p. 398. ISBN 0-89234-032-0.
  36. Barone, Michael; Grant Ujifusa (1989). The Almanac of American Politics 1990. Washington, D.C.: National Journal Group. p. 355. ISBN 0-89234-043-6.
  37. Barone, et al. (1993), p. 394.
  38. Barone, et al. (2005), p. 566.
  39. Parsons, et al. (1986), pp. 159-160.
  40. Parsons, Stanley B.; Michael J. Dubin; Karen Toombs Parsons (1990). United States Congressional Districts, 1883-1913. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 23–27. ISBN 0-313-26482-1.
  41. Parsons, et al. (1990), pp. 182-186.
  42. Parsons, et al. (1990), pp. 187-191.
  43. Guide to U.S. Elections, p. 1005.
  44. Parsons, et al. (1990), pp. 326-330.
  45. Barrett, Edward A. (ed.). Blue Book of the State of Illinois, 1947-1948. Springfield, IL: State of Illinois. p. 110.
  46. Barrett, pp. 113-114.
  47. Congressional District Atlas of the United States. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1960. pp. 18–20.
  48. Congressional District Data Book: Districts of the 88th Congress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1963. pp. 125–127.
  49. Congressional District Data Book, Illinois supplement. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1966. pp. 2–4.
  50. Congressional District Data Book: 93rd Congress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1973. pp. 145, 147–148.
  51. Gottron, Martha V. (ed.) (1983). Congressional Districts in the 1980s. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly. p. 163. ISBN 0-87187-264-1.
  52. Congressional District Atlas: 103rd Congress of the United States. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1993. pp. Illinois–1, 5, 22–26, 28–29, 31–32, 34. ISBN 0-16-041689-2.

Coordinates: 41°40′44″N 87°53′31″W / 41.67889°N 87.89194°W / 41.67889; -87.89194

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