South Carolina's 2nd congressional district

South Carolina's 2nd congressional district

South Carolina's 2nd congressional district – since January 3, 2013.
Current Representative Joe Wilson (R)
Distribution
  • % urban
  • % rural
Population (2000) 668,668
Median income 42,915
Ethnicity
Occupation
Cook PVI R+14

The 2nd Congressional District of South Carolina is a congressional district in central and southwestern South Carolina. The district spans from Columbia to the South Carolina side of the Augusta, Georgia metropolitan area.

From 1993 through 2012, it included all of Lexington, Jasper, Hampton, Allendale and Barnwell counties; most of Richland and Beaufort counties and parts of Aiken, Calhoun and Orangeburg counties.

It was made more compact in the 2010 round of redistricting, and now comprises all of Lexington, Aiken and Barnwell counties, most of Richland County, and part of Orangeburg County. Besides Columbia (60 percent of which is in the district), other major cities in the district include Aiken and North Augusta.

The district was defined in 1933, following South Carolina losing a seat in apportionment as a result of the 1930 Census showing state population loss. Before that time, much of its territory had been within the 6th district.

As a Columbia-based district from 1933 to the early 1990s, it was a fairly compact, urbanized district in the central part of the state. As a result of the 1990 census, the state legislature worked to redefine some of the districts. In a deal between Republicans and Democrats, the 6th congressional district was redefined to incorporate most of the black residents in the area and create a majority-minority district. The 2nd district was expanded to the south and west to gain other, mostly white residents in compensation.

Since 1965 the 2nd district has been held by the Republican Party, made up of white conservatives in the late 20th-century realignment of political parties in the South. In the decades after the Civil War and before disenfranchisement in 1895 under the new state constitution, members of the Republican Party in South Carolina and the South were mostly African Americans, including many freedmen enfranchised due to Republican support for amendments for emancipation, citizenship and the franchise. After white Democrats regained control of state governments across the South, in the late 19th century, they passed new constitutions from 1890 to 1908 to disenfranchise blacks, excluding them totally from the political process. The Republican Party was crippled in the region and nearly comatose.

As a result of the Civil Rights Movement, blacks gained congressional passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which provided for federal enforcement of their constitutional rights. That year, the 2nd district's second-term Democratic congressman, Albert Watson, switched parties and enrolled with the Republicans. He was the first of mostly white Democrats to switch parties.

The 2nd district was one of the earliest districts of South Carolina whose voters supported a Republican candidate for national office in the late 20th century realignment of white conservative voters in the state. The district's best-known congressman, Floyd Spence, represented the district for more than 30 years. He was chairman of the House Armed Services Committee from 1995 to 2001, when he died a few months after being elected to a 16th term. He was succeeded in a special election by one of his former aides, state senator Joe Wilson.

Wilson has since been reelected seven times. In the most recent election, held on November 4, 2014, Wilson earned almost 62.5% of the vote against former Democrat Phil Black and Labor Party candidate Harold Geddings. The district is more than 69% white.

List of representatives

Name Tenure Party Electoral history
Aedanus Burke March 4, 1789 –
March 3, 1791
Anti-Administration [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Robert Barnwell March 4, 1791 –
March 3, 1793
Pro-Administration [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
John Hunter March 4, 1793 –
March 3, 1795
Anti-Administration [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Wade Hampton March 4, 1795 –
March 3, 1797
Democratic-Republican [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
John Rutledge, Jr. March 4, 1797 –
March 3, 1803
Federalist [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
William Butler March 4, 1803 –
March 3, 1813
Democratic-Republican Redistricted from the 5th district
William Lowndes March 4, 1813 –
May 8, 1822
Democratic-Republican Redistricted from the 4th district

Resigned
James Hamilton, Jr. December 13, 1822 –
March 3, 1823
Democratic-Republican [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
March 4, 1823 –
March 3, 1825
Jacksonian Democratic-Republican
March 4, 1825 –
March 3, 1829
Jackson
Robert W. Barnwell March 4, 1829 –
March 3, 1831
Jackson [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
March 4, 1831 –
March 3, 1833
Nullifier
William J. Grayson March 4, 1833 –
March 3, 1837
Nullifier [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Robert Rhett March 4, 1837 –
March 3, 1843
Democratic Redistricted to the 7th district
Richard F. Simpson March 4, 1843 –
March 3, 1849
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
James L. Orr March 4, 1849 –
March 3, 1853
Democratic Redistricted to the 5th district
William Aiken, Jr. March 4, 1853 –
March 3, 1857
Democratic Redistricted from the 6th district
William P. Miles March 4, 1857 –
December 24, 1860
Democratic Retired
Civil War
Occupation and Reconstruction
December 24, 1860 –
July 20, 1868
Christopher C. Bowen July 20, 1868 –
March 3, 1871
Republican [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Robert C. De Large March 4, 1871 –
January 24, 1873
Republican Seat declared vacant
Alonzo J. Ransier March 4, 1873 –
March 3, 1875
Republican [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Edmund W.M. Mackey March 4, 1875 –
July 19, 1876
Independent Republican Seat declared vacant
Charles W. Buttz November 7, 1876 –
March 3, 1877
Republican [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Richard H. Cain March 4, 1877 –
March 3, 1879
Republican [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Michael P. O'Connor March 4, 1879 –
March 3, 1881
Democratic contested election at end of term
Samuel Dibble June 9, 1881 –
May 31, 1882
Democratic lost contested election
Edmund W.M. Mackey May 31, 1882 –
March 3, 1883
Republican Redistricted to the 7th district
George D. Tillman March 4, 1883 –
March 3, 1893
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
W. Jasper Talbert March 4, 1893 –
March 3, 1903
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
George W. Croft March 4, 1903 –
March 10, 1904
Democratic Died
Theodore G. Croft May 17, 1904 –
March 3, 1905
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
James O'H. Patterson March 4, 1905 –
March 3, 1911
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
James F. Byrnes March 4, 1911 –
March 3, 1925
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Butler B. Hare March 4, 1925 –
March 3, 1933
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Hampton Fulmer March 4, 1933 –
October 19, 1944
Democratic Redistricted from the 7th district
Died
Willa L. Fulmer November 7, 1944 –
January 3, 1945
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
John J. Riley January 3, 1945 –
January 3, 1949
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Hugo S. Sims, Jr. January 3, 1949 –
January 3, 1951
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
John J. Riley January 3, 1951 –
January 1, 1962
Democratic Died
Corinne Boyd Riley April 10, 1962 –
January 3, 1963
Democratic [Data unknown/missing. You can help!]
Albert Watson January 3, 1963 –
February 1, 1965
Democratic Resigned
June 15, 1965 –
January 3, 1971
Republican Re-elected to finish his term as a Republican
Floyd Spence January 3, 1971 –
August 16, 2001
Republican Died
Joe Wilson December 18, 2001 –
Present
Republican First elected to finish Spence's term
Name Tenure Party Electoral history

Historical district boundaries

1995 - 2013[1]

See also

References

  1. "The national atlas". nationalatlas.gov. Retrieved February 22, 2014.

Coordinates: 33°26′N 81°18′W / 33.43°N 81.30°W / 33.43; -81.30

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