The United States House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries is a defunct committee of the U.S. House of Representatives.

The Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries was created on December 21, 1887, replacing the Select Committee on American Shipbuilding and Shipowning Interests. The House Rules defined its jurisdiction as those matters concerning the United States Merchant Marine. This included all matters relating to transportation by water, the United States Coast Guard, life-saving service, lighthouses, lightships, ocean derelicts, the Coast and Geodetic Survey, the Panama Canal, and fisheries. Legislation referred to the committee also included matters involving seamen (their assignments, wages, treatment, and health) and officers (their titles, conduct, and licensing); the naming, measuring, licensing, and registering of vessels; navigation and related laws; pleasure yachts; collisions at sea, as well as international arrangements to prevent them; coasting districts; maritime schools; and, taxes, fines, and penalties on vessels. The committee has also regulated shipping in the Philippines and Hawaii. As did most committees of the House, the Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee created subcommittees to handle portions of its jurisdiction.

In 1919 the committee was given jurisdiction over wireless telegraphy and in 1932 its name was changed to the Committee on Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries. After a dispute with the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, the jurisdiction over radio services was transferred to that committee in 1935 and the term "radio" was dropped from the name of the Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee.

During his tenure in office, Congressman Mario Biaggi was Chairman of the US House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries Subcommittee on Coast Guard and Navigation.[1]

In 1995, most duties of the committee were transferred to the Committee on Resources and subsequently abolished.

Chairmen

ChairPartyStateStart of ServiceEnd of Service
Poindexter DunnDemocraticArkansas18871889
John M. FarquharRepublicanNew York18891891
Samuel FowlerDemocraticNew Jersey18911893
George W. FithianDemocraticIllinois18931895
Sereno E. PayneRepublicanNew York18951899
Charles H. GrosvenorRepublicanOhio18991907
William S. GreeneRepublicanMassachusetts19071911
Joshua W. AlexanderDemocraticMissouri19111919
William S. GreeneRepublicanMassachusetts19191924
Frank D. ScottRepublicanMichigan19251927
Wallace H. White Jr.RepublicanMaine19271931
Ewin L. DavisDemocraticTennessee19311933
S. Otis BlandDemocraticVirginia19331947
Frederick Van Ness BradleyRepublicanMichigan
1947
Alvin F. WeichelRepublicanOhio19471949
S. Otis BlandDemocraticVirginia19491950
Edward J. HartDemocraticNew Jersey19501953
Alvin F. WeichelRepublicanOhio19531955
Herbert Covington BonnerDemocraticNorth Carolina19551965
Edward GarmatzDemocraticMaryland19651973
Leonor SullivanDemocraticMissouri19731977
John M. MurphyDemocraticNew York19771980
Thomas W. L. AshleyDemocraticOhio19801981
Walter B. Jones Sr.DemocraticNorth Carolina19811992
Gerry StuddsDemocraticMassachusetts19921995

References

  1. Fishman, Joanne A. (June 24, 1979). "Biaggi Seeks New Water Safety Plan". The New York Times.

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Archives and Records Administration.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.