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Tennessee's 3rd congressional district

U.S. House district for Tennessee


Summary

U.S. House district for Tennessee

FieldValue
stateTennessee
district number3
image name
image captionInteractive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023
representativeChuck Fleischmann
partyRepublican
residenceOoltewah
distribution ref
percent urban62.76
percent rural37.24
population809,872
population year2024
median income$74,530
percent white77.8
percent hispanic5.8
percent black10.0
percent asian1.5
percent more than one race4.3
percent other race0.6
cpviR+18

| percent more than one race = 4.3 The 3rd congressional district of Tennessee is a congressional district in East Tennessee. It has been represented by Republican Chuck Fleischmann since January 2011. The third district has been centered on Chattanooga since before the Civil War.

In terms of density, the district is sparsely populated, as much of it is located within the Appalachian Mountains. Almost half of the district's population lives in Hamilton County.

Composition

The district comprises two halves, joined through a narrow tendril in Roane County near Ten Mile. The lower half borders North Carolina to the east and Georgia to the south. For the 118th and successive Congresses (based on redistricting following the 2020 census), the district contains all or portions of the following counties and communities:

Anderson County (7)

: All 6 communities

Bradley County (7)

: All 7 communities

Campbell County (8)

: Caryville, Jacksboro, LaFollette (part; also 2nd), Rocky Top (shared with Anderson County)

Hamilton County (19)

: All 19 communities

McMinn County (7)

: All 7 communities

Monroe County (7)

: All 7 communities

Morgan County (7)

: All 7 communities

Polk County (7)

: All 3 communities

Roane County (6)

: All 6 communities

Scott County (3)

: Elgin, Huntsville (part; also 6th), Robbins

Due to county island parcels near Sweetwater, Tennessee, the district (although geographically contiguous) entirely-surrounds three exclaves of Tennessee's 2nd congressional district.

Recent election results from statewide races

YearOfficeResults
2008PresidentMcCain 62% - 37%
2012PresidentRomney 65% - 35%
2016PresidentTrump 65% - 30%
2018SenateBlackburn 59% - 40%
GovernorLee 64% - 35%
2020PresidentTrump 65% - 33%
SenateHagerty 67% - 31%
2022GovernorLee 69% - 29%
2024PresidentTrump 67% - 31%
SenateBlackburn 67% - 31%

History

The 3rd district is on the dividing line between counties and towns that favored or opposed Southern secession in the Civil War. George Washington Bridges was elected as a Unionist (the name used by a coalition of Republicans and War Democrats) to the Thirty-seventh Congress, but he was arrested by Confederate troops while en route to Washington, D.C., and taken back to Tennessee. Bridges was held prisoner for more than a year before he escaped and went to Washington, D.C., and assumed his duties on February 23, 1863; serving until March 3, 1863.

During much of the 20th century, southeastern Tennessee was the only portion of traditionally heavily Republican East Tennessee where Democrats were able to compete on a more-or-less even basis. The Chattanooga papers—the moderate-to-progressive Times and the archconservative Free Press (now consolidated into the Chattanooga Times Free Press)—printed diametrically opposed political editorials. The northern counties have predominantly voted Republican since the 1860s, in a manner similar to their neighbors in the present 1st and 2nd districts. However, Democrats have received some support in coal mining areas (dating from the Great Depression). Also, in the years since World War II, the government-founded city of Oak Ridge, with its active labor unions and a population largely derived from outside the region, has been a source of potential Democratic votes.

This balance showed signs of changing beginning in the late 1950s, when rural and working-class whites began splitting their tickets in national elections to support Dwight Eisenhower and Barry Goldwater. In later years, the district warmly supported George Wallace in his third-party run for president in 1968, and gave equally strong support to Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, as well as Governors Winfield Dunn and Lamar Alexander. The district has only supported a Democrat for president twice in the last half century, in 1956 and 1992. Even in those cases, that support was almost entirely attributable to the presence of native sons as vice presidential candidates. In 1956, Senator Estes Kefauver, who had represented the 3rd from 1939 to 1949, was the Democratic vice presidential candidate. In 1992, Senator Al Gore was Bill Clinton's running mate, but even with Gore's presence, the Democrats only carried the 3rd by 39 votes out of 225,000 cast.

Even as the district became friendlier to Republicans at the national level, Democrats still held their own at the local level. This trend was broken when Republican Bill Brock won the congressional seat in 1962, ending a 40-year run by Democrats. He handed the seat to fellow Republican LaMar Baker in 1971. However, conservative Democrat Marilyn Lloyd (the widow of a popular television news anchorman in Chattanooga) regained it in 1974 and held it for 20 years. As late as the early 1990s, area Democrats held at least half the local offices in the region, particularly in the southern portion.

As the 1990s wore on, Democrats slowly began losing even county and local offices that they had held for generations. This trend actually began as early as 1992, when Lloyd barely held onto her seat against Republican Zach Wamp. Lloyd retired in 1994, and Wamp narrowly won the race to succeed her as part of that year's massive GOP wave. Wamp was handily reelected in 1996, and the Republicans have held it without serious difficulty since then. Indeed, the Democrats have only cleared 40 percent of the vote twice since Lloyd retired. Redistricting after the 2010 census consolidated the Republican hold on the seat, and it is now one of the most Republican districts in the nation.

Democrats still remain competitive in some local- and state-level races, particularly in Chattanooga and Oak Ridge. Chattanooga also sends some Democrats to the state legislature. However, even moderately liberal politics are a very hard sell, and most of the area's Democrats—particularly outside Chattanooga—are quite conservative on social issues. The 3rd district is home to several Evangelical Protestant denominations and colleges, contributing to the area's social conservatism.

After Wamp's January 2009 announcement that he would run for governor in 2010 instead of seeking re-election, several candidates announced campaigns for the seat. As of March 2010, the Republican field included former state party chairwoman Robin Smith, Air Force Captain Rick Kernea, Tommy Crangle, Chattanooga attorney Chuck Fleischmann, Bradley County sheriff Tim Gobble, Art Rhodes, Van Irion, and Basil Marceaux. Fleischmann won the August 5, 2010 primary with about 28% of the total vote. Democratic candidates as of October 2009 were Paula Flowers of Oak Ridge, a former member of Governor Phil Bredesen's cabinet, and former Libertarian Party member Brent Benedict, who won the 2006 Democratic primary for the seat but lost the general election to Wamp. Both of those Democrats later abandoned their campaigns, but four other candidates placed their names on the ballot for the August 2010 Democratic primary: Alicia Mitchell of Oak Ridge, Brenda Freeman Short of East Ridge, and Brent Staton and John Wolfe of Chattanooga. Wolfe was the winner in the August 5, 2010 primary. Six independents also filed petitions to appear on the November 2010 ballot: Don Barkman, Mark DeVol, Gregory C. Goodwin, Robert Humphries, Mo Kiah and Savas T. Kyriakidis. Republican nominee Chuck Fleischmann won the general election in November 2010 with 57% of the vote, trailed by Democrat John Wolfe with 28%, and independent Savas Kyriakidis with 10%.

List of members representing the district

NameYearsCong
ressPartyElectoral historyDistrict location
District established March 4, 1805
William Dickson
(Nashville)nowrapMarch 4, 1805 –
March 3, 1807Democratic-RepublicanRedistricted from the and re-elected in 1805.
Retired.1805–1813
"Metro district"
Jesse Wharton
(Nashville)nowrapMarch 4, 1807 –
March 3, 1809Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1807.
Retired.
Pleasant Moorman Miller
(Knoxville)nowrapMarch 4, 1809 –
March 3, 1811Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1809.
Retired.
[[File:Grundy-felix-by-wb-cooper.jpg100px]]
Felix Grundy
(Nashville)nowrapMarch 4, 1811 –
March 3, 1813Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1811.
Redistricted to the .
Thomas K. Harris
(Sparta)nowrapMarch 4, 1813 –
March 3, 1815Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1813.
Lost re-election.1813–1823
Isaac Thomas
(Sparta)nowrapMarch 4, 1815 –
March 3, 1817Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1815.
Retired.
Francis Jones
(Winchester)nowrapMarch 4, 1817 –
March 3, 1823Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1817.
Re-elected in 1819.
Re-elected in 1821.
Retired.
[[File:JamesStandifer.jpg100px]]
James I. Standifer
(Pikeville)nowrapMarch 4, 1823 –
March 3, 1825Democratic-RepublicanElected in 1823.
Lost re-election.1823–1833
James C. Mitchell
(Athens)nowrapMarch 4, 1825 –
March 3, 1829JacksonianElected in 1825.
Re-elected in 1827.
Lost re-election.
James I. Standifer
(Mount Airy)nowrapMarch 4, 1829 –
March 3, 1833JacksonianElected in 1829.
Re-elected in 1831.
Redistricted to the .
Luke Lea
(Campbells Station)nowrapMarch 4, 1833 –
March 3, 1835JacksonianElected in 1833.
Re-elected in 1835.
Retired.1833–1843
nowrapMarch 4, 1835 –
March 3, 1837Anti-Jacksonian
Joseph L. Williams
(Knoxville)nowrapMarch 4, 1837 –
March 3, 1843WhigElected in 1837.
Re-elected in 1839.
Re-elected in 1841.
Lost renomination.
Julius W. Blackwell
(Athens)nowrapMarch 4, 1843 –
March 3, 1845DemocraticElected in 1842.
Lost re-election.1843–1853
John H. Crozier
(Knoxville)nowrapMarch 4, 1845 –
March 3, 1849WhigElected in 1845.
Re-elected in 1847.
Retired.
Josiah M. Anderson
(Fairview)nowrapMarch 4, 1849 –
March 3, 1851WhigElected in 1849.
Lost re-election.
[[File:William M. Churchwell - 34th TN.jpg100px]]
William M. Churchwell
(Knoxville)nowrapMarch 4, 1851 –
March 3, 1853DemocraticElected in 1851.
Redistricted to the .
[[File:SamuelASmith.jpg100px]]
Samuel A. Smith
(Charleston)nowrapMarch 4, 1853 –
March 3, 1859DemocraticElected in 1853.
Re-elected in 1855.
Re-elected in 1857.
Lost re-election.1853–1863
Reese B. Brabson
(Chattanooga)nowrapMarch 4, 1859 –
March 3, 1861OppositionElected in 1859.
Retired.
George W. Bridges
(Athens)nowrapMarch 4, 1861 –
March 3, 1863UnionElected in 1861 but initially unable to take seat when taken prisoner by the Confederate Army.
Seated February 25, 1863 after escaping a Confederate prison.
Unable to seek re-election, as state was under Confederate occupation.
District inactivenowrapMarch 4, 1863 –
July 24, 1866Civil War and Reconstruction
[[File:William Brickly Stokes - Brady-Handy.jpg100px]]
William B. Stokes
(Alexandria)nowrapJuly 24, 1866 –
March 3, 1867UnionElected in 1865.
Re-elected in 1867.
Re-elected in 1868.
Lost re-election.1866–1873
nowrapMarch 4, 1867 –
March 3, 1871Republican
Abraham E. Garrett
(Carthage)nowrapMarch 4, 1871 –
March 3, 1873DemocraticElected in 1870.
Redistricted to the and lost re-election.
[[File:William Crutchfield - Brady-Handy.jpg100px]]
William Crutchfield
(Chattanooga)nowrapMarch 4, 1873 –
March 3, 1875RepublicanElected in 1872.
Retired.1873–1883
[[File:George Gibbs Dibrell - Brady-Handy.jpg100px]]
George G. Dibrell
(Sparta)March 4, 1875 –
March 3, 1885DemocraticElected in 1874.
Re-elected in 1876.
Re-elected in 1878.
Re-elected in 1880.
Re-elected in 1882.
Retired.
1883–1893
[[File:John R. Neal (Tennessee Congressman).jpg100px]]
John R. Neal
(Rhea Springs)nowrapMarch 4, 1885 –
March 3, 1889DemocraticElected in 1884.
Re-elected in 1886.
Retired.
[[File:Portrait of Henry Clay Evans.jpg100px]]
Henry Clay Evans
(Chattanooga)nowrapMarch 4, 1889 –
March 3, 1891RepublicanElected in 1888.
Lost re-election.
[[File:HenryCSnodgrass.jpg100px]]
Henry C. Snodgrass
(Sparta)March 4, 1891 –
March 3, 1895DemocraticElected in 1890.
Re-elected in 1892.
Lost re-election.
1893–1903
[[File:Foster V. Brown.jpg100px]]
Foster V. Brown
(Chattanooga)nowrapMarch 4, 1895 –
March 3, 1897RepublicanElected in 1894.
Retired.
[[File:John A Moon.jpg100px]]
John A. Moon
(Chattanooga)March 4, 1897 –
March 3, 1921DemocraticElected in 1896.
Re-elected in 1898.
Re-elected in 1900.
Re-elected in 1902.
Re-elected in 1904.
Re-elected in 1906.
Re-elected in 1908.
Re-elected in 1910.
Re-elected in 1912.
Re-elected in 1914.
Re-elected in 1916.
Re-elected in 1918.
Lost re-election.
1903–1913
1913–1923
[[File:JosephEdgarBrown.jpg100px]]
Joseph E. Brown
(Chattanooga)nowrapMarch 4, 1921 –
March 3, 1923RepublicanElected in 1920.
Retired.
[[File:Samuel D. McReynolds (Tennessee Congressman).jpg100px]]
Sam D. McReynolds
(Chattanooga)March 4, 1923 –
July 11, 1939DemocraticElected in 1922.
Re-elected in 1924.
Re-elected in 1926.
Re-elected in 1928.
Re-elected in 1930.
Re-elected in 1932.
Re-elected in 1934.
Re-elected in 1936.
Re-elected in 1938.
Died.1923–1933
1933–1943
VacantnowrapJuly 11, 1939 –
September 13, 1939
[[File:SenatorKefauver(D-TN).jpg100px]]
Estes Kefauver
(Chattanooga)September 13, 1939 –
January 3, 1949DemocraticElected to finish McReynolds's term.
Re-elected in 1940.
Re-elected in 1942.
Re-elected in 1944.
Re-elected in 1946.
Retired to run for U.S. senator.
1943–1953
[[File:James B. Frazier Jr. (Tennessee Congressman).jpg100px]]
James B. Frazier Jr.
(Chattanooga)January 3, 1949 –
January 3, 1963DemocraticElected in 1948.
Re-elected in 1950.
Re-elected in 1952.
Re-elected in 1954.
Re-elected in 1956.
Re-elected in 1958.
Re-elected in 1960.
Lost renomination.
1953–1963
[[File:Bill Brock.png100px]]
Bill Brock
(Chattanooga)nowrapJanuary 3, 1963 –
January 3, 1971RepublicanElected in 1962.
Re-elected in 1964.
Re-elected in 1966.
Re-elected in 1968.
Retired to run for U.S. senator.1963–1973
[[File:LaMar Baker 93rd Congress 1973.jpg100px]]
LaMar Baker
(Chattanooga)January 3, 1971 –
January 3, 1975RepublicanElected in 1970.
Re-elected in 1972.
Lost re-election.
1973–1983
[[File:Marilyn Lloyd.jpg100px]]
Marilyn Lloyd
(Chattanooga)January 3, 1975 –
January 3, 1995DemocraticElected in 1974.
Re-elected in 1976.
Re-elected in 1978.
Re-elected in 1980.
Re-elected in 1982.
Re-elected in 1984.
Re-elected in 1986.
Re-elected in 1988.
Re-elected in 1990.
Re-elected in 1992.
Retired.
1983–1993
1993–2003
[[File:Zach Wamp.jpg100px]]
Zach Wamp
(Chattanooga)January 3, 1995 –
January 3, 2011RepublicanElected in 1994.
Re-elected in 1996.
Re-elected in 1998.
Re-elected in 2000.
Re-elected in 2002.
Re-elected in 2004.
Re-elected in 2006.
Re-elected in 2008.
Retired to run for Governor of Tennessee.
2003–2013
[[File:TN03 109.gif300px]]
[[File:Charles J. Fleischmann 113th Congress.jpg100px]]
Chuck Fleischmann
(Ooltewah)January 3, 2011 –
presentRepublicanElected in 2010.
Re-elected in 2012.
Re-elected in 2014.
Re-elected in 2016.
Re-elected in 2018.
Re-elected in 2020.
Re-elected in 2022.
Re-elected in 2024.
2013–2023
[[File:Tennessee US Congressional District 3 (since 2013).tif300px]]
2023–present
[[File:Tennessee's 3rd congressional district (since 2023).svg300px]]

Recent election results

2012

2014

2016

2018

2020

2022

2024

References

References

  1. "Congressional Districts Relationship Files (State-based) - Geography - U.S. Census Bureau".
  2. "My Congressional District".
  3. (April 3, 2025). "2025 Cook PVI℠: District Map and List (119th Congress)".
  4. (November 19, 2021). "Congressional-district-boundaries".
  5. "Tennessee - Congressional District 1 - Representative Diana Harshbarger".
  6. "DRA 2020".
  7. [http://www.tennessee.gov/sos/election/results/Rep%20GovUSHouseTotal.pdf Republican Primary Unofficial Results], Tennessee Election Commission website, accessed August 6, 2010
  8. Larry Henry, [http://www.timesfreepress.com/news/2010/aug/06/fleischmann-beats-smith-3rd-district/ Fleischmann beats Smith in 3rd District], ''[[Chattanooga Times Free Press]]'', August 6, 2010
  9. [http://www.allbusiness.com/government/elections-politics-campaigns-elections/13234988-1.html 3rd District hopefuls tout finances], AllBusiness.com website, attributed to ''Chattanooga Times Free Press'', October 17, 2009
  10. Tom Humphrey, [http://blogs.knoxnews.com/humphrey/2009/10/congressional-candidate-money.html Congressional candidate money notes], Humphrey on the Hill, ''Knoxville News Sentinel'' website, October 15, 2009
  11. Joe Lance, [http://chattarati.com/2009/09/28/what-kind-of-democrat-will-win-the-third-district-primary/ What Kind of Democrat Will Win the Third District Primary?], September 28, 2009
  12. [http://www.tennessee.gov/sos/election/results/Dem%20GovUSHouse%20Total.pdf Democratic Primary Unofficial Results], Tennessee Election Commission website, accessed August 6, 2010
  13. [http://tnsos.org/elections/2010CandidatesStatewide.php?showall Official List of 2010 Candidates], Tennessee Department of State - Division of Elections, May 7, 2010
  14. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/politics/2010-race-maps/house/ 2010 Congressional Election Results: Tennessee District 3], Washington Post, accessed December 9, 2010
  15. Johnson, Cheryl L.. (February 28, 2019). "Statistics of the Congressional Election of November 6, 2018". [[Clerk of the United States House of Representatives.
  16. (December 2, 2020). "State of Tennessee General Election Results, November 3, 2020, Results By Office". Secretary of State of Tennessee.
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