1897 United States House of Representatives elections

There were eight special elections to the United States House of Representatives in 1897 during the 55th United States Congress, which began on March 4, 1897.None of the special elections in 1897 were during the 54th United States Congress, which ended March 3, 1897.This United States Congress–related article is a stub.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
U.S. House of RepresentativesThomas B. ReedJoseph Weldon BaileyRepublicanDemocraticMaine 1stTexas 4thPopulistSilver55th United States Congress54th United States CongressPennsylvania 25James J. DavidsonJoseph B. ShowalterMissouri 1Richard P. GilesJames T. LloydMaine 3Seth L. MillikenEdwin C. BurleighFrederick W. PlaistedSouth Carolina 6John L. McLaurin1892 (special)James NortonMassachusetts 1Ashley B. WrightGeorge P. LawrenceIndiana 4William S. HolmanFrancis M. GriffithNew York 3Francis H. WilsonBrooklynEdmund H. DriggsWilliam A. PrendergastHoratio C. KingIllinois 6Edward D. CookeHenry S. BoutellList of special elections to the United States House of RepresentativesOffice of the Historian, United States House of RepresentativesUnited States Government Printing Office1896←→1898U.S. SenateAlabamaArkansasCaliforniaColoradoConnecticutDelaware (Special)FloridaIllinoisIndianaKansasKentuckyMissouriNevadaNew HampshireNew YorkNorth CarolinaNorth DakotaOhio (Special)PennsylvaniaSouth CarolinaSouth DakotaWashingtonWisconsin6th sp4th sp3rd sp1st sp25th spGovernorsMassachusettsRhode IslandVirginiaIowa SenateBostonChicagoNew York CitySan DiegoUnited States House of Representativeselections1788–891790–911792–931794–951796–971798–991800–011802–031804–051806–071808–091810–111812–131814–151816–171818–191820–211822–231824–251826–271828–291830–311832–331834–351836–371838–391840–411842–431844–451846–471848–491850–511852–531854–551856–571858–591860–611862–631864–651866–671868–691870–711872–731874–751876–771878–79DelawareDistrict of ColumbiaFull list1855–56January 2015October 2015January 2023October 20231789–18221824–18541856–presentSpecial electionsThird-party performancesUnited States Congress