Catherine Dorris Norrell

Catherine Dorris Norrell (March 30, 1901 – August 26, 1981) was the third woman in Arkansas history to gain a seat in the United States House of Representatives.Catherine Norrell worked alongside her husband for three decades and succeeded him in the United States House of Representatives following his death.[6] Serving as president of the Congressional Wives Club, Norrell befriended Hattie Wyatt Caraway of Jonesboro, Arkansas, who was the first woman ever elected to the U.S.[13] Norrell's first vote in Congress was in favor of the Kennedy administration's Cold War policies that proposed foreign aid to Latin American countries.[15] Norrell noticed the wood industry within her district suffered from reduced tariff rates and she sequentially joined Representative Cleveland M. Bailey of West Virginia in supporting a bill that would ease Internal Revenue Service (IRS) efforts to collect retroactive taxes.[21] After her term in Congress, President Kennedy appointed her Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs where she served from 1963 to 1965.
U.S. House of RepresentativesArkansasWilliam F. NorrellCamdenOuachita CountyWarrenBradley CountyMonticelloDemocraticDrew CountyAlma materOuachita Baptist UniversityUniversity of Arkansas at FayettevilleUnited States House of RepresentativesOuachita County, ArkansasBaptistTennesseeMonticello, ArkansasArkadelphiaUniversity of ArkansasFayettevilleArkansas A & M CollegeArkansas State UniversityWilliam Frank NorrellGeorge Washington University Law SchoolHattie Wyatt CarawayJonesboro, ArkansasU.S. SenateArkansas SenateCongressDemocratic candidateEighty-seventh United States Congressspecial electionPine BluffArkansas's 6th congressional districtKennedy administration'sCold WarLatin AmericanSixth DistrictRepresentativeCleveland M. BaileyWest VirginiaInternal Revenue ServiceEqual Rights Amendment Amendment'sDemocratsArkansas's Sixth DistrictOren HarrisPresident KennedyDeputy Assistant SecretaryUnited States Department of StateHonoluluLyndon B. JohnsonHawaiimusicianWarren, ArkansasWomen in the United States House of RepresentativesBiographical Directory of the United States Congresspublic domain materialU.S. House of RepresentativesreapportionmentMembers of the U.S. House of Representatives from ArkansasTerritoryConwaySevierAt-largeNewtonJohnsonBreckinridge1st districtGreenwoodHindmanHodgesFeatherstoneMcCullochCarawayDriverGathingsAlexanderLincolnCrawford2nd districtElliottA. A. C. RogersO. P. SnyderSlemonsLittleBrundidgeW. OldfieldP. OldfieldMillerTuckerBethuneT. RobinsonThorntonV. SnyderGriffin3rd districtEdwardsWilshireGunterJ. CravensJ. H. RogersDinsmoreTillmanFullerFulbrightTrimbleHammerschmidtT. HutchinsonA. HutchinsonBoozmanWomack4th districtW. TerryW. B. CravensO. WingoE. WingoW. F. CravensTackettHarrisAnthonyDickeyCottonWesterman5th districtJacowayD. TerryAlford6th districtJ. RobinsonS. TaylorC. TaylorSawyerGloverMcClellanW. Norrell7th districtWallaceGoodwinKitchens