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Women in the United States Senate

This article covers the history of women in the United States Senate and various milestones achieved by female senators. It includes a list of all women who have served in the Senate, a list of current female senators, and a list of states represented by women in the Senate. The first female U.S. senator, Rebecca Latimer Felton, represented Georgia for a single day in 1922, and the first woman elected to the Senate, Hattie Caraway, was elected from Arkansas in 1932. Sixty women have served in the upper house of the United States Congress since its establishment in 1789. As of October 3, 2023, there are 25 women (15 Democrats, 9 Republicans, and 1 Independent) serving as U.S. senators. Additionally, Kamala Harris as vice president serves as President of the Senate.

Nancy Kassebaum is currently the oldest living former female member of the Senate at the age 91.

History edit

 
Rebecca Latimer Felton (D-Georgia), the first female member of the United States Senate, who served for a single day in 1922.
 
One woman (Barbara Mikulski) was reelected and four women were elected to the Senate in 1992, the "Year of the Woman," Left to right: Senators Murray, Moseley Braun, Mikulski, Feinstein, and Boxer.
 
By the 111th United States Congress (2009–2011), the number of women senators had increased to 17, including 4 Republicans and 13 Democrats

For its first 130 years in existence, the Senate's membership was entirely male. Until 1920, few women ran for the Senate. Until the 1990s, very few were elected. This paucity of women was due to many factors, including the lack of women's suffrage in many states until the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, women's limited access to higher education until the mid-1900s, public perceptions of gender roles, and barriers to women's advancement such as sex discrimination.

The first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate was Rebecca Latimer Felton; she represented Georgia for one day in 1922. Ten years later, Hattie Caraway became the first woman to win election to the Senate, representing Arkansas. In 1949, Margaret Chase Smith began her service in the Senate; she was the first woman to serve in both the House and Senate. Her 1960 reelection bid resulted in Chase Smith winning the nation's first-ever United States Senate election with two female major party nominees. In 1972, Elaine Edwards was appointed as the first Catholic woman in the Senate by her husband, the Governor of Louisiana, while she was Louisiana's First Lady; she retired after three months. In 1978, Muriel Humphrey Brown became the first and only Second Lady to serve in the United States Senate, after Hubert Humphrey's unexpected death in office. Humphrey Brown was appointed by the Governor of Minnesota to fill her late husband's Senate seat; she served for less than one year and did not seek to be elected to her husband's seat.

In 1978, Nancy Kassebaum became the first woman ever elected to a full term in the Senate, representing Kansas, without her husband having previously served in Congress.[n 1] Since 1978, there has always been at least one woman in the Senate. The first woman to be elected to the Senate without any family connections was Florida Republican Paula Hawkins, elected in 1980. She was also the first and, to date, only female member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints elected to the United States Senate. In 1990, there were still few women in the Senate as compared to the number of women in the House. The trend of few women in the Senate began to change in the wake of the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court nomination hearings and the subsequent election of the 103rd United States Congress in 1992, which was dubbed the "Year of the Woman."[1] Barbara Mikulski was reelected and four new Democratic women were elected to the Senate. They were Patty Murray of Washington, Carol Moseley Braun of Illinois, Dianne Feinstein of California, and Barbara Boxer of California. Carol Moseley Braun was the first woman of color to serve in the Senate and the first woman to defeat an incumbent senator after she won the 1992 Democratic primary election over Alan Dixon. Later in 1992, Feinstein was the first woman to defeat an incumbent senator from a different party when she defeated John Seymour in a special election. Feinstein entered the Senate the same year as the first female Jewish senator.[2][3][4]

Bathroom facilities for women in the Senate on the Senate chamber level were first provided in 1992.[5] Women were not allowed to wear pants on the Senate floor until 1993.[6][7] In 1993, Senators Barbara Mikulski and Carol Moseley Braun wore pants onto the floor in defiance of the rule, and female support staff followed soon after, with the rule being amended later that year by Senate Sergeant-at-Arms Martha Pope to allow women to wear pants on the floor so long as they also wore a jacket.[6][7]

The first time two female senators from the same state served concurrently was beginning in 1993; Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer (both D-CA) were both elected in 1992, with Feinstein taking office that same year (as the result of a special election) and Boxer taking office in 1993; Boxer served until 2016, when she retired, and Feinstein was joined by Kamala Harris. In June 1993, Kay Bailey Hutchison won a special election in Texas, and joined Kassebaum as a fellow female Republican senator. These additions significantly diminished the popular perception of the Senate as an exclusive "boys' club". Since 1992, there has been at least one new woman elected to the Senate every two years, with the exception of 2004 (Lisa Murkowski was elected for the first time in 2004, but had been appointed to the seat since 2002).

 
Eight Democratic women senators appear at the 2008 Democratic Convention in Denver. It has become a tradition at Democratic conventions for incumbent women senators to appear on opening night.

Olympia Snowe of Maine arrived in the Senate in 1995, having previously served in the US House of Representatives and both houses of the Maine state legislature. She and later Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona, and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming are the only women to have served in both houses of a state legislature and both houses of the federal legislature. In 2000, Stabenow and Maria Cantwell became the first women to defeat incumbent elected senators in a general election, unseating Senators Spencer Abraham and Slade Gorton respectively.[n 2] Hillary Clinton is the first and only First Lady to run for or win a Senate seat. Clinton joined the Senate in 2001, becoming the first female senator from New York, and served until 2009, when she resigned to become the 67th United States Secretary of State, under President Barack Obama. She was replaced by Kirsten Gillibrand, who has been elected three times and was herself a candidate for president in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries.

In 2008, Kay Hagan became the first woman to unseat a female incumbent, Elizabeth Dole. Upon the opening of the 112th United States Congress in 2011, New Hampshire Democrat Jeanne Shaheen was joined by newly elected Republican Kelly Ayotte, making up the first Senate delegation of two women belonging to different parties.

In November 2022, Dianne Feinstein became the longest-serving female senator in history,[8] surpassing Barbara Mikulski,[9][10] having served for 30 years.[11] Feinstein was retiring at the end of her last term, scheduled for January 3, 2025,[12] but died on September 29, 2023, before her term ended.[13] Subsequently, Patty Murray surpassed Feinstein as the longest serving woman senator, and continues to serve.

In 2012, a record five new female senators were elected. This beat the record of four new female senators from 1992 and set the record of five new women and eleven female senators in one Senate class. The five new women were Democrats Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, and Republican Deb Fischer of Nebraska. Hirono was the first Asian-American woman and first Buddhist in the Senate, and Baldwin was the first openly gay person in the Senate.

In 2014, Joni Ernst was elected as the first female combat veteran to serve in the Senate. In 2016, Catherine Cortez Masto was elected as the first Latina senator, while Tammy Duckworth was elected as the first female double amputee in the Senate.[14] In a June 2016 primary election, as a result of California's recent establishment of the top-two primary, Attorney General of California Kamala Harris and U.S. Representative Loretta Sanchez became the first women of the same party to advance to a Senate general election. In November 2016, Harris became the first woman to defeat a woman of the same party in a Senate general election.

In 2016, Hillary Clinton became the first former female senator to win a major party's nomination for President of the United States. Despite winning a plurality of the popular vote, she ultimately lost her bid to Donald Trump.

Starting in 2017, United States Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, have held the distinction of being the first and second women elected as both the governor of a state and a United States senator from a state; both served as Governor of New Hampshire before their time in the Senate.

In 2018, Kyrsten Sinema defeated Martha McSally, becoming Arizona's first female senator, as well as the first openly bisexual senator from any state. Two weeks later, Arizona Governor Doug Ducey announced that he would appoint McSally to Arizona's other Senate seat, which was becoming vacant with the resignation of Jon Kyl. Sinema and McSally have been the only concurrently serving female senators to have previously faced off against each other in a Senate election. McSally exited the Senate in late 2020 after losing that year's special election to Mark Kelly, a Democrat.

Also in 2018, Jacky Rosen made political history as the first female one-term outgoing U.S. representative ever elected to the Senate.[15]

In 2023, Patty Murray became the first woman to serve as president pro tempore, a role traditionally given to the most senior member of the majority party in the United States Senate. Dianne Feinstein was the most senior Democratic senator, but declined to serve. This made Murray the third person in line to become president, after the vice president and the Speaker of the House.[16]

Sixty women have served in the United States Senate since its establishment in 1789.[17] Cumulatively, 36 female U.S. senators have been Democrats, while 23 have been Republicans and one is an independent. As of 2023, no female U.S. senator has ever won election to the House after her Senate term, resigned from a state governorship for the purpose of a Senate appointment by her successor, also won election as an independent or to represent more than one state in non-consecutive elections, served both seats of a state at different times, or represented a third party in her career. In December 2022, Senator Kyrsten Sinema became the first female senator to switch her party affiliation while in office. In September 2023, Senator Dianne Feinstein became the first female senator to die in office.

Some female U.S. senators have later run for U.S. president or vice president—see list of female United States presidential and vice presidential candidates. In 2020, Kamala Harris became the first female senator, current or past, to win her vice presidential election bid and become the first female President of the United States Senate in American history.

Election, selection, and family edit

Before 2001, a plurality of women joined the U.S. Senate through appointment following the death or resignation of a husband or father who previously held the seat. An example is Muriel Humphrey (D-MN), the widow of former senator and Vice President Hubert Humphrey; she was appointed to fill his seat until a special election was held (in which she did not run). However, with the election of three women in 2000, the balance shifted; more women have now entered service as a senator by winning elections than by being appointed.[citation needed]

Recent examples of selection include Jean Carnahan and Lisa Murkowski. In 2000, Jean Carnahan (D-MO) was appointed to fill the Senate seat won by her recently deceased husband, Mel Carnahan. Carnahan—even though dead—defeated the incumbent senator, John Ashcroft. Carnahan's widow was named to fill his seat by Missouri Governor Roger Wilson until a special election was held. However, she lost the subsequent 2002 election to fill out the rest of the six-year term. In 2002, Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) was appointed by her father Alaska Governor Frank Murkowski, who had resigned from the Senate to become governor, to serve the remaining two years of his term. Lisa Murkowski defeated former governor Tony Knowles in her reelection bid in 2004.

Two recent members of the Senate brought with them a combination of name recognition resulting from the political careers of their famous husbands and their own substantial experience in public affairs. The first, former senator Elizabeth Dole (R-NC), was married to former Senate Majority Leader and 1996 Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole and served as Secretary of Transportation under President Ronald Reagan and Secretary of Labor under President George H.W. Bush; she later ran a losing bid for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000. The other, former senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY), wife of former President Bill Clinton, was First Lady of the United States and First Lady of Arkansas before taking her seat in 2000. She too ran an unsuccessful campaign for her party's presidential nomination in 2008; she resigned in 2009 to become the secretary of state for the eventual victor of that election, Barack Obama. In 2016, she ran a successful campaign for her party's presidential nomination, eventually losing in the general election to Republican nominee Donald Trump.

Another famous name is Nancy Landon Kassebaum (R-KS), the daughter of former Kansas governor and one-time presidential candidate Alf Landon. After retiring from the Senate, she married former senator Howard Baker (R-TN). Kassebaum has the distinction of being the first female elected senator who did not succeed her husband in Congress (Margaret Chase Smith was only elected to the Senate after succeeding her husband to his House seat).

Among the women elected or appointed in Senate history, by stature, Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) are the shortest, at 4 feet 11 inches (1.50 m), whereas Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) is the tallest, at 5 feet 11 inches (1.80 m).[18][19][20]

List of female U.S. senators edit

Portrait Name
(lifespan)
State Term Entered by Left for Party
Term start Term end Length of
service (days)
  Rebecca Felton
(1835–1930)[n 3]
  Georgia November 21, 1922 November 21, 1922 1
(0 days)
Appointment by Thomas W. Hardwick Appointment ended Democratic
  Hattie Caraway
(1878–1950)[n 4]
  Arkansas November 13, 1931 January 3, 1945 4,800
(13 years, 51 days)
Appointment by Harvey Parnell Lost renomination Democratic
  Rose Long
(1892–1970)[n 5]
  Louisiana January 31, 1936 January 3, 1937 338
(338 days)
Appointment by James Noe Retired Democratic
  Dixie Graves
(1882–1965)
  Alabama August 20, 1937 January 10, 1938 143
(143 days)
Appointment by Bibb Graves Appointment ended Democratic
  Gladys Pyle
(1890–1989)
  South Dakota November 9, 1938 January 3, 1939 55
(55 days)
Special election Retired Republican
  Vera C. Bushfield
(1889–1976)[n 6]
  South Dakota October 6, 1948 December 26, 1948 81
(81 days)
Appointment by George Mickelson Appointment ended Republican
  Margaret Chase Smith
(1897–1995)
  Maine January 3, 1949 January 3, 1973 8,766
(24 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Republican
  Eva Bowring
(1892–1985)
  Nebraska April 16, 1954 November 7, 1954 205
(205 days)
Appointment by Robert B. Crosby Appointment ended Republican
  Hazel Abel
(1888–1966)
  Nebraska November 8, 1954 December 31, 1954 53
(53 days)
Special election Retired and resigned early[n 7] Republican
  Maurine Neuberger
(1907–2000)[n 8]
  Oregon November 9, 1960 January 3, 1967 2,246
(6 years, 55 days)
Special election Retired Democratic
  Elaine Edwards
(1929–2018)
  Louisiana August 1, 1972 November 13, 1972 104
(104 days)
Appointment by Edwin Edwards Appointment ended Democratic
  Muriel Humphrey
(1912–1998)[n 9]
  Minnesota January 25, 1978 November 7, 1978 286
(286 days)
Appointment by Rudy Perpich Appointment ended Democratic (DFL)
  Maryon Allen
(1925–2018)[n 10]
  Alabama June 8, 1978 November 7, 1978 152
(152 days)
Appointment by George Wallace Lost nomination to finish term Democratic
  Nancy Kassebaum
(born 1932)
  Kansas December 23, 1978 January 3, 1997 6,586
(18 years, 11 days)
Election[n 11] Retired Republican
  Paula Hawkins
(1927–2009)
  Florida January 1, 1981 January 3, 1987 2,193
(6 years, 2 days)
Election[n 11] Lost reelection Republican
  Barbara Mikulski
(born 1936)
  Maryland January 3, 1987 January 3, 2017 10,959
(30 years, 0 days)
Election Retired Democratic
  Jocelyn Burdick
(1922–2019)[n 12]
  North Dakota September 12, 1992 December 14, 1992 93
(93 days)
Appointment by George Sinner Appointment ended Democratic–NPL
  Dianne Feinstein
(1933–2023)[n 13]
  California November 4, 1992 September 29, 2023 11,286
(30 years, 329 days)
Special election Died in office Democratic
  Barbara Boxer
(born 1940)
  California January 3, 1993 January 3, 2017 8,767
(24 years, 0 days)
Election Retired Democratic
  Carol Moseley-Braun
(born 1947)[n 14]
  Illinois January 3, 1993 January 3, 1999 2,191
(6 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Democratic
  Patty Murray
(born 1950)
  Washington January 3, 1993 present 11,365
(31 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Kay Hutchison
(born 1943)
  Texas June 14, 1993 January 3, 2013 7,143
(19 years, 203 days)
Special election Retired Republican
  Olympia Snowe
(born 1947)
  Maine January 3, 1995 January 3, 2013 6,576
(18 years, 0 days)
Election Retired Republican
  Sheila Frahm
(born 1945)
  Kansas June 11, 1996 November 6, 1996 148
(148 days)
Appointment by Bill Graves Lost nomination to finish term Republican
  Susan Collins
(born 1952)
  Maine January 3, 1997 present 9,904
(27 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Mary Landrieu
(born 1955)
  Louisiana January 3, 1997 January 3, 2015 6,575
(18 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Democratic
  Blanche Lincoln
(born 1960)[n 15]
  Arkansas January 3, 1999 January 3, 2011 4,383
(12 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Democratic
  Maria Cantwell
(born 1958)
  Washington January 3, 2001 present 8,443
(23 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Jean Carnahan
(1933-2024)
  Missouri January 3, 2001 November 23, 2002 689
(1 year, 324 days)
Appointment by Roger B. Wilson Lost election to finish term Democratic
  Hillary Clinton
(born 1947)
  New York January 3, 2001 January 21, 2009 2,940
(8 years, 18 days)
Election Resigned to become United States Secretary of State Democratic
  Debbie Stabenow
(born 1950)
  Michigan January 3, 2001 present 8,443
(23 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Lisa Murkowski
(born 1957)[n 16]
  Alaska December 20, 2002 present 7,727
(21 years, 57 days)
Appointment by Frank Murkowski Incumbent Republican
  Elizabeth Dole
(born 1936)[n 17]
  North Carolina January 3, 2003 January 3, 2009 2,192
(6 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection[n 18] Republican
  Amy Klobuchar
(born 1960)
  Minnesota January 3, 2007 present 6,252
(17 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic (DFL)
  Claire McCaskill
(born 1953)
  Missouri January 3, 2007 January 3, 2019 4,383
(12 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Democratic
  Jeanne Shaheen
(born 1947)
  New Hampshire January 3, 2009 present 5,521
(15 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Kay Hagan
(1953–2019)
  North Carolina January 3, 2009 January 3, 2015 2,191
(6 years, 0 days)
Election[n 18] Lost reelection Democratic
  Kirsten Gillibrand
(born 1966)
  New York January 26, 2009 present 5,498
(15 years, 20 days)
Appointment by David Paterson Incumbent Democratic
  Kelly Ayotte
(born 1968)
  New Hampshire January 3, 2011 January 3, 2017 2,192
(6 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Republican
  Tammy Baldwin
(born 1962)[n 19]
  Wisconsin January 3, 2013 present 4,060
(11 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Deb Fischer
(born 1951)
  Nebraska January 3, 2013 present 4,060
(11 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Heidi Heitkamp
(born 1955)
  North Dakota January 3, 2013 January 3, 2019 2,191
(6 years, 0 days)
Election Lost reelection Democratic–NPL
  Mazie Hirono
(born 1947)[n 20]
  Hawaii January 3, 2013 present 4,060
(11 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Elizabeth Warren
(born 1949)
  Massachusetts January 3, 2013 present 4,060
(11 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Joni Ernst
(born 1970)
  Iowa January 3, 2015 present 3,330
(9 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Shelley Moore Capito
(born 1953)
  West Virginia January 3, 2015 present 3,330
(9 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Catherine Cortez Masto
(born 1964)[n 21]
  Nevada January 3, 2017 present 2,599
(7 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Tammy Duckworth
(born 1968)[n 22]
  Illinois January 3, 2017 present 2,599
(7 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Kamala Harris
(born 1964)[n 23]
  California January 3, 2017 January 18, 2021 1,476
(4 years, 15 days)
Election Resigned to become Vice President of the United States Democratic
  Maggie Hassan
(born 1958)
  New Hampshire January 3, 2017 present 2,599
(7 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Tina Smith
(born 1958)
  Minnesota January 3, 2018 present 2,234
(6 years, 43 days)
Appointment by Mark Dayton Incumbent Democratic (DFL)
  Cindy Hyde-Smith
(born 1959)
  Mississippi April 2, 2018 present 2,145
(5 years, 319 days)
Appointment by Phil Bryant Incumbent Republican
  Marsha Blackburn
(born 1952)[n 24]
  Tennessee January 3, 2019 present 1,869
(5 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Kyrsten Sinema
(born 1976)
  Arizona January 3, 2019 present 1,869
(5 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
(2019–2022)
Independent
(since 2022)[n 25]
  Martha McSally
(born 1966)
  Arizona January 3, 2019 December 2, 2020 699
(1 year, 334 days)
Appointment by Doug Ducey Lost election to finish term Republican
  Jacky Rosen
(born 1957)
  Nevada January 3, 2019 present 1,869
(5 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Democratic
  Kelly Loeffler
(born 1970)
  Georgia January 6, 2020 January 20, 2021 380
(1 year, 14 days)
Appointment by Brian Kemp Lost election to finish term Republican
  Cynthia Lummis
(born 1954)
  Wyoming January 3, 2021 present 1,138
(3 years, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Katie Britt
(born 1982)
  Alabama January 3, 2023 present 408
(1 year, 43 days)
Election Incumbent Republican
  Laphonza Butler
(born 1979)[n 26]
  California October 1, 2023 present 137
(137 days)
Appointment by Gavin Newsom Incumbent Democratic

Currently serving women U.S. senators edit

There are 25 women serving in the United States Senate. This is the second-highest number of women to have served concurrently in the Senate in U.S. history. Fifteen are Democrats, nine are Republicans, and one is an independent.

In January 2019, four new women senators (Blackburn, McSally, Rosen, and Sinema) were seated although two others (Heitkamp and McCaskill) lost reelection bids, so the number of female senators reached 25, at the time with 17 being Democrats and 8 being Republicans. In January 2020, Kelly Loeffler was appointed to the Senate from Georgia, increasing the number of women in the Senate to 26, the highest proportion of women serving as U.S. senators in history.

Martha McSally lost an election to finish John McCain's unexpired term on November 3, 2020, and left the Congress on December 2, which reduced the number of female senators to 25. On January 3, 2021, Cynthia Lummis, the first woman senator from Wyoming, began her term, so the number of female senators reached 26 once again. Meanwhile, Kamala Harris was elected Vice President of the United States; she resigned her Senate seat on January 18 in anticipation of the scheduled commencement of her term as Vice President (and thus President of the Senate) on January 20, which reduced the number of female senators to 25. In addition, Loeffler lost the January 5 special election runoff for the remainder of the term to which she had been appointed, and she left office also on January 20, which further reduced the number of women serving in the Senate to 24. On December 9, 2022, Sinema defected from the Democratic Party to become a registered independent, leaving 15 of her fellow women senators from her former party, and on January 3, 2023, Katie Britt, the first Republican woman senator from Alabama and also the first woman ever elected to the Senate from her state, began her term as well, increasing the number to 25 again. The death of Dianne Feinstein on September 29, 2023, brought the number back down to 24. The seating of Feinstein's replacement, appointed senator Laphonza Butler, on October 3 returned the figure to 25.

As of January 2023, four states (Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, and Washington) are represented by two female U.S. senators. Eleven incumbent women in the Senate are former U.S. representatives: Senators Stabenow, Cantwell, Gillibrand, Baldwin, Hirono, Moore Capito, Duckworth, Sinema, Rosen, Blackburn, and Lummis.

Class State Name Party Prior experience First took
office
Born
3 Alabama Katie Britt Republican CEO of the Business Council of Alabama, chief of staff to predecessor Richard Shelby 2023

(age 40)

1982
3 Alaska Lisa Murkowski Republican Alaska House of Representatives 2002

(age 45)

1957
1 Arizona Kyrsten Sinema Independent[n 25] Arizona House of Representatives, Arizona Senate, U.S. House of Representatives 2019

(age 42)

1976
1 California Laphonza Butler Democratic Member of the Board of Regents of the University of California, President of EMILY's List 2023

(age 44)

1979
1 Hawaii Mazie Hirono Democratic Hawaii House of Representatives, Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii, gubernatorial nominee, U.S. House of Representatives 2013

(age 65)

1947
3 Illinois Tammy Duckworth Democratic U.S. House of Representatives 2017

(age 48)

1968
2 Iowa Joni Ernst Republican Montgomery County Auditor, Iowa Senate 2015

(age 44)

1970
2 Maine Susan Collins Republican Massachusetts Deputy Treasurer, gubernatorial nominee 1997

(age 44)

1952
1 Massachusetts Elizabeth Warren Democratic Special Advisor to the President for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 2013

(age 63)

1949
1 Michigan Debbie Stabenow Democratic Michigan House of Representatives, Michigan Senate, U.S. House of Representatives 2001

(age 50)

1950
1 Minnesota Amy Klobuchar Democratic-Farmer-Labor Hennepin County Attorney 2007

(age 46)

1960
2 Minnesota Tina Smith Democratic-Farmer-Labor Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota 2018

(age 60)

1958
2 Mississippi Cindy Hyde-Smith Republican Mississippi Senate, Mississippi Commissioner of Agriculture and Commerce 2018

(age 58)

1959
1 Nebraska Deb Fischer Republican Nebraska Legislature 2013

(age 61)

1951
3 Nevada Catherine Cortez Masto Democratic Nevada Attorney General 2017

(age 52)

1964
1 Nevada Jacky Rosen Democratic U.S. House of Representatives 2019

(age 61)

1957
2 New Hampshire Jeanne Shaheen Democratic New Hampshire Senate, Governor of New Hampshire 2009

(age 61)

1947
3 New Hampshire Maggie Hassan Democratic New Hampshire Senate, Governor of New Hampshire 2017

(age 58)

1958
1 New York Kirsten Gillibrand Democratic U.S. House of Representatives 2009

(age 43)

1966
1 Tennessee Marsha Blackburn Republican Tennessee Senate, U.S. House of Representatives 2019

(age 66)

1952
3 Washington Patty Murray Democratic Washington Senate 1993

(age 42)

1950
1 Washington Maria Cantwell Democratic Washington House of Representatives, U.S. House of Representatives 2001

(age 42)

1958
2 West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito Republican West Virginia House of Delegates, U.S. House of Representatives 2015

(age 62)

1953
1 Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin Democratic Wisconsin State Assembly, U.S. House of Representatives 2013

(age 50)

1962
2 Wyoming Cynthia Lummis Republican Wyoming House of Representatives, Wyoming Senate, Wyoming Treasurer, U.S. House of Representatives 2021

(age 66)

1954

List of states represented by women edit

Thirty-three states have been represented by female senators. As of October 3, 2023, 21 states are represented by female senators.

State Current Previous Total First woman senator Years represented by female senators Year first elected a female senator
Alabama 1 2 3 Dixie Graves 1937–1938, 1978, 2023–present 2022
Alaska 1 0 1 Lisa Murkowski 2002–present 2004
Arizona 1 1 2 Kyrsten Sinema &
Martha McSally
2019–present 2018
Arkansas 0 2 2 Hattie Caraway 1931–1945, 1999–2011 1932
California 1 3 4 Dianne Feinstein 1992–present 1992 (special)
Colorado 0 0 0
Connecticut 0 0 0
Delaware 0 0 0
Florida 0 1 1 Paula Hawkins 1981–1987 1980
Georgia 0 2 2 Rebecca Felton 1922, 2020–2021 N / A; both women senators appointed
Hawaii 1 0 1 Mazie Hirono 2013–present 2012
Idaho 0 0 0
Illinois 1 1 2 Carol Moseley-Braun 1993–1999, 2017–present 1992
Indiana 0 0 0
Iowa 1 0 1 Joni Ernst 2015–present 2014
Kansas 0 2 2 Nancy Kassebaum 1978–1997 1978
Kentucky 0 0 0
Louisiana 0 3 3 Rose Long 1936–1937, 1972, 1997–2015 1936 (special)
Maine 1 2 3 Margaret Chase Smith 1949–1973, 1995–present 1948
Maryland 0 1 1 Barbara Mikulski 1987–2017 1986
Massachusetts 1 0 1 Elizabeth Warren 2013–present 2012
Michigan 1 0 1 Debbie Stabenow 2001–present 2000
Minnesota 2 1 3 Muriel Humphrey 1978, 2007–present 2006
Mississippi 1 0 1 Cindy Hyde-Smith 2018–present 2018 (special)
Missouri 0 2 2 Jean Carnahan 2001–2002, 2007–2019 2006
Montana 0 0 0
Nebraska 1 2 3 Eva Bowring 1954, 2013–present 1954 (special)
Nevada 2 0 2 Catherine Cortez Masto 2017–present 2016
New Hampshire 2 1 3 Jeanne Shaheen 2009–present 2008
New Jersey 0 0 0
New Mexico 0 0 0
New York 1 1 2 Hillary Clinton 2001–2009, 2009–present 2000
North Carolina 0 2 2 Elizabeth Dole 2003–2015 2002
North Dakota 0 2 2 Jocelyn Burdick 1992, 2013–2019 2012
Ohio 0 0 0
Oklahoma 0 0 0
Oregon 0 1 1 Maurine Neuberger 1960–1967 1960 (special)
Pennsylvania 0 0 0
Rhode Island 0 0 0
South Carolina 0 0 0
South Dakota 0 2 2 Gladys Pyle 1938–1939, 1948 1938 (special)
Tennessee 1 0 1 Marsha Blackburn 2019–present 2018
Texas 0 1 1 Kay Hutchison 1993–2013 1993 (special)
Utah 0 0 0
Vermont 0 0 0
Virginia 0 0 0
Washington 2 0 2 Patty Murray 1993–present 1992
West Virginia 1 0 1 Shelley Moore Capito 2015–present 2014
Wisconsin 1 0 1 Tammy Baldwin 2013–present 2012
Wyoming 1 0 1 Cynthia Lummis 2021–present 2020
Total 25 35 60 Rebecca Felton 1922, 1931–1945, 1948–1973,

1978–present

1932

Graphs edit

Histograph edit

Note: In the graph below, entry dates refer to the date the senator was sworn in, not the date of the appointment, or election.

Starting Total Graph Event
March 4, 1789 0    
November 21, 1922 1
  Rebecca Felton appointed
November 23, 1922 0     End of Rebecca Felton's appointment
December 9, 1931 1
  Hattie Caraway appointed
January 31, 1936 2
  Rose Long appointed
January 3, 1937 1
  Rose Long retires
August 20, 1937 2
  Dixie Graves appointed
January 10, 1938 1
  End of Dixie Graves's appointment
November 9, 1938 2
  Gladys Pyle begins service
January 3, 1939 1
  Gladys Pyle retires
January 3, 1945 0     Hattie Caraway ends service
October 6, 1948 1
  Vera C. Bushfield appointed
December 27, 1948 0     End of Vera C. Bushfield's appointment
January 3, 1949 1
  Margaret Chase Smith begins service
April 16, 1954 2
  Eva Bowring appointed
November 7, 1954 1
  End of Eva Bowring's appointment
November 8, 1954 2
  Hazel Abel begins service
December 31, 1954 1
  Hazel Abel retires
November 9, 1960 2
  Maurine Neuberger begins service
January 3, 1967 1
  Maurine Neuberger retires
August 1, 1972 2
  Elaine Edwards appointed
November 13, 1972 1
  End of Elaine Edwards's appointment
January 3, 1973 0     Margaret Chase Smith ends service
January 25, 1978 1
  Muriel Humphrey appointed
June 8, 1978 2
  Maryon Allen appointed
November 7, 1978 0      End of Muriel Humphrey's and Maryon Allen's appointments
December 23, 1978 1
  Nancy Kassebaum begins service
January 1, 1981 2
  Paula Hawkins begins service
September 16, 1992 3
  Jocelyn Burdick appointed
November 4, 1992 4
  Dianne Feinstein begins service
December 14, 1992 3
  End of Jocelyn Burdick's appointment
January 3, 1993 6
    Barbara Boxer, Carol Moseley Braun, and Patty Murray begin service
June 14, 1993 7
  Kay Hutchison begins service
January 3, 1995 8
  Olympia Snowe begins service
June 11, 1996 9
  Sheila Frahm appointed
November 6, 1996 8
  End of Sheila Frahm's appointment
January 3, 1997 9
    Susan Collins and Mary Landrieu begin service;
Nancy Kassebaum retires
January 3, 2001 13
     Maria Cantwell, Hillary Clinton, and Debbie Stabenow begin service;
Jean Carnahan appointed
November 23, 2002 12
  End of Jean Carnahan's appointment
December 20, 2002 13
  Lisa Murkowski appointed
January 3, 2003 14
  Elizabeth Dole begins service
January 3, 2007 16
   Amy Klobuchar and Claire McCaskill begin service
January 3, 2009 17
    Jeanne Shaheen and Kay Hagan begin service; Elizabeth Dole ends service
January 21, 2009 16
  Hillary Clinton resigns to become Secretary of State
January 26, 2009 17
  Kirsten Gillibrand appointed
January 3, 2013 20
        Tammy Baldwin, Deb Fischer, Heidi Heitkamp, Mazie Hirono, and Elizabeth Warren begin service;
Kay Hutchison and Olympia Snowe retire
January 3, 2017 21
        Catherine Cortez Masto, Tammy Duckworth, Kamala Harris, and Maggie Hassan begin service; Barbara Boxer and Barbara Mikulski retire; Kelly Ayotte ends service
January 3, 2018 22
  Tina Smith appointed
April 9, 2018 23
  Cindy Hyde Smith appointed
January 3, 2019 25
       Marsha Blackburn, Kyrsten Sinema, and Jacky Rosen begin service; Martha McSally appointed; Heidi Heitkamp and Claire McCaskill end service
January 6, 2020 26
  Kelly Loeffler appointed
December 2, 2020 25
  End of Martha McSally's appointment
January 3, 2021 26
  Cynthia Lummis begins service
January 18, 2021 25
  Kamala Harris resigns to become Vice President of the United States
January 20, 2021 24
  End of Kelly Loeffler's appointment
January 3, 2023 25
  Katie Britt begins service
September 29, 2023 24
  Death of Dianne Feinstein
October 3, 2023 25
  Laphonza Butler appointed

Timeline edit

Laphonza ButlerKatie BrittCynthia LummisKelly LoefflerKyrsten SinemaJacky RosenMartha McSallyMarsha BlackburnCindy Hyde-SmithTina SmithMaggie HassanKamala HarrisTammy DuckworthCatherine Cortez MastoShelley Moore CapitoJoni ErnstElizabeth WarrenMazie HironoHeidi HeitkampDeb FischerTammy BaldwinKelly AyotteKirsten GillibrandJeanne ShaheenKay HaganClaire McCaskillAmy KlobucharElizabeth DoleLisa MurkowskiDebbie StabenowHillary ClintonJean CarnahanMaria CantwellBlanche LincolnMary LandrieuSusan CollinsSheila FrahmOlympia SnoweKay Bailey HutchisonPatty MurrayCarol Moseley-BraunBarbara BoxerDianne FeinsteinJocelyn BurdickBarbara MikulskiPaula Hawkins (politician)Nancy KassebaumMaryon AllenMuriel HumphreyElaine S. EdwardsMaurine NeubergerHazel AbelEva BowringMargaret Chase SmithVera C. BushfieldGladys PyleDixie Bibb GravesRose McConnell LongHattie CarawayRebecca Latimer Felton

Concurrently serving women from the same state edit

On January 3, 2019, Arizona's Kyrsten Sinema and Martha McSally became the first women from the same state to start serving in the Senate on the same date.

State Start date End date Duration Senior senator Junior senator
California January 3, 1993 January 18, 2021 10,242 days
(28 years, 15 days)
Dianne Feinstein (D) Barbara Boxer (D)
(January 3, 1993 – January 3, 2017),
8,766 days (24 years, 0 days)
Kamala Harris (D)
(January 3, 2017 – January 18, 2021),
1,476 days (4 years, 15 days)
Kansas June 11, 1996 November 6, 1996 148 days Nancy Kassebaum (R) Sheila Frahm (R)
Maine January 3, 1997 January 3, 2013 5,844 days
(16 years, 0 days)
Olympia Snowe (R) Susan Collins (R)
Washington January 3, 2001 Present 8,443 days
(23 years, 43 days)
Patty Murray (D) Maria Cantwell (D)
New Hampshire January 3, 2011 Present 4,791 days
(13 years, 43 days)
Jeanne Shaheen (D) Kelly Ayotte (R)
(January 3, 2011 – January 3, 2017),
2,192 days (6 years, 0 days)
Maggie Hassan (D)
(January 3, 2017–present),
2,599 days (7 years, 43 days)
Minnesota January 3, 2018 Present 2,234 days
(6 years, 43 days)
Amy Klobuchar (DFL) Tina Smith (DFL)
Nevada January 3, 2019 Present 1,869 days
(5 years, 43 days)
Catherine Cortez Masto (D) Jacky Rosen (D)
Arizona January 3, 2019 December 2, 2020 699 days
(1 year, 334 days)
Kyrsten Sinema (D) Martha McSally (R)

Elections with two women major-party nominees edit

Incumbent senators are in bold.

Elections with two women major-party nominees
Election year State Winner Second-place finisher Other major female candidates
1960 Maine Margaret Chase Smith Lucia Cormier
1986 Maryland Barbara Mikulski Linda Chavez
1998 Washington Patty Murray Linda Smith
2002 Louisiana Mary Landrieu Suzanne Haik Terrell
Maine (2) Susan Collins Chellie Pingree
2006 Maine (3) Olympia Snowe Jean Hay Bright
Texas Kay Bailey Hutchison Barbara Ann Radnofsky
2008 North Carolina[n 18] Kay Hagan Elizabeth Dole
2010 California Barbara Boxer Carly Fiorina
2012 California (2) Dianne Feinstein Elizabeth Emken
Hawaii Mazie Hirono Linda Lingle
New York Kirsten Gillibrand Wendy Long
2014 Maine (4) Susan Collins Shenna Bellows
West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito Natalie Tennant
2016 California (3) Kamala Harris Loretta Sanchez
New Hampshire Maggie Hassan Kelly Ayotte
2018 Arizona Kyrsten Sinema Martha McSally
Minnesota Tina Smith Karin Housley
Nebraska Deb Fischer Jane Raybould
New York (2) Kirsten Gillibrand Chele Farley
Washington (2) Maria Cantwell Susan Hutchison
Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin Leah Vukmir
2020 Iowa Joni Ernst Theresa Greenfield
Maine (5) Susan Collins Sara Gideon
West Virginia (2) Shelley Moore Capito Paula Jean Swearengin
Wyoming Cynthia Lummis Merav Ben-David
2022 Alaska Lisa Murkowski Kelly Tshibaka Pat Chesbro
Illinois Tammy Duckworth Kathy Salvi
Washington (3) Patty Murray Tiffany Smiley

Pregnancies edit

On April 9, 2018, Duckworth gave birth to her daughter Maile Pearl, becoming the first sitting senator to give birth.[21] Shortly afterward, rules were changed so that a senator has the right to bring a child under one year old on the Senate floor and breastfeed him or her during votes.[22] The day after those rules were changed, Maile became the first baby on the Senate floor when Duckworth brought her.[22][23]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Of the female senators who preceded Kassebaum: Rebecca Latimer Felton, Rose McConnell Long, Dixie Bibb Graves, Vera C. Bushfield, Eva Bowring, Elaine S. Edwards, Muriel Humphrey, and Maryon Pittman Allen were all appointed and were never elected; Gladys Pyle (R-SD) and Hazel Abel (R-NE), were elected, but not to full terms (i.e., to complete terms where the previous senator had died or resigned, not to new six-year terms); Hattie Caraway and Maurine Brown Neuberger were both elected to full six-year terms, but their husbands had held the seat previously. Margaret Chase Smith's (R-ME) husband never served in the Senate, but he did serve in the House. When he died, Margaret won the ensuing election. Of the appointed senators, Long, Bushfield, Humphrey, and Allen were all appointed to fill out part of the terms of their deceased husbands, while Graves and Edwards were appointed by their husbands, the governor of their states at the time. However, Kassebaum's father was a former governor of Kansas, which means that the first woman to be elected to the Senate without any family connections was Paula Hawkins, who was elected in 1980 to represent Florida.
  2. ^ Bob Krueger and John F. Seymour, defeated by Kay Bailey Hutchison and Dianne Feinstein respectively, were appointed to the Senate by the governors of their states.
  3. ^ Latimer Felton was the oldest woman appointed to the Senate (at age 87)
    Shortest-serving woman in the Senate
  4. ^ Succeeded her late husband
    First woman in the Senate to succeed her spouse
    First woman re-elected to the Senate
  5. ^ Succeeded her late husband
  6. ^ Succeeded her late husband
  7. ^ Abel resigned 3 days before the end of her term, a common practice to give her successor seniority advantage.
  8. ^ Followed her late husband (although she did not directly succeed him)
  9. ^ Succeeded her late husband
  10. ^ Succeeded her late husband
  11. ^ a b Predecessor resigned early to give successor seniority advantage, so the senator was appointed for the few days prior to the commencement of the elected term
  12. ^ Succeeded her late husband
  13. ^ First non-Christian (Jewish) woman elected to the Senate
  14. ^ First African-American woman elected to the Senate
  15. ^ Lincoln was the first youngest woman to hold the distinction of "youngest member of the Senate" (at age 38)
    Lincoln was also the youngest woman elected to the Senate (at age 38)
  16. ^ Succeeded her father
    First woman in the Senate to succeed a living parent
  17. ^ Married to Bob Dole
  18. ^ a b c When Kay Hagan defeated Elizabeth Dole, it was the first time in history a woman candidate defeated an incumbent woman.
  19. ^ First openly LGBT and lesbian woman elected to the Senate
  20. ^ First Asian-American woman elected to the Senate
    First Japanese-American woman elected to the Senate
    First Buddhist woman elected to the Senate
  21. ^ First Hispanic and Latina American woman elected to the Senate
  22. ^ First woman with a disability elected to the Senate
    First Southeast Asian-American (Thai) woman elected to the Senate
    First Amerasian or Eurasian woman elected to the Senate
  23. ^ First South Asian-American (Indian) woman elected to the Senate
    First Jamaican American woman elected to the Senate
    First woman of African-American and South Asian descent elected to the Senate
  24. ^ Blackburn was the oldest woman at the time of first election to the Senate (at 66 years and 5 months).
  25. ^ a b Sinema was elected as a Democrat in 2018, but switched to an independent in December 2022.
  26. ^ First openly LGBT woman of color appointed to the Senate
    First LGBT African American woman appointed to the Senate

References edit

  1. ^ "Year of the Woman". U.S. Senate.
  2. ^ "Jewesses in politics represent!". Jewish Women's Archive. November 5, 2002. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  3. ^ "Dianne Feinstein". Congress.gov. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  4. ^ "Barbara Boxer". Congress.gov. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  5. ^ Plaskow, Judith (July 8, 2008). "Embodiment, Elimination, and the Role of Toilets in Struggles for Social Justice". Cross Currents. 58 (1): 51–64. doi:10.1111/j.1939-3881.2008.00004.x.
  6. ^ a b Robin Givhan (January 21, 2004). "Moseley Braun: Lady in red". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  7. ^ a b Cooper, Kent (June 9, 2005). "The Long and Short of Capitol Style : Roll Call Special Features 50th Anniversary". Rollcall.com. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  8. ^ Franke-Ruta, Garance (January 5, 2011). "Barbara Mikulski Becomes Longest-Serving Female Senator". The Atlantic.
  9. ^ "Biography". Dianne Feinstein United States Senator for California. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
  10. ^ Gaines, Danielle E. (December 17, 2020). "Capitol Meeting Room Named in Honor of Maryland's First Female U.S. Senator". Maryland Matters.
  11. ^ Schwartzman, Paul (December 12, 2016). "Passing the torch: Mikulski says goodbye to the Senate". The Washington Post.
  12. ^ Haberkorn, Jennifer (February 14, 2023). "Sen. Feinstein makes it official: She will retire at the end of her current term". The Los Angeles Times. from the original on February 14, 2023. Retrieved February 16, 2023.
  13. ^ Swan, Rachel; Stein, Shira; Fracassa, Dominic; Echeverria, Danielle; Parker, Jordan; Toledo, Aldo (September 29, 2023). "Dianne Feinstein: Senator died of natural causes Friday morning". San Francisco Chronicle. from the original on September 29, 2023. Retrieved September 30, 2023.
  14. ^ "U.S. Senate: Senators, 1789 to present". senate.gov. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  15. ^ Ostermeier, Eric (July 27, 2017). . Smart Politics. Archived from the original on November 24, 2018.
  16. ^ Shabad, Rebecca (January 3, 2023). "Sen. Patty Murray becomes first female president pro tempore". NBC News.
  17. ^ (PDF). Center for American Women and Politics. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 3, 2015.
  18. ^ Kanin, Zach (November 17, 2007). "Does Height Matter in Politics?". HuffPost.
  19. ^ Saenz, Arlette (March 2, 2015). "Barbara Mikulski: From Girl Scout to Senator, 7 Things You Might Not Know About the Retiring Senator". ABC News.
  20. ^ "Risk, hoops memories entice new Dream owner Loeffler". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. June 4, 2011. Retrieved December 1, 2020. A skinny 5-foot-11, her nickname on the court was NBC — 'Newborn Calf.'
  21. ^ "Tammy Duckworth Becomes First U.S. Senator To Give Birth While In Office". NPR.org. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  22. ^ a b Serfaty, Sunlen (April 18, 2018). "Babies now allowed on Senate floor after rule change". CNN.
  23. ^ "A duckling onesie and a blazer: The Senate floor sees its first baby, but many traditions stand". The Washington Post. April 19, 2018. Retrieved April 20, 2018.

External links edit

women, united, states, senate, this, article, covers, history, women, united, states, senate, various, milestones, achieved, female, senators, includes, list, women, have, served, senate, list, current, female, senators, list, states, represented, women, senat. This article covers the history of women in the United States Senate and various milestones achieved by female senators It includes a list of all women who have served in the Senate a list of current female senators and a list of states represented by women in the Senate The first female U S senator Rebecca Latimer Felton represented Georgia for a single day in 1922 and the first woman elected to the Senate Hattie Caraway was elected from Arkansas in 1932 Sixty women have served in the upper house of the United States Congress since its establishment in 1789 As of October 3 2023 there are 25 women 15 Democrats 9 Republicans and 1 Independent serving as U S senators Additionally Kamala Harris as vice president serves as President of the Senate Nancy Kassebaum is currently the oldest living former female member of the Senate at the age 91 Contents 1 History 2 Election selection and family 3 List of female U S senators 4 Currently serving women U S senators 5 List of states represented by women 6 Graphs 6 1 Histograph 6 2 Timeline 7 Concurrently serving women from the same state 8 Elections with two women major party nominees 9 Pregnancies 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Rebecca Latimer Felton D Georgia the first female member of the United States Senate who served for a single day in 1922 nbsp One woman Barbara Mikulski was reelected and four women were elected to the Senate in 1992 the Year of the Woman Left to right Senators Murray Moseley Braun Mikulski Feinstein and Boxer nbsp By the 111th United States Congress 2009 2011 the number of women senators had increased to 17 including 4 Republicans and 13 DemocratsFor its first 130 years in existence the Senate s membership was entirely male Until 1920 few women ran for the Senate Until the 1990s very few were elected This paucity of women was due to many factors including the lack of women s suffrage in many states until the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution women s limited access to higher education until the mid 1900s public perceptions of gender roles and barriers to women s advancement such as sex discrimination The first woman to serve in the U S Senate was Rebecca Latimer Felton she represented Georgia for one day in 1922 Ten years later Hattie Caraway became the first woman to win election to the Senate representing Arkansas In 1949 Margaret Chase Smith began her service in the Senate she was the first woman to serve in both the House and Senate Her 1960 reelection bid resulted in Chase Smith winning the nation s first ever United States Senate election with two female major party nominees In 1972 Elaine Edwards was appointed as the first Catholic woman in the Senate by her husband the Governor of Louisiana while she was Louisiana s First Lady she retired after three months In 1978 Muriel Humphrey Brown became the first and only Second Lady to serve in the United States Senate after Hubert Humphrey s unexpected death in office Humphrey Brown was appointed by the Governor of Minnesota to fill her late husband s Senate seat she served for less than one year and did not seek to be elected to her husband s seat In 1978 Nancy Kassebaum became the first woman ever elected to a full term in the Senate representing Kansas without her husband having previously served in Congress n 1 Since 1978 there has always been at least one woman in the Senate The first woman to be elected to the Senate without any family connections was Florida Republican Paula Hawkins elected in 1980 She was also the first and to date only female member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints elected to the United States Senate In 1990 there were still few women in the Senate as compared to the number of women in the House The trend of few women in the Senate began to change in the wake of the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court nomination hearings and the subsequent election of the 103rd United States Congress in 1992 which was dubbed the Year of the Woman 1 Barbara Mikulski was reelected and four new Democratic women were elected to the Senate They were Patty Murray of Washington Carol Moseley Braun of Illinois Dianne Feinstein of California and Barbara Boxer of California Carol Moseley Braun was the first woman of color to serve in the Senate and the first woman to defeat an incumbent senator after she won the 1992 Democratic primary election over Alan Dixon Later in 1992 Feinstein was the first woman to defeat an incumbent senator from a different party when she defeated John Seymour in a special election Feinstein entered the Senate the same year as the first female Jewish senator 2 3 4 Bathroom facilities for women in the Senate on the Senate chamber level were first provided in 1992 5 Women were not allowed to wear pants on the Senate floor until 1993 6 7 In 1993 Senators Barbara Mikulski and Carol Moseley Braun wore pants onto the floor in defiance of the rule and female support staff followed soon after with the rule being amended later that year by Senate Sergeant at Arms Martha Pope to allow women to wear pants on the floor so long as they also wore a jacket 6 7 The first time two female senators from the same state served concurrently was beginning in 1993 Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer both D CA were both elected in 1992 with Feinstein taking office that same year as the result of a special election and Boxer taking office in 1993 Boxer served until 2016 when she retired and Feinstein was joined by Kamala Harris In June 1993 Kay Bailey Hutchison won a special election in Texas and joined Kassebaum as a fellow female Republican senator These additions significantly diminished the popular perception of the Senate as an exclusive boys club Since 1992 there has been at least one new woman elected to the Senate every two years with the exception of 2004 Lisa Murkowski was elected for the first time in 2004 but had been appointed to the seat since 2002 nbsp Eight Democratic women senators appear at the 2008 Democratic Convention in Denver It has become a tradition at Democratic conventions for incumbent women senators to appear on opening night Olympia Snowe of Maine arrived in the Senate in 1995 having previously served in the US House of Representatives and both houses of the Maine state legislature She and later Debbie Stabenow of Michigan Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming are the only women to have served in both houses of a state legislature and both houses of the federal legislature In 2000 Stabenow and Maria Cantwell became the first women to defeat incumbent elected senators in a general election unseating Senators Spencer Abraham and Slade Gorton respectively n 2 Hillary Clinton is the first and only First Lady to run for or win a Senate seat Clinton joined the Senate in 2001 becoming the first female senator from New York and served until 2009 when she resigned to become the 67th United States Secretary of State under President Barack Obama She was replaced by Kirsten Gillibrand who has been elected three times and was herself a candidate for president in the 2020 Democratic Party presidential primaries In 2008 Kay Hagan became the first woman to unseat a female incumbent Elizabeth Dole Upon the opening of the 112th United States Congress in 2011 New Hampshire Democrat Jeanne Shaheen was joined by newly elected Republican Kelly Ayotte making up the first Senate delegation of two women belonging to different parties In November 2022 Dianne Feinstein became the longest serving female senator in history 8 surpassing Barbara Mikulski 9 10 having served for 30 years 11 Feinstein was retiring at the end of her last term scheduled for January 3 2025 12 but died on September 29 2023 before her term ended 13 Subsequently Patty Murray surpassed Feinstein as the longest serving woman senator and continues to serve In 2012 a record five new female senators were elected This beat the record of four new female senators from 1992 and set the record of five new women and eleven female senators in one Senate class The five new women were Democrats Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota Mazie Hirono of Hawaii Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Republican Deb Fischer of Nebraska Hirono was the first Asian American woman and first Buddhist in the Senate and Baldwin was the first openly gay person in the Senate In 2014 Joni Ernst was elected as the first female combat veteran to serve in the Senate In 2016 Catherine Cortez Masto was elected as the first Latina senator while Tammy Duckworth was elected as the first female double amputee in the Senate 14 In a June 2016 primary election as a result of California s recent establishment of the top two primary Attorney General of California Kamala Harris and U S Representative Loretta Sanchez became the first women of the same party to advance to a Senate general election In November 2016 Harris became the first woman to defeat a woman of the same party in a Senate general election In 2016 Hillary Clinton became the first former female senator to win a major party s nomination for President of the United States Despite winning a plurality of the popular vote she ultimately lost her bid to Donald Trump Starting in 2017 United States Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire have held the distinction of being the first and second women elected as both the governor of a state and a United States senator from a state both served as Governor of New Hampshire before their time in the Senate In 2018 Kyrsten Sinema defeated Martha McSally becoming Arizona s first female senator as well as the first openly bisexual senator from any state Two weeks later Arizona Governor Doug Ducey announced that he would appoint McSally to Arizona s other Senate seat which was becoming vacant with the resignation of Jon Kyl Sinema and McSally have been the only concurrently serving female senators to have previously faced off against each other in a Senate election McSally exited the Senate in late 2020 after losing that year s special election to Mark Kelly a Democrat Also in 2018 Jacky Rosen made political history as the first female one term outgoing U S representative ever elected to the Senate 15 In 2023 Patty Murray became the first woman to serve as president pro tempore a role traditionally given to the most senior member of the majority party in the United States Senate Dianne Feinstein was the most senior Democratic senator but declined to serve This made Murray the third person in line to become president after the vice president and the Speaker of the House 16 Sixty women have served in the United States Senate since its establishment in 1789 17 Cumulatively 36 female U S senators have been Democrats while 23 have been Republicans and one is an independent As of 2023 no female U S senator has ever won election to the House after her Senate term resigned from a state governorship for the purpose of a Senate appointment by her successor also won election as an independent or to represent more than one state in non consecutive elections served both seats of a state at different times or represented a third party in her career In December 2022 Senator Kyrsten Sinema became the first female senator to switch her party affiliation while in office In September 2023 Senator Dianne Feinstein became the first female senator to die in office Some female U S senators have later run for U S president or vice president see list of female United States presidential and vice presidential candidates In 2020 Kamala Harris became the first female senator current or past to win her vice presidential election bid and become the first female President of the United States Senate in American history Election selection and family editBefore 2001 a plurality of women joined the U S Senate through appointment following the death or resignation of a husband or father who previously held the seat An example is Muriel Humphrey D MN the widow of former senator and Vice President Hubert Humphrey she was appointed to fill his seat until a special election was held in which she did not run However with the election of three women in 2000 the balance shifted more women have now entered service as a senator by winning elections than by being appointed citation needed Recent examples of selection include Jean Carnahan and Lisa Murkowski In 2000 Jean Carnahan D MO was appointed to fill the Senate seat won by her recently deceased husband Mel Carnahan Carnahan even though dead defeated the incumbent senator John Ashcroft Carnahan s widow was named to fill his seat by Missouri Governor Roger Wilson until a special election was held However she lost the subsequent 2002 election to fill out the rest of the six year term In 2002 Lisa Murkowski R AK was appointed by her father Alaska Governor Frank Murkowski who had resigned from the Senate to become governor to serve the remaining two years of his term Lisa Murkowski defeated former governor Tony Knowles in her reelection bid in 2004 Two recent members of the Senate brought with them a combination of name recognition resulting from the political careers of their famous husbands and their own substantial experience in public affairs The first former senator Elizabeth Dole R NC was married to former Senate Majority Leader and 1996 Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole and served as Secretary of Transportation under President Ronald Reagan and Secretary of Labor under President George H W Bush she later ran a losing bid for the Republican presidential nomination in 2000 The other former senator Hillary Clinton D NY wife of former President Bill Clinton was First Lady of the United States and First Lady of Arkansas before taking her seat in 2000 She too ran an unsuccessful campaign for her party s presidential nomination in 2008 she resigned in 2009 to become the secretary of state for the eventual victor of that election Barack Obama In 2016 she ran a successful campaign for her party s presidential nomination eventually losing in the general election to Republican nominee Donald Trump Another famous name is Nancy Landon Kassebaum R KS the daughter of former Kansas governor and one time presidential candidate Alf Landon After retiring from the Senate she married former senator Howard Baker R TN Kassebaum has the distinction of being the first female elected senator who did not succeed her husband in Congress Margaret Chase Smith was only elected to the Senate after succeeding her husband to his House seat Among the women elected or appointed in Senate history by stature Barbara Boxer D CA and Barbara Mikulski D MD are the shortest at 4 feet 11 inches 1 50 m whereas Kelly Loeffler R GA is the tallest at 5 feet 11 inches 1 80 m 18 19 20 List of female U S senators editPortrait Name lifespan State Term Entered by Left for PartyTerm start Term end Length ofservice days nbsp Rebecca Felton 1835 1930 n 3 nbsp Georgia November 21 1922 November 21 1922 1 0 days Appointment by Thomas W Hardwick Appointment ended Democratic nbsp Hattie Caraway 1878 1950 n 4 nbsp Arkansas November 13 1931 January 3 1945 4 800 13 years 51 days Appointment by Harvey Parnell Lost renomination Democratic nbsp Rose Long 1892 1970 n 5 nbsp Louisiana January 31 1936 January 3 1937 338 338 days Appointment by James Noe Retired Democratic nbsp Dixie Graves 1882 1965 nbsp Alabama August 20 1937 January 10 1938 143 143 days Appointment by Bibb Graves Appointment ended Democratic nbsp Gladys Pyle 1890 1989 nbsp South Dakota November 9 1938 January 3 1939 55 55 days Special election Retired Republican nbsp Vera C Bushfield 1889 1976 n 6 nbsp South Dakota October 6 1948 December 26 1948 81 81 days Appointment by George Mickelson Appointment ended Republican nbsp Margaret Chase Smith 1897 1995 nbsp Maine January 3 1949 January 3 1973 8 766 24 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Republican nbsp Eva Bowring 1892 1985 nbsp Nebraska April 16 1954 November 7 1954 205 205 days Appointment by Robert B Crosby Appointment ended Republican nbsp Hazel Abel 1888 1966 nbsp Nebraska November 8 1954 December 31 1954 53 53 days Special election Retired and resigned early n 7 Republican nbsp Maurine Neuberger 1907 2000 n 8 nbsp Oregon November 9 1960 January 3 1967 2 246 6 years 55 days Special election Retired Democratic nbsp Elaine Edwards 1929 2018 nbsp Louisiana August 1 1972 November 13 1972 104 104 days Appointment by Edwin Edwards Appointment ended Democratic nbsp Muriel Humphrey 1912 1998 n 9 nbsp Minnesota January 25 1978 November 7 1978 286 286 days Appointment by Rudy Perpich Appointment ended Democratic DFL nbsp Maryon Allen 1925 2018 n 10 nbsp Alabama June 8 1978 November 7 1978 152 152 days Appointment by George Wallace Lost nomination to finish term Democratic nbsp Nancy Kassebaum born 1932 nbsp Kansas December 23 1978 January 3 1997 6 586 18 years 11 days Election n 11 Retired Republican nbsp Paula Hawkins 1927 2009 nbsp Florida January 1 1981 January 3 1987 2 193 6 years 2 days Election n 11 Lost reelection Republican nbsp Barbara Mikulski born 1936 nbsp Maryland January 3 1987 January 3 2017 10 959 30 years 0 days Election Retired Democratic nbsp Jocelyn Burdick 1922 2019 n 12 nbsp North Dakota September 12 1992 December 14 1992 93 93 days Appointment by George Sinner Appointment ended Democratic NPL nbsp Dianne Feinstein 1933 2023 n 13 nbsp California November 4 1992 September 29 2023 11 286 30 years 329 days Special election Died in office Democratic nbsp Barbara Boxer born 1940 nbsp California January 3 1993 January 3 2017 8 767 24 years 0 days Election Retired Democratic nbsp Carol Moseley Braun born 1947 n 14 nbsp Illinois January 3 1993 January 3 1999 2 191 6 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Democratic nbsp Patty Murray born 1950 nbsp Washington January 3 1993 present 11 365 31 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Kay Hutchison born 1943 nbsp Texas June 14 1993 January 3 2013 7 143 19 years 203 days Special election Retired Republican nbsp Olympia Snowe born 1947 nbsp Maine January 3 1995 January 3 2013 6 576 18 years 0 days Election Retired Republican nbsp Sheila Frahm born 1945 nbsp Kansas June 11 1996 November 6 1996 148 148 days Appointment by Bill Graves Lost nomination to finish term Republican nbsp Susan Collins born 1952 nbsp Maine January 3 1997 present 9 904 27 years 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Mary Landrieu born 1955 nbsp Louisiana January 3 1997 January 3 2015 6 575 18 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Democratic nbsp Blanche Lincoln born 1960 n 15 nbsp Arkansas January 3 1999 January 3 2011 4 383 12 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Democratic nbsp Maria Cantwell born 1958 nbsp Washington January 3 2001 present 8 443 23 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Jean Carnahan 1933 2024 nbsp Missouri January 3 2001 November 23 2002 689 1 year 324 days Appointment by Roger B Wilson Lost election to finish term Democratic nbsp Hillary Clinton born 1947 nbsp New York January 3 2001 January 21 2009 2 940 8 years 18 days Election Resigned to become United States Secretary of State Democratic nbsp Debbie Stabenow born 1950 nbsp Michigan January 3 2001 present 8 443 23 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Lisa Murkowski born 1957 n 16 nbsp Alaska December 20 2002 present 7 727 21 years 57 days Appointment by Frank Murkowski Incumbent Republican nbsp Elizabeth Dole born 1936 n 17 nbsp North Carolina January 3 2003 January 3 2009 2 192 6 years 0 days Election Lost reelection n 18 Republican nbsp Amy Klobuchar born 1960 nbsp Minnesota January 3 2007 present 6 252 17 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic DFL nbsp Claire McCaskill born 1953 nbsp Missouri January 3 2007 January 3 2019 4 383 12 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Democratic nbsp Jeanne Shaheen born 1947 nbsp New Hampshire January 3 2009 present 5 521 15 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Kay Hagan 1953 2019 nbsp North Carolina January 3 2009 January 3 2015 2 191 6 years 0 days Election n 18 Lost reelection Democratic nbsp Kirsten Gillibrand born 1966 nbsp New York January 26 2009 present 5 498 15 years 20 days Appointment by David Paterson Incumbent Democratic nbsp Kelly Ayotte born 1968 nbsp New Hampshire January 3 2011 January 3 2017 2 192 6 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Republican nbsp Tammy Baldwin born 1962 n 19 nbsp Wisconsin January 3 2013 present 4 060 11 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Deb Fischer born 1951 nbsp Nebraska January 3 2013 present 4 060 11 years 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Heidi Heitkamp born 1955 nbsp North Dakota January 3 2013 January 3 2019 2 191 6 years 0 days Election Lost reelection Democratic NPL nbsp Mazie Hirono born 1947 n 20 nbsp Hawaii January 3 2013 present 4 060 11 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Elizabeth Warren born 1949 nbsp Massachusetts January 3 2013 present 4 060 11 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Joni Ernst born 1970 nbsp Iowa January 3 2015 present 3 330 9 years 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Shelley Moore Capito born 1953 nbsp West Virginia January 3 2015 present 3 330 9 years 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Catherine Cortez Masto born 1964 n 21 nbsp Nevada January 3 2017 present 2 599 7 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Tammy Duckworth born 1968 n 22 nbsp Illinois January 3 2017 present 2 599 7 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Kamala Harris born 1964 n 23 nbsp California January 3 2017 January 18 2021 1 476 4 years 15 days Election Resigned to become Vice President of the United States Democratic nbsp Maggie Hassan born 1958 nbsp New Hampshire January 3 2017 present 2 599 7 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Tina Smith born 1958 nbsp Minnesota January 3 2018 present 2 234 6 years 43 days Appointment by Mark Dayton Incumbent Democratic DFL nbsp Cindy Hyde Smith born 1959 nbsp Mississippi April 2 2018 present 2 145 5 years 319 days Appointment by Phil Bryant Incumbent Republican nbsp Marsha Blackburn born 1952 n 24 nbsp Tennessee January 3 2019 present 1 869 5 years 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Kyrsten Sinema born 1976 nbsp Arizona January 3 2019 present 1 869 5 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic 2019 2022 Independent since 2022 n 25 nbsp Martha McSally born 1966 nbsp Arizona January 3 2019 December 2 2020 699 1 year 334 days Appointment by Doug Ducey Lost election to finish term Republican nbsp Jacky Rosen born 1957 nbsp Nevada January 3 2019 present 1 869 5 years 43 days Election Incumbent Democratic nbsp Kelly Loeffler born 1970 nbsp Georgia January 6 2020 January 20 2021 380 1 year 14 days Appointment by Brian Kemp Lost election to finish term Republican nbsp Cynthia Lummis born 1954 nbsp Wyoming January 3 2021 present 1 138 3 years 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Katie Britt born 1982 nbsp Alabama January 3 2023 present 408 1 year 43 days Election Incumbent Republican nbsp Laphonza Butler born 1979 n 26 nbsp California October 1 2023 present 137 137 days Appointment by Gavin Newsom Incumbent DemocraticCurrently serving women U S senators editThere are 25 women serving in the United States Senate This is the second highest number of women to have served concurrently in the Senate in U S history Fifteen are Democrats nine are Republicans and one is an independent In January 2019 four new women senators Blackburn McSally Rosen and Sinema were seated although two others Heitkamp and McCaskill lost reelection bids so the number of female senators reached 25 at the time with 17 being Democrats and 8 being Republicans In January 2020 Kelly Loeffler was appointed to the Senate from Georgia increasing the number of women in the Senate to 26 the highest proportion of women serving as U S senators in history Martha McSally lost an election to finish John McCain s unexpired term on November 3 2020 and left the Congress on December 2 which reduced the number of female senators to 25 On January 3 2021 Cynthia Lummis the first woman senator from Wyoming began her term so the number of female senators reached 26 once again Meanwhile Kamala Harris was elected Vice President of the United States she resigned her Senate seat on January 18 in anticipation of the scheduled commencement of her term as Vice President and thus President of the Senate on January 20 which reduced the number of female senators to 25 In addition Loeffler lost the January 5 special election runoff for the remainder of the term to which she had been appointed and she left office also on January 20 which further reduced the number of women serving in the Senate to 24 On December 9 2022 Sinema defected from the Democratic Party to become a registered independent leaving 15 of her fellow women senators from her former party and on January 3 2023 Katie Britt the first Republican woman senator from Alabama and also the first woman ever elected to the Senate from her state began her term as well increasing the number to 25 again The death of Dianne Feinstein on September 29 2023 brought the number back down to 24 The seating of Feinstein s replacement appointed senator Laphonza Butler on October 3 returned the figure to 25 As of January 2023 four states Minnesota Nevada New Hampshire and Washington are represented by two female U S senators Eleven incumbent women in the Senate are former U S representatives Senators Stabenow Cantwell Gillibrand Baldwin Hirono Moore Capito Duckworth Sinema Rosen Blackburn and Lummis Class State Name Party Prior experience First tookoffice Born3 Alabama Katie Britt Republican CEO of the Business Council of Alabama chief of staff to predecessor Richard Shelby 2023 age 40 19823 Alaska Lisa Murkowski Republican Alaska House of Representatives 2002 age 45 19571 Arizona Kyrsten Sinema Independent n 25 Arizona House of Representatives Arizona Senate U S House of Representatives 2019 age 42 19761 California Laphonza Butler Democratic Member of the Board of Regents of the University of California President of EMILY s List 2023 age 44 19791 Hawaii Mazie Hirono Democratic Hawaii House of Representatives Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii gubernatorial nominee U S House of Representatives 2013 age 65 19473 Illinois Tammy Duckworth Democratic U S House of Representatives 2017 age 48 19682 Iowa Joni Ernst Republican Montgomery County Auditor Iowa Senate 2015 age 44 19702 Maine Susan Collins Republican Massachusetts Deputy Treasurer gubernatorial nominee 1997 age 44 19521 Massachusetts Elizabeth Warren Democratic Special Advisor to the President for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 2013 age 63 19491 Michigan Debbie Stabenow Democratic Michigan House of Representatives Michigan Senate U S House of Representatives 2001 age 50 19501 Minnesota Amy Klobuchar Democratic Farmer Labor Hennepin County Attorney 2007 age 46 19602 Minnesota Tina Smith Democratic Farmer Labor Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota 2018 age 60 19582 Mississippi Cindy Hyde Smith Republican Mississippi Senate Mississippi Commissioner of Agriculture and Commerce 2018 age 58 19591 Nebraska Deb Fischer Republican Nebraska Legislature 2013 age 61 19513 Nevada Catherine Cortez Masto Democratic Nevada Attorney General 2017 age 52 19641 Nevada Jacky Rosen Democratic U S House of Representatives 2019 age 61 19572 New Hampshire Jeanne Shaheen Democratic New Hampshire Senate Governor of New Hampshire 2009 age 61 19473 New Hampshire Maggie Hassan Democratic New Hampshire Senate Governor of New Hampshire 2017 age 58 19581 New York Kirsten Gillibrand Democratic U S House of Representatives 2009 age 43 19661 Tennessee Marsha Blackburn Republican Tennessee Senate U S House of Representatives 2019 age 66 19523 Washington Patty Murray Democratic Washington Senate 1993 age 42 19501 Washington Maria Cantwell Democratic Washington House of Representatives U S House of Representatives 2001 age 42 19582 West Virginia Shelley Moore Capito Republican West Virginia House of Delegates U S House of Representatives 2015 age 62 19531 Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin Democratic Wisconsin State Assembly U S House of Representatives 2013 age 50 19622 Wyoming Cynthia Lummis Republican Wyoming House of Representatives Wyoming Senate Wyoming Treasurer U S House of Representatives 2021 age 66 1954List of states represented by women editThirty three states have been represented by female senators As of October 3 2023 21 states are represented by female senators State Current Previous Total First woman senator Years represented by female senators Year first elected a female senatorAlabama 1 2 3 Dixie Graves 1937 1938 1978 2023 present 2022Alaska 1 0 1 Lisa Murkowski 2002 present 2004Arizona 1 1 2 Kyrsten Sinema amp Martha McSally 2019 present 2018Arkansas 0 2 2 Hattie Caraway 1931 1945 1999 2011 1932California 1 3 4 Dianne Feinstein 1992 present 1992 special Colorado 0 0 0Connecticut 0 0 0Delaware 0 0 0Florida 0 1 1 Paula Hawkins 1981 1987 1980Georgia 0 2 2 Rebecca Felton 1922 2020 2021 N A both women senators appointedHawaii 1 0 1 Mazie Hirono 2013 present 2012Idaho 0 0 0Illinois 1 1 2 Carol Moseley Braun 1993 1999 2017 present 1992Indiana 0 0 0Iowa 1 0 1 Joni Ernst 2015 present 2014Kansas 0 2 2 Nancy Kassebaum 1978 1997 1978Kentucky 0 0 0Louisiana 0 3 3 Rose Long 1936 1937 1972 1997 2015 1936 special Maine 1 2 3 Margaret Chase Smith 1949 1973 1995 present 1948Maryland 0 1 1 Barbara Mikulski 1987 2017 1986Massachusetts 1 0 1 Elizabeth Warren 2013 present 2012Michigan 1 0 1 Debbie Stabenow 2001 present 2000Minnesota 2 1 3 Muriel Humphrey 1978 2007 present 2006Mississippi 1 0 1 Cindy Hyde Smith 2018 present 2018 special Missouri 0 2 2 Jean Carnahan 2001 2002 2007 2019 2006Montana 0 0 0Nebraska 1 2 3 Eva Bowring 1954 2013 present 1954 special Nevada 2 0 2 Catherine Cortez Masto 2017 present 2016New Hampshire 2 1 3 Jeanne Shaheen 2009 present 2008New Jersey 0 0 0New Mexico 0 0 0New York 1 1 2 Hillary Clinton 2001 2009 2009 present 2000North Carolina 0 2 2 Elizabeth Dole 2003 2015 2002North Dakota 0 2 2 Jocelyn Burdick 1992 2013 2019 2012Ohio 0 0 0Oklahoma 0 0 0Oregon 0 1 1 Maurine Neuberger 1960 1967 1960 special Pennsylvania 0 0 0Rhode Island 0 0 0South Carolina 0 0 0South Dakota 0 2 2 Gladys Pyle 1938 1939 1948 1938 special Tennessee 1 0 1 Marsha Blackburn 2019 present 2018Texas 0 1 1 Kay Hutchison 1993 2013 1993 special Utah 0 0 0Vermont 0 0 0Virginia 0 0 0Washington 2 0 2 Patty Murray 1993 present 1992West Virginia 1 0 1 Shelley Moore Capito 2015 present 2014Wisconsin 1 0 1 Tammy Baldwin 2013 present 2012Wyoming 1 0 1 Cynthia Lummis 2021 present 2020Total 25 35 60 Rebecca Felton 1922 1931 1945 1948 1973 1978 present 1932Graphs editHistograph edit Note In the graph below entry dates refer to the date the senator was sworn in not the date of the appointment or election Starting Total Graph EventMarch 4 1789 0 November 21 1922 1 nbsp Rebecca Felton appointedNovember 23 1922 0 nbsp End of Rebecca Felton s appointmentDecember 9 1931 1 nbsp Hattie Caraway appointedJanuary 31 1936 2 nbsp Rose Long appointedJanuary 3 1937 1 nbsp Rose Long retiresAugust 20 1937 2 nbsp Dixie Graves appointedJanuary 10 1938 1 nbsp End of Dixie Graves s appointmentNovember 9 1938 2 nbsp Gladys Pyle begins serviceJanuary 3 1939 1 nbsp Gladys Pyle retiresJanuary 3 1945 0 nbsp Hattie Caraway ends serviceOctober 6 1948 1 nbsp Vera C Bushfield appointedDecember 27 1948 0 nbsp End of Vera C Bushfield s appointmentJanuary 3 1949 1 nbsp Margaret Chase Smith begins serviceApril 16 1954 2 nbsp Eva Bowring appointedNovember 7 1954 1 nbsp End of Eva Bowring s appointmentNovember 8 1954 2 nbsp Hazel Abel begins serviceDecember 31 1954 1 nbsp Hazel Abel retiresNovember 9 1960 2 nbsp Maurine Neuberger begins serviceJanuary 3 1967 1 nbsp Maurine Neuberger retiresAugust 1 1972 2 nbsp Elaine Edwards appointedNovember 13 1972 1 nbsp End of Elaine Edwards s appointmentJanuary 3 1973 0 nbsp Margaret Chase Smith ends serviceJanuary 25 1978 1 nbsp Muriel Humphrey appointedJune 8 1978 2 nbsp Maryon Allen appointedNovember 7 1978 0 nbsp nbsp End of Muriel Humphrey s and Maryon Allen s appointmentsDecember 23 1978 1 nbsp Nancy Kassebaum begins serviceJanuary 1 1981 2 nbsp Paula Hawkins begins serviceSeptember 16 1992 3 nbsp Jocelyn Burdick appointedNovember 4 1992 4 nbsp Dianne Feinstein begins serviceDecember 14 1992 3 nbsp End of Jocelyn Burdick s appointmentJanuary 3 1993 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp Barbara Boxer Carol Moseley Braun and Patty Murray begin serviceJune 14 1993 7 nbsp Kay Hutchison begins serviceJanuary 3 1995 8 nbsp Olympia Snowe begins serviceJune 11 1996 9 nbsp Sheila Frahm appointedNovember 6 1996 8 nbsp End of Sheila Frahm s appointmentJanuary 3 1997 9 nbsp nbsp nbsp Susan Collins and Mary Landrieu begin service Nancy Kassebaum retiresJanuary 3 2001 13 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Maria Cantwell Hillary Clinton and Debbie Stabenow begin service Jean Carnahan appointedNovember 23 2002 12 nbsp End of Jean Carnahan s appointmentDecember 20 2002 13 nbsp Lisa Murkowski appointedJanuary 3 2003 14 nbsp Elizabeth Dole begins serviceJanuary 3 2007 16 nbsp nbsp Amy Klobuchar and Claire McCaskill begin serviceJanuary 3 2009 17 nbsp nbsp nbsp Jeanne Shaheen and Kay Hagan begin service Elizabeth Dole ends serviceJanuary 21 2009 16 nbsp Hillary Clinton resigns to become Secretary of StateJanuary 26 2009 17 nbsp Kirsten Gillibrand appointedJanuary 3 2013 20 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Tammy Baldwin Deb Fischer Heidi Heitkamp Mazie Hirono and Elizabeth Warren begin service Kay Hutchison and Olympia Snowe retireJanuary 3 2017 21 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Catherine Cortez Masto Tammy Duckworth Kamala Harris and Maggie Hassan begin service Barbara Boxer and Barbara Mikulski retire Kelly Ayotte ends serviceJanuary 3 2018 22 nbsp Tina Smith appointedApril 9 2018 23 nbsp Cindy Hyde Smith appointedJanuary 3 2019 25 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Marsha Blackburn Kyrsten Sinema and Jacky Rosen begin service Martha McSally appointed Heidi Heitkamp and Claire McCaskill end serviceJanuary 6 2020 26 nbsp Kelly Loeffler appointedDecember 2 2020 25 nbsp End of Martha McSally s appointmentJanuary 3 2021 26 nbsp Cynthia Lummis begins serviceJanuary 18 2021 25 nbsp Kamala Harris resigns to become Vice President of the United StatesJanuary 20 2021 24 nbsp End of Kelly Loeffler s appointmentJanuary 3 2023 25 nbsp Katie Britt begins serviceSeptember 29 2023 24 nbsp Death of Dianne FeinsteinOctober 3 2023 25 nbsp Laphonza Butler appointedTimeline editConcurrently serving women from the same state editOn January 3 2019 Arizona s Kyrsten Sinema and Martha McSally became the first women from the same state to start serving in the Senate on the same date State Start date End date Duration Senior senator Junior senatorCalifornia January 3 1993 January 18 2021 10 242 days 28 years 15 days Dianne Feinstein D Barbara Boxer D January 3 1993 January 3 2017 8 766 days 24 years 0 days Kamala Harris D January 3 2017 January 18 2021 1 476 days 4 years 15 days Kansas June 11 1996 November 6 1996 148 days Nancy Kassebaum R Sheila Frahm R Maine January 3 1997 January 3 2013 5 844 days 16 years 0 days Olympia Snowe R Susan Collins R Washington January 3 2001 Present 8 443 days 23 years 43 days Patty Murray D Maria Cantwell D New Hampshire January 3 2011 Present 4 791 days 13 years 43 days Jeanne Shaheen D Kelly Ayotte R January 3 2011 January 3 2017 2 192 days 6 years 0 days Maggie Hassan D January 3 2017 present 2 599 days 7 years 43 days Minnesota January 3 2018 Present 2 234 days 6 years 43 days Amy Klobuchar DFL Tina Smith DFL Nevada January 3 2019 Present 1 869 days 5 years 43 days Catherine Cortez Masto D Jacky Rosen D Arizona January 3 2019 December 2 2020 699 days 1 year 334 days Kyrsten Sinema D Martha McSally R Elections with two women major party nominees editIncumbent senators are in bold Elections with two women major party nomineesElection year State Winner Second place finisher Other major female candidates1960 Maine Margaret Chase Smith Lucia Cormier1986 Maryland Barbara Mikulski Linda Chavez1998 Washington Patty Murray Linda Smith2002 Louisiana Mary Landrieu Suzanne Haik TerrellMaine 2 Susan Collins Chellie Pingree2006 Maine 3 Olympia Snowe Jean Hay BrightTexas Kay Bailey Hutchison Barbara Ann Radnofsky2008 North Carolina n 18 Kay Hagan Elizabeth Dole2010 California Barbara Boxer Carly Fiorina2012 California 2 Dianne Feinstein Elizabeth EmkenHawaii Mazie Hirono Linda LingleNew York Kirsten Gillibrand Wendy Long2014 Maine 4 Susan Collins Shenna BellowsWest Virginia Shelley Moore Capito Natalie Tennant2016 California 3 Kamala Harris Loretta SanchezNew Hampshire Maggie Hassan Kelly Ayotte2018 Arizona Kyrsten Sinema Martha McSallyMinnesota Tina Smith Karin HousleyNebraska Deb Fischer Jane RaybouldNew York 2 Kirsten Gillibrand Chele FarleyWashington 2 Maria Cantwell Susan HutchisonWisconsin Tammy Baldwin Leah Vukmir2020 Iowa Joni Ernst Theresa GreenfieldMaine 5 Susan Collins Sara GideonWest Virginia 2 Shelley Moore Capito Paula Jean SwearenginWyoming Cynthia Lummis Merav Ben David2022 Alaska Lisa Murkowski Kelly Tshibaka Pat ChesbroIllinois Tammy Duckworth Kathy SalviWashington 3 Patty Murray Tiffany SmileyPregnancies editOn April 9 2018 Duckworth gave birth to her daughter Maile Pearl becoming the first sitting senator to give birth 21 Shortly afterward rules were changed so that a senator has the right to bring a child under one year old on the Senate floor and breastfeed him or her during votes 22 The day after those rules were changed Maile became the first baby on the Senate floor when Duckworth brought her 22 23 See also editWomen in the United States House of Representatives Widow s succession List of female governors in the United States Party leaders of the United States Senate Politics of the United States Sexism in American political electionsNotes edit Of the female senators who preceded Kassebaum Rebecca Latimer Felton Rose McConnell Long Dixie Bibb Graves Vera C Bushfield Eva Bowring Elaine S Edwards Muriel Humphrey and Maryon Pittman Allen were all appointed and were never elected Gladys Pyle R SD and Hazel Abel R NE were elected but not to full terms i e to complete terms where the previous senator had died or resigned not to new six year terms Hattie Caraway and Maurine Brown Neuberger were both elected to full six year terms but their husbands had held the seat previously Margaret Chase Smith s R ME husband never served in the Senate but he did serve in the House When he died Margaret won the ensuing election Of the appointed senators Long Bushfield Humphrey and Allen were all appointed to fill out part of the terms of their deceased husbands while Graves and Edwards were appointed by their husbands the governor of their states at the time However Kassebaum s father was a former governor of Kansas which means that the first woman to be elected to the Senate without any family connections was Paula Hawkins who was elected in 1980 to represent Florida Bob Krueger and John F Seymour defeated by Kay Bailey Hutchison and Dianne Feinstein respectively were appointed to the Senate by the governors of their states Latimer Felton was the oldest woman appointed to the Senate at age 87 Shortest serving woman in the Senate Succeeded her late husbandFirst woman in the Senate to succeed her spouseFirst woman re elected to the Senate Succeeded her late husband Succeeded her late husband Abel resigned 3 days before the end of her term a common practice to give her successor seniority advantage Followed her late husband although she did not directly succeed him Succeeded her late husband Succeeded her late husband a b Predecessor resigned early to give successor seniority advantage so the senator was appointed for the few days prior to the commencement of the elected term Succeeded her late husband First non Christian Jewish woman elected to the Senate First African American woman elected to the Senate Lincoln was the first youngest woman to hold the distinction of youngest member of the Senate at age 38 Lincoln was also the youngest woman elected to the Senate at age 38 Succeeded her fatherFirst woman in the Senate to succeed a living parent Married to Bob Dole a b c When Kay Hagan defeated Elizabeth Dole it was the first time in history a woman candidate defeated an incumbent woman First openly LGBT and lesbian woman elected to the Senate First Asian American woman elected to the SenateFirst Japanese American woman elected to the SenateFirst Buddhist woman elected to the Senate First Hispanic and Latina American woman elected to the Senate First woman with a disability elected to the SenateFirst Southeast Asian American Thai woman elected to the SenateFirst Amerasian or Eurasian woman elected to the Senate First South Asian American Indian woman elected to the SenateFirst Jamaican American woman elected to the SenateFirst woman of African American and South Asian descent elected to the Senate Blackburn was the oldest woman at the time of first election to the Senate at 66 years and 5 months a b Sinema was elected as a Democrat in 2018 but switched to an independent in December 2022 First openly LGBT woman of color appointed to the SenateFirst LGBT African American woman appointed to the SenateReferences edit Year of the Woman U S Senate Jewesses in politics represent Jewish Women s Archive November 5 2002 Retrieved April 27 2018 Dianne Feinstein Congress gov Retrieved April 27 2018 Barbara Boxer Congress gov Retrieved April 27 2018 Plaskow Judith July 8 2008 Embodiment Elimination and the Role of Toilets in Struggles for Social Justice Cross Currents 58 1 51 64 doi 10 1111 j 1939 3881 2008 00004 x a b Robin Givhan January 21 2004 Moseley Braun Lady in red Chicago Tribune Retrieved July 30 2014 a b Cooper Kent June 9 2005 The Long and Short of Capitol Style Roll Call Special Features 50th Anniversary Rollcall com Retrieved July 30 2014 Franke Ruta Garance January 5 2011 Barbara Mikulski Becomes Longest Serving Female Senator The Atlantic Biography Dianne Feinstein United States Senator for California Retrieved January 24 2023 Gaines Danielle E December 17 2020 Capitol Meeting Room Named in Honor of Maryland s First Female U S Senator Maryland Matters Schwartzman Paul December 12 2016 Passing the torch Mikulski says goodbye to the Senate The Washington Post Haberkorn Jennifer February 14 2023 Sen Feinstein makes it official She will retire at the end of her current term The Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 16 2023 Swan Rachel Stein Shira Fracassa Dominic Echeverria Danielle Parker Jordan Toledo Aldo September 29 2023 Dianne Feinstein Senator died of natural causes Friday morning San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on September 29 2023 Retrieved September 30 2023 U S Senate Senators 1789 to present senate gov Retrieved April 8 2018 Ostermeier Eric July 27 2017 Jacky Rosen s Historic 2018 US Senate Bid Smart Politics Archived from the original on November 24 2018 Shabad Rebecca January 3 2023 Sen Patty Murray becomes first female president pro tempore NBC News Women in the U S Senate 1922 2015 PDF Center for American Women and Politics Archived from the original PDF on July 3 2015 Kanin Zach November 17 2007 Does Height Matter in Politics HuffPost Saenz Arlette March 2 2015 Barbara Mikulski From Girl Scout to Senator 7 Things You Might Not Know About the Retiring Senator ABC News Risk hoops memories entice new Dream owner Loeffler The Atlanta Journal Constitution June 4 2011 Retrieved December 1 2020 A skinny 5 foot 11 her nickname on the court was NBC Newborn Calf Tammy Duckworth Becomes First U S Senator To Give Birth While In Office NPR org Retrieved April 9 2018 a b Serfaty Sunlen April 18 2018 Babies now allowed on Senate floor after rule change CNN A duckling onesie and a blazer The Senate floor sees its first baby but many traditions stand The Washington Post April 19 2018 Retrieved April 20 2018 External links editU S Senate History Women in the Senate Women in the U S Senate 1922 2010 Center for American Women and Politics Eagleton Institute of Politics Rutgers The State University of New Jersey Steinhauer Jennifer March 21 2013 Once Few Women Hold More Power in Senate The New York Times Retrieved March 23 2013 Maurer Elizabeth Legislating History 100 Years of Women in Congress Archived April 23 2018 at the Wayback Machine National Women s History Museum 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Women in the United States Senate amp oldid 1201996042, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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