List of United States Congressional Districts - California

California

List of all California Districts

  • 1st district
  • 2nd district
  • 3rd district
  • 4th district
  • 5th district
  • 6th district
  • 7th district
  • 8th district
  • 9th district
  • 10th district
  • 11th district
  • 12th district
  • 13th district
  • 14th district
  • 15th district
  • 16th district
  • 17th district
  • 18th district
  • 19th district
  • 20th district
  • 21st district
  • 22nd district
  • 23rd district
  • 24th district
  • 25th district
  • 26th district
  • 27th district
  • 28th district
  • 29th district
  • 30th district
  • 31st district
  • 32nd district
  • 33rd district
  • 34th district
  • 35th district
  • 36th district
  • 37th district
  • 38th district
  • 39th district
  • 40th district
  • 41st district
  • 42nd district
  • 43rd district
  • 44th district
  • 45th district
  • 46th district
  • 47th district
  • 48th district
  • 49th district
  • 50th district
  • 51st district
  • 52nd district
  • 53rd district
  • At-large, obsolete since 1885

Read more about this topic:  List Of United States Congressional Districts

Famous quotes containing the word california:

    The Indian remarked as before, “Must have hard wood to cook moose-meat,” as if that were a maxim, and proceeded to get it. My companion cooked some in California fashion, winding a long string of the meat round a stick and slowly turning it in his hand before the fire. It was very good. But the Indian, not approving of the mode, or because he was not allowed to cook it his own way, would not taste it.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Resorts advertised for waitresses, specifying that they “must appear in short clothes or no engagement.” Below a Gospel Guide column headed, “Where our Local Divines Will Hang Out Tomorrow,” was an account of spirited gun play at the Bon Ton. In Jeff Winney’s California Concert Hall, patrons “bucked the tiger” under the watchful eye of Kitty Crawhurst, popular “lady” gambler.
    —Administration in the State of Colo, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    I can’t earn my own living. I could never make anything turn into money. It’s like making fires. A careful assortment of paper, shavings, faggots and kindling nicely tipped with pitch will never light for me. I have never been present when a cigarette butt, extinct, thrown into a damp and isolated spot, started a conflagration in the California woods.
    Margaret Anderson (1886–1973)