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Alabama's 7th congressional district

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Image:Alabama7th.PNG
Alabama's Seventh Congressional District since 2002.

Alabama's Seventh Congressional District is a U.S. congressional district in Alabama, which elects a representative to the United States House of Representatives. The district encompasses the counties of Greene, Choctaw, Sumter, Marengo, Dallas, Wilcox, Perry and Hale. It also includes parts of Jefferson, Tuscaloosa, Clarke, St. Clair and Pickens counties.

It is currently represented by Democrat Artur Davis.

[edit] Statistics

  • Area: 22,740 Sq. Kilometers (8,780 Sq. Miles)
  • Distribution: 72.2% Urban, 27.8% Rural
  • Population (2000): 635,300
  • Median Income: $26,672
  • Ethnic Composition: 35.5% White, 61.7% Black, 0.6% Asian, 0.2% Native American, 1.3% Hispanic, 0.7% Other
  • Occupation: Blue Collar 28.6%, White Collar 53.4%, Gray Collar 18.0%
  • Cook Partisan Voting Index: D + 17

[edit] Character

The 7th district is dominated by the politics of its largest city, Birmingham

The 7th district was created as a black-majority district in 1992. It includes Black Belt counties where the Alabama and Tombigbee rivers flow past old plantations, as well as the home of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. Of highly irregular shape, the 7th district gerrymanders into the predominantly-black western section of Jefferson County and Birmingham's inner neighborhoods.

The 7th district represents an economic dichotomy boasting some of the largest pockets of prosperity in the state of Alabama along with some of the largest pockets of poverty in the developed world. Birmingham is home to the University of Alabama at Birmingham Medical Center, the region's largest employer. Mercedes-Benz located its first North American plant in Tuscaloosa County and manufactures its M-class SUV there. Such prosperity however is anything but uniform across the district.

Nine of the 12 counties in the 7th District are in Black Belt, a rural expanse in Alabama and former home to the state's once-flourishing cotton plantations. Race politics remain important in the district, and, as the district heavily favors the Democratic party, its representation is largely decided in the party's primary election.

[edit] Representation

Image:Alabama7Hist.png
A graphical representation of party control of Alabama's 7th Congressional District
Party and Year Representative
2003 - present Artur Davis
1993 - 2003 Earl F. Hilliard
1987 - 1993 Claude Harris, Jr.
1979 - 1987 Richard C. Shelby
1973 - 1979 Walter Flowers
1967 - 1973 Tom Bevill
1965 - 1967 James D. Martin
1949 - 1965 Carl Elliott
1943 - 1949 Carter Manasco
1941 - 1943 Walter W. Bankhead
1939 - 1941 Zadoc L. Weatherford
1933 - 1939 William B. Bankhead
1923 - 1933 Miles C. Allgood
1920 - 1923 John L. Burnett
1899 - 1920 John L. Burnett
1895 - 1899 Milford W. Howard
1893 - 1895 William Henry Denson
1877 - 1893 William H. Forney
1867 - 1877 Not Allocated
1861 - 1867 Civil War
1857 - 1861 Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry
1855 - 1857 Sampson Willis Harris
1853 - 1855 James Ferguson Dowdell
1851 - 1853 Alexander White
1844 - 1851 Franklin Welsh Bowdon
1843 - 1844 Felix Grundy McConnell


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