House Receptions
"Members of the House of Representatives, I deem it a high privilege and a great honor to present to you..."
Congress has invited speeches by dignitaries throughout its history. Initially, the standard manner in which both the House and the Senate received addresses by foreign leaders was to invite dignitaries to a one-chamber reception. This procedure required either unanimous consent or resolution by the chamber that wished to receive the foreign leader. The Marquis de Lafayette was the first foreign leader to address a House Reception on December 10, 1824. Though typically used to receive foreign dignitaries, five notable exceptions included receptions to honor United States Major General William Tecumseh Sherman in 1866, United States General Jonathan M. Wainwright in 1945, United States General Lucius D. Clay in 1949, United States Senator Hubert H. Humphrey in 1977, and United States General H. Norman Schwarkopf in 1991.
These receptions are not associated with other informal, social receptions and lunches provided for foreign leaders on behalf of congressional leadership or individual committees. In the post-World War II era, the practice of using one-chamber receptions largely disappeared. The last House Reception to honor a foreign leader was held for Mexican President José Lopez Portillo in 1977.
Date | Dignitary | House Reception or Address1 |
---|---|---|
May 8, 1991 | United States Army General H. Norman Schwarzkopf | Address |
November 3, 1977 | United States Senator Hubert H. Humphrey2 of Minnesota | Remarks and Reception |
February 17, 1977 | José Lopez Portillo, President of Mexico | Address |
July 26, 1961 | Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Prime Minister of Nigeria | Address |
June 22, 1961 | Hayato Ikeda, Prime Minister of Japan | Address |
April 18, 1961 | Constantine Karamanlis, Prime Minister of Greece | Address |
July 29, 1958 | Amintore Fanfani, Prime Minister of Italy | Address |
July 25, 1958 | Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, Prime Minister of Ghana | Address |
June 25, 1958 | Muhammad Daoud Khan, Prime Minister of Afghanistan | Address |
July 11, 1957 | Husseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy, Prime Minister of Pakistan | Address |
June 20, 1957 | Nobusuke Kishi, Prime Minister of Japan | Address |
May 28, 1957 | Konrad Adenauer, Chancellor of West Germany | Address |
February 27, 1957 | Guy Mollet, Prime Minister of France | Address |
March 15, 1956 | John Aloysius Costello, Prime Minister of Ireland | Address |
February 2, 1956 | Anthony Eden, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | Address |
May 30, 1955 | U Nu, Prime Minister of Burma | Address |
May 4, 1955 | P. Phibunsongkhram, Prime Minister of Thailand | Address |
March 30, 1955 | Mario Scelba, Prime Minister of Italy | Address |
March 16, 1955 | Robert Gordon Menzies, Prime Minister of Australia | Address |
August 1, 1950 | Robert Gordon Menzies, Prime Minister of Australia | Address |
July 31, 1950 | Tokutaro Kitamura, member of Japanese Diet | Address |
May 4, 1950 | Liaquat Ali Khan, Prime Minister of Pakistan | Address |
October 13, 1949 | Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime Minister of India | Address |
August 9, 1949 | Elpidio Quirino, President of the Philippines | Address |
May 17, 1949 | United States Army General Lucius D. Clay | Address |
September 10, 1945 | United States Army General Jonathan M. Wainwright | Address |
January 20, 1944 | Isaias Medina Angarita, President of Venezuela | Address |
June 10, 1943 | Hininio Morinigo M., President of Paraguay | Address |
May 27, 1943 | Edwin Barclay, President of Liberia | Address |
May 13, 1943 | Edvard Benes, President of Czechoslovakia | Address |
May 6, 1943 | Enrique Penaranda, President of Bolivia | Address |
February 18, 1943 | Madame Chiang Kai-shek, of China | Address |
December 10, 1942 | Fulgencio Batista, President of Cuba | Address |
November 24, 1942 | Carlos Arroyo del Rio, President of Ecuador | Address |
June 25, 1942 | Peter II, King of Yugoslavia | Address |
June 15, 1942 | George II, King of Greece | Address |
June 2, 1942 | Manuel L. Quezon, President of Philippines | Address |
May 11, 1942 | Manuel Prado, President of Peru | Address |
May 8, 1939 | Anastasio Somoza Garcia, President of Nicaragua | Address |
January 1, 1937 | John Buchan, Lord Tweedsmuir, Governor General of Canada | Address |
October 7, 1929 | Ramsay MacDonald, Prime Minister of England | Remarks and Reception |
January 25, 1928 | William Thomas Cosgrave, President of Executive Council of Ireland | Reception and Address |
October 28, 1919 | Albert I, King of the Belgians | Address |
August 27, 1918 | Dr. Baltasar M. Brum, Uruguayan Minister of Foreign Affairs | Address |
January 8, 1918 | Milenko Vesnic, Head of Serbian War Mission | Address |
September 5, 1917 | Kikujiro Ishii, Ambassador from Japan | Address |
June 27, 1917 | Baron Moncheur, Chief of Political Bureau of Belgian Foreign Office at Havre | Address |
June 23, 1917 | Boris Bakhmetieff, Ambassador from Russia | Address |
June 2, 1917 | Ferdinando di'Savoia, Prince of Udine, Head of Italian Mission to U.S.; Guglielmo Marconi, member of Italian Mission to U.S. | Address |
May 5, 1917 | Arthur James Balfour, British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. | Address |
May 3, 1917 | Rene Raphael Viviani, Minister of Justice from France; Jules Jusserand, Ambassador from France; address attended by Marshal Joseph Jacques Cesaire Joffre, member of French Commission to U.S. | Address |
June 10, 1912 | Dr. Orestes Ferrara, Speaker of the House of the Cuban Congress | Address |
February 2, 1912 | Count Francis Luetzow, dignitary from Bohemia | Address |
February 9, 1911 | Count Albert Apponyi, Minister of Education from Hungary | Address |
February 2, 1880 | Charles Stewart Parnell, Member of Parliament from Ireland | Address |
March 6, 1872 | Tomomi Iwakura, Ambassador from Japan | Address |
June 9, 1868 | Anson Burlingame, Ambassador from China | Address |
January 29, 1866 | United States Army Major General William Tecumseh Sherman | Remarks and Reception |
January 7, 1852 | Louis Kossuth, exiled Governor of Hungary | Remarks and Reception |
December 10, 1824 | Speaker Henry Clay; General Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, of France | Address |
Footnotes
1Chart based on a table in the Congressional Directory, 109th Congress, in the “Statistical Information” section on “Joint Sessions, Joint Meetings, and Inaugurations” (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 2001).
2The event took place during an intra-day recess of the House of Representatives. It is the first known instance of the House of Representatives standing in recess to receive a sitting Senator in the House Chamber.