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December 10, 1883, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Rosecrans introduced a bill (H. R. 60) to establish a Department of Commerce and Navigation. Referred to Committee on Commerce. December 10, 1883, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Willis introduced a bill (H. R. 649) to establish a Bureau of Statistics of Labor and Industries. Referred to Committee on Education and Labor.

December 10, 1883, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Dingley introduced a bill (H. R. 693) to constitute a Bureau of Commerce and Navigation in the Treasury Department.

December 11, 1883, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. O'Neill introduced a bill (H. R. 894) to establish a Bureau of Labor Statistics. Referred to Committee on Education and Labor.

December 11, 1883, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Hopkins introduced a bill (H. R. 1340) to establish a Department of Labor Statistics. Referred to Committee on Education and Labor. Approved by President June 27, 1884.

December 18, 1883, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Frye introduced a bill (S. 738) to constitute a Bureau of Commerce and Navigation in the Treasury Department. Referred to Committee on Commerce and reported adversely.

January 8, 1884, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. McKinley introduced a bill (H. R. 3020) to establish a Bureau of Labor Statistics. Referred to Committee on Labor.

January 8, 1884, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Foran introduced a bill (H. R. 2549) to establish a Department of Industry. Referred to Committee on Labor.

January 10, 1884, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Lamb introduced a bill (H. R. 3060) to establish a Bureau of Labor Statistics. Referred to Committee on Labor.

January 10, 1884, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Dingley introduced a bill (H. R. 3056) to establish a Bureau of Navigation, Treasury Department. Approved by President, July 5,

1884.

January 14, 1884, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Dunham introduced a bill (H. R. 3120) to establish a Department of Commerce. Referred to Committee on Commerce.

January 21, 1884, Forty-eighth Congress, first session. Mr. Wood introduced a bill (H. R. 3595) to authorize the governor of each State of the United States to appoint commissioners to establish a system of international commerce, and to decide the practicability of establishing a Bureau of International Commerce. Referred to Committee on Commerce, and reported adversely.

December 21, 1885, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Weaver introduced a bill (H. R. 585) to establish an Executive Department of Labor, with a Secretary of Labor. Referred to Committee on Labor.

January 7, 1886, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Dunham introduced a bill (H. R. 3036) to establish a Department of Commerce. Referred to Committee on Commerce.

February 3, 1886, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Hatch introduced a bill (H. R. 5190) to enlarge the duties of the Department of Agriculture, and providing for a Department of Agriculture and Labor.

March 1, 1886, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Butterworth introduced a bill (H. R. 6202) to establish a Department of Industry and Bureau of Labor. Referred to Committee on Labor.

April 26, 1886, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Springer introduced a bill (H. R. 8119) to establish a Department of Labor, and to create a board for the arbitration of controversies between labor and capital. Referred to Committee on Labor.

May 10, 1886, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Breckenridge introduced a bill (H. R. 8629) to establish a Department of Agriculture and Industry. Referred to Committee on Agriculture.

May 10, 1886, Forty-ninth Congress, first session. Mr. Reagan introduced a bill (H. R. 8674) to establish a Department of Industries. Referred to Committee on Commerce.

May 22, 1886, House of Representatives. Mr. Osborne presented memorial of the board of trade of Philadelphia, urging the necessity of a Department of Commerce. Referred to Committee on Commerce.

January 4, 1888, Fiftieth Congress, first session. Mr. Springer introduced a bill (H. R. 1280) to establish a Department of Labor, and to create a board for the arbitration of controversies between labor and capital.

January 4, 1888, Fiftieth Congress, first session. Mr. Townshend introduced a bill (H. R. 1283) for the establishment of a Department of Industries and Public Works. Referred to the Committee on Commerce.

January 9, 1888, Fiftieth Congress, first session. Mr. Hatch introduced a bill (H. R. 3408) to enlarge the duties of the Department of Agriculture, and to create an Executive Department to be known as the Department of Agriculture and Labor. Referred to Committee on Agriculture. H. R. 8191 (March 7, 1888) below substituted for it.

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January 9, 1888, Fiftieth Congress, first session. Mr. McCreary introduced a bill (H. R. 3368) to create a Department to be known as the Department of Agriculture and Labor. Referred to Committee on Agriculture.

March 7, 1888, Fiftieth Congress, first session. Committee on Agriculture, as substitute for H. R. 3408, introduced a bill (H. R. 8191) to enlarge the powers and duties of the Department of Agriculture, and to create an Executive Department to be known as the Department of Agriculture. This bill went to a conference committee.

March 15, 1888, Fiftieth Congress, first session. Mr. O'Neill introduced a bill (H. R. 8560) to establish a Department of Labor. Approved by President June 18, 1888.

(Numerous petitions for a Department of Commerce were presented during the first session of the Fifty-first Congress.) January 15, 1891, Fifty-first Congress, second session. Mr. Frye introduced a bill (S. 4859) to establish the Department of Commerce. Referred to Committee on Commerce.

January 5, 1892, Fifty-second Congress, first session. Mr. Simpson introduced a bill (H. R. 135) to establish a Department of Finance and Commerce. Referred to Committee on Judiciary. January 9, 1892, Fifty-second Congress, first session. Mr. Belford introduced a bill (H. R. 2191) to establish a Bureau of Mines and Mining, a Bureau of Manufactures, and a Bureau of Labor Statistics in the Interior Department, and to change the designation of the existing Bureau of Statistics to Bureau of Commerce. Referred to Committee on Mines and Mining.

February 1, 1892, Fifty-second Congress, first session. Mr. Caminetti introduced a bill (H. R. 5161) to establish a Department of Mines and Mining. Referred to Committee on Mines and Mining.

February 14, 1893, Fifty-second Congress, second session. Mr. Miller introduced a bill (H. R. 10503) to establish an Executive Department of Public Labor. Referred to Committee of Revision of Laws.

December 7, 1893, Fifty-second Congress, second session. Mr. Doolittle introduced a bill (H. R. 4514) to enlarge the duties of the Bureau of Labor, and to create an Executive Department to be known as the Department of Labor. Referred to Committee on Labor.

January 10, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, first session. Mr. Cobb introduced a bill (H. R. 3619) to enlarge the duties and powers of the department of commerce, and to create an Executive Department to be known as the Department of Commerce. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

January 21, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, first session. Mr. Cobb introduced a bill (H. R. 4447) to create an Executive Department to be known as the Department of Commerce. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. February 17, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, first session. Mr. Tracey introduced a bill (H. R. 6196) to create a Department of Commerce. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

March 9, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, first session. Mr. Frye introduced a bill (S. 2447) to establish a Department of Commerce and Manufactures. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. March 16, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, first session. Mr. Barrett introduced a bill (H. R. 7254) to establish a Department of Commerce and Manufactures. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

June 4, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, first session. Mr. Tracey introduced a bill (H. R. 9346) to establish a Department of Commerce and Manufactures. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

December 15, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, second session. Mr. Meyer introduced a bill (H. R. 9667) to establish a Department of Commerce, Manufactures, and Labor. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

December 17, 1896, Fifty-fourth Congress, second session. Mr. Phillips introduced a bill (H. R. 9188) authorizing the appointment of a nonpartisan commission to collate information and to consider and recommend legislation to meet the problems presented by labor, agriculture, and capital. Reported as signed in the Senate, March 3, 1897.

January 28, 1897, Fifty-fourth Congress, second session. Mr. Watson introduced a bill (H. R. 10179) to establish a Department of Labor. Referred to the Committee on Labor.

March 18, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, first session. Mr. Frye introduced a bill (S. 624) to establish a Department of Commerce and Industries. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. March 18, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, first session. A bill (H. R. 398) to provide national supervision, etc., over certain corporations. Referred to the Committee on Judiciary.

March 18, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, first session. Mr. Barrett introduced a bill (H. R. 410) to establish a Department of Commerce and Manufactures. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

March 24, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, first session. Mr. Brownlow introduced a bill (H. R. 2128) to establish a Department of Commerce, Labor, and Manufactures. Referred to the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

June 22, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, first session. S. 2253. (Same as H. R. 9188, above, December 17, 1896.)

December 9, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, second session. Mr. Hepburn introduced a bill (H. R. 4364) to establish a Department of Commerce and Industries.

December 10, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, second session. Mr. Low introduced a bill (H. R. 4583). (See H. R. 398, March 18, 1897, above.)

December 13, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, second session. Mr. Baker introduced a bill (H. R. 4774) to establish the Department of Commerce, Manufactures, Industries, and Labor. Referred to Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. December 13, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, second session. Mr. Platt, of Connecticut, introduced a bill (S. 2736) to establish a division in the Treasury Department for the regulation of insurance among the several States. Referred to Committee on Commerce. December 16, 1897, Fifty-fifth Congress, second session. Mr. Baker introduced a bill (H. R. 5162) to establish a Department of Commerce and Industries. Referred to Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

January 6, 1898, Fifty-fifth Congress, second session. Mr. Barham introduced a bill (H. R. 5861) to create an Executive Department of Mines and Mining. Referred to Committee on Mines and Mining.

January 12, 1899, Fifty-fifth Congress, third session. Mr. Osborne introduced a bill (H. R. 11571) to establish a Department of Mineralogy and Mining. Referred to Committee on Mines and Mining.

December 5, 1899, Fifty-sixth Congress, first session. Mr. Roberts introduced a bill (H. R. 938) to establish a Department of Commerce and Manufactures. Referred to Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce.

December 6, 1899, Fifty-sixth Congress, first session. Mr. Frye introduced a bill (S. 738) to establish a Department of Commerce and Industries. Referred to Committee on Commerce. December 11, 1899, Fifty-sixth Congress, first session (S. Doc. 16). President McKinley transmitted to Congress resolutions of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, requesting legislation authorizing the appointment of commercial attachés at the principal embassies and legations of the United States, and setting forth that England, Germany, and Russia had such officials.

January 3, 1900, Fifty-sixth Congress, first session. Mr. McComas introduced a bill (S. 2018) to establish a Department of Commerce and Industries. Referred to Committee on Commerce.

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