1866 in the United States
List of events
Events from the year 1866 in the United States .
Incumbents
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama : Robert M. Patton (Democratic )
Governor of Arkansas : Isaac Murphy (Democratic )
Governor of California : Frederick Low (Republican )
Governor of Connecticut : William A. Buckingham (Republican ) (until May 2), Joseph R. Hawley (Republican ) (starting May 2)
Governor of Delaware : Gove Saulsbury (Democratic )
Governor of Florida : David S. Walker (Democratic )
Governor of Georgia : Charles J. Jenkins (Democratic )
Governor of Illinois : Richard J. Oglesby (Republican )
Governor of Indiana : Oliver P. Morton (Republican )
Governor of Iowa : William M. Stone (Republican )
Governor of Kansas : Samuel J. Crawford (Republican )
Governor of Kentucky : Thomas E. Bramlette (Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana : James Madison Wells (Republican )
Governor of Maine : Samuel Cony (Republican )
Governor of Maryland : Augustus Bradford (Union ) (until January 10), Thomas Swann (Democratic ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Massachusetts : John Albion Andrew (Republican ) (until January 4), Alexander H. Bullock (Republican ) (starting January 4)
Governor of Michigan : Henry H. Crapo (Republican )
Governor of Minnesota : Stephen Miller (Republican ) (until January 11), William R. Marshall (Republican ) (starting January 11)
Governor of Mississippi : Benjamin G. Humphreys (Democratic )
Governor of Missouri : Thomas Clement Fletcher (Republican )
Governor of Nevada : Henry G. Blasdel (Republican )
Governor of New Hampshire : Frederick Smyth (Republican )
Governor of New Jersey : Joel Parker (Democratic ) (until January 16), Marcus Lawrence Ward (Republican ) (starting January 16)
Governor of New York : Reuben Fenton (Republican )
Governor of North Carolina : Jonathan Worth (Conservative)
Governor of Ohio : Charles Anderson (Republican ) (until January 8), Jacob Dolson Cox (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Governor of Oregon : A. C. Gibbs (Republican ) (until September 12), George L. Woods (Republican ) (starting September 12)
Governor of Pennsylvania : Andrew Gregg Curtin (Republican )
Governor of Rhode Island : James Y. Smith (Republican ) (until May 29), Ambrose Everett Burnside (Republican ) (starting May 29)
Governor of South Carolina : James Lawrence Orr (Democratic )
Governor of Tennessee : William G. Brownlow (Republican )
Governor of Texas : Andrew J. Hamilton (Democratic ) (until August 9), James W. Throckmorton (Democratic ) (starting August 9)
Governor of Vermont : Paul Dillingham (Republican )
Governor of Virginia : Francis Harrison Pierpont (Republican )
Governor of West Virginia : Arthur I. Boreman (Republican )
Governor of Wisconsin : James T. Lewis (Republican ) (until January 1), Lucius Fairchild (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant governors
Events
May 16 – U.S. nickel coin approved
January–March
April–June
July–September
October–December
Undated
Ongoing
Births
January 5 – William B. Hanna , sportswriter (died 1930 )
January 6 – Caro Dawes , wife of Charles G. Dawes , Second Lady of the United States (died 1957 )
January 15 – Horatio Dresser , New Thought religious leader and writer (died 1954 )
January 23 – Lydia Field Emmet , painter and designer (died 1952 )
January 30 – Gelett Burgess , humorist (died 1951 )
February 9 – George Ade , writer, newspaper columnist and playwright (died 1944 )
February 23 – Joseph Miller Huston , architect working in Pennsylvania (died 1940 )
March 3 – William Marmaduke Kavanaugh , U.S. Senator from Arkansas in 1913 (died 1915 )
March 17 – Pierce Butler , Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (died 1939 )
March 30 – George Van Haltren , baseball player (died 1945 )
April 13 – Butch Cassidy , born Robert Leroy Parker, outlaw (killed 1909 in Bolivia)
April 14 – Anne Sullivan , tutor of Helen Keller (died 1936 )
April 24 – Claude C. Hopkins , advertising executive (died 1932 )
April 30 – Mary Haviland Stilwell Kuesel , pioneer dentist (died 1936 )
May 22 – Charles F. Haanel , New Thought author and businessman (died 1949 )
May 23 – Edgar J. Banks , antiquarian (died 1945 )
June 25 – Bertha Fowler , educator (died 1952 )
July 22 – Mary Onahan Gallery , critic (died 1941 )
August 1 – Claude Fayette Bragdon , architect (died 1946 )
August 8 – Matthew Henson , African-American explorer (died 1955 )
September 1 – James J. Corbett , heavyweight boxer (died 1933 )[ 5]
September 2 – Hiram Johnson , U.S. Senator from California from 1917 to 1945 (died 1945 )
September 16 – Joe Vila , sportswriter (died 1934 )
September 22
September 25 – Thomas Hunt Morgan , geneticist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1933 (died 1944 )
November 1 – John Sheridan Weller , attorney and politician (died 1944 )
November 27 – George H. Reed , African-American screen actor (died 1952 )
November 28
Deaths
January 16 – Phineas Quimby , physician (born 1802 )
January 31 – Thomas B. Marsh , leader of the Latter Day Saint movement (born 1800 )
February 13 – John Bernard Fitzpatrick , Catholic Bishop of Boston (born 1812 )
February 21 – Stephen Elliott Jr. , Confederate brigadier general (born 1830 )
March 4 – Alexander Campbell , Scotch-Irish American founder of the Disciples of Christ (born 1788 )
March 9 – James F. Trotter , U.S. Senator from Mississippi in 1838 (born 1802 )
March 28 – Solomon Foot , politician (born 1802)
April 1 – Chester Harding , portrait painter (born 1792 )
May 11 – George Edmund Badger , U.S. Senator from North Carolina from 1846 to 1855 (born 1795 )
May 16 – Jean Baptiste Charbonneau , son of Sacagawea , American explorer, guide, fur trapper, trader, and Military Scout. (born 1805 )
May 26 – Henry Darwin Rogers , geologist (born 1808 )
May 29 – Winfield Scott , presidential candidate in 1853, Union Civil War General (born 1786 ; died at West Point, New York )
June 7 – Chief Seattle , Native American leader (born c. 1786)
June 17 – Lewis Cass , U.S. Senator from Michigan from 1845 to 1848 and from 1849 to 1857 (born 1782 )
July 11 – James H. Lane , Union Civil War General and U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1861 to 1866 (born 1814 )
July 25 – Floride Calhoun , wife of John C. Calhoun , Second Lady of the U.S. (born 1792 )
August 1 – John Ross , Principal Chief of the Cherokee (born 1790 )
August 5 – William Burton , 39th Governor of Delaware from 1859 to 1863 (born 1789 )
September 7 – Clement Comer Clay , U.S. Senator from Alabama from 1837 to 1841 (born 1789 )
October 13 – Celadon Leeds Daboll , merchant and inventor (born 1818 )
December 20 – James Semple , U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1843 till 1847 (born 1798 )
See also
References
^ Alexander, Leslie, ed. (2010). "Civil Rights Act of 1866". Encyclopedia of African American History . Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 699.
^ Reynolds, Donald E. (1964). "The New Orleans Riot of 1866, Reconsidered" . Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association . 5 (1): 5– 27. ISSN 0024-6816 .
^ "Fast Facts" . The College of Wooster. Archived from the original on April 19, 2013. Retrieved April 8, 2013 .
^ Orso, Miranda (2002). "Victor, Metta Victoria Fuller" . Archived from the original on May 15, 2013. Retrieved November 4, 2013 .
^ "James J. Corbett | American boxer" . Encyclopedia Britannica . Retrieved August 8, 2021 .
Further reading
External links