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Decades: |
- 1860s
- 1870s
- 1880s
- 1890s
- 1900s
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Events from the year 1883 in the United States.
Incumbents
- J. Warren Keifer (R-Ohio) (until March 4)
- John G. Carlisle (D-Kentucky) (starting December 3)
Governors and lieutenant governors
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Governors
- Governor of Alabama: Edward A. O'Neal (Democratic)
- Governor of Arkansas: Thomas James Churchill (Democratic) (until January 13), James Henderson Berry (Democratic) (starting January 13)
- Governor of California: George Clement Perkins (Republican) (until January 10), George Stoneman (Republican) (starting January 10)
- Governor of Colorado: Frederick Walker Pitkin (Republican) (until January 9), James Benton Grant (Democratic) (starting January 9)
- Governor of Connecticut: Hobart B. Bigelow (Republican) (until January 3), Thomas M. Waller (Democratic) (starting January 3)
- Governor of Delaware: John W. Hall (Democratic) (until January 16), Charles C. Stockley (Democratic) (starting January 16)
- Governor of Florida: William D. Bloxham (Democratic)
- Governor of Georgia:
- Governor of Illinois: Shelby Moore Cullom (Republican) (until February 16), John Marshall Hamilton (Republican) (starting February 16)
- Governor of Indiana: Albert G. Porter (Republican)
- Governor of Iowa: Buren R. Sherman (Republican)
- Governor of Kansas: John P. St. John (Republican) (until January 8), George W. Glick (Democratic) (starting January 8)
- Governor of Kentucky: Luke P. Blackburn (Democratic) (until September 5), J. Proctor Knott (Democratic) (starting September 5)
- Governor of Louisiana: Samuel D. McEnery (Democratic)
- Governor of Maine: Harris M. Plaisted (Democratic) (until January 3), Frederick Robie (Republican) (starting January 3)
- Governor of Maryland: William T. Hamilton (Democratic)
- Governor of Massachusetts: John Davis Long (Republican) (until January 4), Benjamin F. Butler (Democratic) (starting January 4)
- Governor of Michigan: David Jerome (Republican) (until January 1), Josiah Begole (Democratic) (starting January 1)
- Governor of Minnesota: Lucius F. Hubbard (Republican)
- Governor of Mississippi: Robert Lowry (Democratic)
- Governor of Missouri: Thomas Theodore Crittenden (Democratic)
- Governor of Nebraska: Albinus Nance (Republican) (until January 4), James W. Dawes (Republican) (starting January 4)
- Governor of Nevada: John Henry Kinkead (Republican) (until January 1), Jewett W. Adams (Democratic) (starting January 1)
- Governor of New Hampshire: Charles H. Bell (Republican) (until June 7), Samuel W. Hale (Republican) (starting June 7)
- Governor of New Jersey: George C. Ludlow (Democratic)
- Governor of New York: Grover Cleveland (Democratic) (starting January 1)
- Governor of North Carolina: Thomas Jordan Jarvis (Democratic)
- Governor of Ohio: Charles Foster (Republican)
- Governor of Oregon: Z. F. Moody (Republican)
- Governor of Pennsylvania: Henry M. Hoyt (Republican) (until January 16), Robert E. Pattison (Democratic) (starting January 16)
- Governor of Rhode Island: Alfred H. Littlefield (Republican) (until May 29), Augustus O. Bourn (Republican) (starting May 29)
- Governor of South Carolina: Hugh Smith Thompson (Democratic)
- Governor of Tennessee: Alvin Hawkins (Republican) (until January 15), William B. Bate (Democratic) (starting January 15)
- Governor of Texas: Oran M. Roberts (Democratic) (until January 16), John Ireland (Democratic) (starting January 16)
- Governor of Vermont: John L. Barstow (Republican)
- Governor of Virginia: William E. Cameron (Re-adjuster)
- Governor of West Virginia: Jacob B. Jackson (Democratic)
- Governor of Wisconsin: Jeremiah McLain Rusk (Republican)
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of California: John Mansfield (Republican) (until January 10), John Daggett (Democratic) (starting January 10)
- Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: Horace Austin Warner Tabor (Republican) (until January 9), William H. Meyer (Republican) (starting January 9)
- Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: William H. Bulkeley (Republican) (until January 3), George G. Sumner (Democratic) (starting January 3)
- Lieutenant Governor of Florida: Livingston W. Bethel (no political party)
- Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: John Marshall Hamilton (Republican) (until February 6), William J. Campbell (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: Thomas Hanna (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Orlando H. Manning (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: David Wesley Finney (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: James E. Cantrill (Democratic) (until September 5), James R. Hindman (Democratic) (starting September 5)
- Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: vacant
- Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Byron Weston (Republican) (until January 4), Oliver Ames (Republican) (starting January 4)
- Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: Moreau S. Crosby (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Charles A. Gilman (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: G. D. Shands (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Robert Alexander Campbell (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska: Edmund C. Carns (Republican) (until January 4), Alfred W. Agee (Republican) (starting January 4)
- Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Jewett W. Adams (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), Charles E. Laughton (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of New York: David B. Hill (Republican) (starting January 1)
- Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: James L. Robinson (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Ohio: Rees G. Richards (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: Charles Warren Stone (Republican) (until January 16), Chauncey Forward Black (Democratic) (starting January 16)
- Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Henry Fay (political party unknown) (until May 29), Oscar Rathbun (political party unknown) (starting May 29)
- Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: John Calhoun Sheppard (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: George H. Morgan (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), Benjamin F. Alexander (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of Texas: Leonidas J. Storey (Democratic) (until January 16), Francis M. Martin (Democratic) (starting January 16)
- Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Samuel E. Pingree (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: John F. Lewis (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: Sam S. Fifield (Republican)
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Events
January–March
April–June
July–September
October–December
Undated
Ongoing
Sport
Births
- January 10
- January 19 – Waite Phillips, businessman and philanthropist (died 1964)
- January 20 – Enoch L. Johnson, political boss and racketeer (died 1968)
- January 25 – Homer Bone, U.S. Senator from Washington from 1933 to 1944 (died 1970)
- January 30 – Eddie Collins, vaudeville-veteran comic (died 1940)
- March 3 – Edwin Carewe, Native American director (died 1940)
- March 19 – Joseph Stilwell, general (died 1946)
- April 2 – Pearl Doles Bell, film scenarist, novelist and editor (died 1968)
- April 3 – Walter Walker, U.S. Senator from Colorado in 1932 (died 1956)
- April 12 – Imogen Cunningham, photographer (died 1976)
- May 22 – Jane Grey, actress (died 1944)
- May 23 – Douglas Fairbanks, swashbuckling silent film actor (died 1939)
- June 7 – Sylvanus Morley, Mayanist (died 1948)
- June 21 – Richard Remer, athlete (died 1973)
- June 25 – Paul Bartholomew, architect (died 1973)
- June 26 – Mary van Kleeck, labor activist (died 1972)
- July 4 – Rube Goldberg, cartoonist, sculptor, author, engineer and inventor (died 1970)
- July 24 – Nelle Wilson Reagan, mother of United States President Ronald Reagan (d. 1962)
- August 18 – Sidney Hatch, athlete (died 1966)
- September 5 – Mel Sheppard, athlete (died 1942)
- September 19 – Mabel Vernon, suffragist (died 1975)
- November 8 – Charles Demuth, painter (died 1935)
- November 25 – Merrill C. Meigs, newspaper publisher and aviation promoter (died 1968)
- November 26 – Belle da Costa Greene, librarian (died 1950)
- December 19 – Barry Byrne, architect (died 1967)
- December 22 – Edna Goodrich, actress (died 1972)
- December 31 – Leo Otis Colbert, admiral and engineer, director of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey (died 1968)
Deaths
- January 10 – Samuel Mudd, physician imprisoned for conspiring with John Wilkes Booth in the assassination of Abraham Lincoln (born 1833)
- January 12 – Clark Mills, sculptor (born 1810)
- January 13 – Webster Wagner, inventor, manufacturer and politician (born 1817)
- February 16 – Stephen P. Hempstead, 2nd Governor of Iowa from 1850 to 1854 (born 1812)
- March 4 – Alexander H. Stephens, only vice president of the Confederate States of America (born 1812)
- March 15 – Henry C. Wayne, U.S. Army officer, Confederate brigadier general (born 1815)
- March 26 – Joseph Saberton, U.S. Army private, Union Army (born 1830)
- March 28 – Napoleon Bonaparte Buford, general and railroad executive (born 1807)
- April 4 – Peter Cooper, industrialist, inventor, philanthropist and candidate for President of the U.S. (born 1791)
- April 6 – Benjamin Wright Raymond, politician, twice mayor of Chicago (born 1801)
- April 28 – William M. Browne, politician and newsman, Acting Confederate States Secretary of State in 1862 (born 1823 in Ireland)
- May 15 – Josiah Gorgas, Northern-born Confederate general (born 1818)
- June 14
- July 15 – General Tom Thumb, dwarf performer (born 1838)
- July 22 – Edward Ord, engineer and U.S. Army officer who saw action in the Seminole War, the Indian Wars and the American Civil War (born 1818)
- July 23 – Ginery Twichell, transportation manager and politician (born 1811)
- July 24 – Thomas Swann, politician and president of Baltimore and Ohio Railroad from 1847 to 1853 (born 1809)
- July 27 – Montgomery Blair, politician and lawyer (born 1813)
- September 16 – Junius Brutus Booth Jr., actor and theatre manager (born 1821)
- October 4 – Henry Farnam, surveyor, railroad president and philanthropist (born 1809)
- October 22 – Thomas Mayne Reid, novelist (born 1818 in Ireland)
- November 20 – Augustus C. Dodge, U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1848 to 1855 (born 1812)
- November 24 – Albert Fitch Bellows, landscape painter (born 1829)
- November 26 – Sojourner Truth, African American abolitionist and women's rights activist (born c. 1797)
- December 27 – Andrew A. Humphreys, general and civil engineer (born 1810)
- Mary S. B. Shindler, poet (born 1810)
See also
External links
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18th century | |
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19th century | |
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20th century | |
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21st century | |
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By U.S. state/territory | |
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