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Decades: |
- 1860s
- 1870s
- 1880s
- 1890s
- 1900s
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Events from the year 1885 in the United States.
Incumbents
- Chester A. Arthur (R-New York) (until March 4)
- Grover Cleveland (D-New York) (starting March 4)
- vacant (until March 4)
- Thomas A. Hendricks (D-Indiana) (March 4 – November 25)
- vacant (starting November 25)
Governors and lieutenant governors
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Governors
- Governor of Alabama: Edward A. O'Neal (Democratic)
- Governor of Arkansas: James Henderson Berry (Democratic) (until January 17), Simon Pollard Hughes, Jr. (Democratic) (starting January 17)
- Governor of California: George Stoneman (Republican)
- Governor of Colorado: James Benton Grant (Democratic) (until January 13), Benjamin Harrison Eaton (Republican) (starting January 13)
- Governor of Connecticut: Thomas M. Waller (Democratic) (until January 8), Henry B. Harrison (Republican) (starting January 8)
- Governor of Delaware: Charles C. Stockley (Democratic)
- Governor of Florida: William D. Bloxham (Democratic) (until January 7), Edward A. Perry (Democratic) (starting January 7)
- Governor of Georgia: Henry D. McDaniel (Democratic)
- Governor of Illinois: John Marshall Hamilton (Republican) (until January 30), Richard J. Oglesby (Republican) (starting January 30)
- Governor of Indiana: Albert G. Porter (Republican) (until January 12), Isaac P. Gray (Democratic) (starting January 12)
- Governor of Iowa: Buren R. Sherman (Republican)
- Governor of Kansas: George W. Glick (Democratic) (until January 12), John A. Martin (Republican) (starting January 12)
- Governor of Kentucky: J. Proctor Knott (Democratic)
- Governor of Louisiana: Samuel D. McEnery (Democratic)
- Governor of Maine: Frederick Robie (Republican)
- Governor of Maryland: Robert Milligan McLane (Democratic) (until March 27), Henry Lloyd (Democratic) (starting March 27)
- Governor of Massachusetts: George D. Robinson (Republican)
- Governor of Michigan: Josiah Begole (Democratic) (until January 1), Russell Alger (Republican) (starting January 1)
- Governor of Minnesota: Lucius F. Hubbard (Republican)
- Governor of Mississippi: Robert Lowry (Democratic)
- Governor of Missouri: Thomas Theodore Crittenden (Democratic) (until January 12), John S. Marmaduke (Democratic) (starting January 12)
- Governor of Nebraska: James W. Dawes (Republican)
- Governor of Nevada: Jewett W. Adams (Democratic)
- Governor of New Hampshire: Samuel W. Hale (Republican) (until June 4), Moody Currier (Republican) (starting June 4)
- Governor of New Jersey: Leon Abbett (Democratic)
- Governor of New York: Grover Cleveland (Democratic) (until January 6), David B. Hill (Democratic) (starting January 6)
- Governor of North Carolina: Thomas Jordan Jarvis (Democratic) (until January 21), Alfred Moore Scales (Democratic) (starting January 21)
- Governor of Ohio: George Hoadly (Democratic)
- Governor of Oregon: Z. F. Moody (Republican)
- Governor of Pennsylvania: Robert E. Pattison (Democratic)
- Governor of Rhode Island: Augustus O. Bourn (Republican) (until May 26), George P. Wetmore (Republican) (starting May 26)
- Governor of South Carolina: Hugh Smith Thompson (Democratic)
- Governor of Tennessee: William B. Bate (Democratic)
- Governor of Texas: John Ireland (Democratic)
- Governor of Vermont: Samuel E. Pingree (Republican)
- Governor of Virginia: William E. Cameron (Re-adjuster)
- Governor of West Virginia: Jacob B. Jackson (Democratic) (until March 4), Emanuel Willis Wilson (Democratic) (starting March 4)
- Governor of Wisconsin: Jeremiah McLain Rusk (Republican)
Lieutenant governors
- Lieutenant Governor of California: John Daggett (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: William H. Meyer (Republican) (until January 13), Peter W. Breene (Republican) (starting January 13)
- Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: George G. Sumner (Democratic) (until January 8), Lorrin A. Cooke (Republican) (starting January 8)
- Lieutenant Governor of Florida: Livingston W. Bethel (Democratic) (until January 7), Milton H. Mabry (Democratic) (starting January 7)
- Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: William J. Campbell (Republican) (until January 30), John Smith (Republican) (starting January 30)
- Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: Thomas Hanna (Republican) (until January 12), Mahlon Dickerson Manson (Democratic) (starting January 12)
- Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Orlando H. Manning (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: David Wesley Finney (Republican) (until January 12), Alexander P. Riddle (Republican) (starting January 12)
- Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: James R. Hindman (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: Clay Knobloch (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Oliver Ames (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: Moreau S. Crosby (Republican) (until month and day unknown), Archibald Buttars (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Charles A. Gilman (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: G. D. Shands (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Robert Alexander Campbell (Democratic) (until January 12), Albert P. Morehouse (Democratic) (starting January 12)
- Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska: Alfred W. Agee (Republican) (until month and day unknown), Hibbard H. Shedd (Republican) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Charles E. Laughton (Republican)
- Lieutenant Governor of New York:
- Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: James L. Robinson (Democratic) (until January 21), Charles M. Stedman (Democratic) (starting January 21)
- Lieutenant Governor of Ohio: John George Warwick (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: Chauncey Forward Black (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Oscar Rathbun (political party unknown) (until May 26), Lucius B. Darling (Republican) (starting May 26)
- Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: Chauncey Forward Black (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: John Calhoun Sheppard (Democratic)
- Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: Benjamin F. Alexander (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), Cabell R. Berry (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of Texas: Francis M. Martin (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), Barnett Gibbs (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
- Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Ebenezer J. Ormsbee (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 7 – Edwin Swatek, swimmer and water polo player (died 1966)
- January 11 – Alice Paul, suffragist (died 1977)
- January 15 – Grover Lowdermilk, baseball player (died 1968)
- January 27
- February 7 – Sinclair Lewis fiction writer, recipient of Nobel Prize in Literature in 1930 (died 1951 in Italy)
- February 13 – Bess Truman, First Lady of the United States, Second Lady of the United States (died 1982)
- February 17 – Steve Evans, baseball player (died 1943)
- February 18 – Richard S. Edwards, admiral (died 1956)
- March 6 – Ring Lardner, writer (died 1933)
- April 1 – Wallace Beery, actor (died 1949)
- April 7 – Bee Ho Gray, Wild West star, silent film actor and vaudeville performer (died 1951)
- April 13 – Vean Gregg, baseball player (died 1964)
- May 2
- May 7 – George "Gabby" Hayes, Western film character actor (died 1969)
- May 14 – Ben J. Tarbutton, businessman and politician (died 1962)
- May 30 – Arthur E. Andersen, accountant (died 1947)
- June 29 – Andrew Tombes, comedian and character actor (died 1976)
- July 4 – Louis B. Mayer, film producer (died 1957)
- July 6 – Charles Wisner Barrell, writer (died 1974)
- July 10 – Mary O'Hara, author and screenwriter (died 1980)[2]
- July 15 – Tom Kennedy, actor (died 1965)
- July 22 – John Thomas Kennedy, general and Medal Honour recipient (died 1969)
- August 15 – Edna Ferber, novelist, short story writer, and playwright (died 1968)[3]
- September 7 – Elinor Wylie (Elinor Morton Hoyt), poet and novelist (died 1928)
- September 11 – Julian C. Smith, general (died 1975)
- September 15 – James P. Boyle, politician (died 1939)
- September 22 – George Gaul, actor (died 1939)
- October 3 – Sophie Treadwell, dramatist and journalist (died 1970)
- October 9 – Raymond DeWalt, inventor and businessman (died 1961)
- October 30 – Ezra Pound, poet (died 1972 in Italy)
- November 1 – Edgar J. Kaufmann, merchant and patron of Fallingwater (died 1955)
- November 11 – George S. Patton, General (died 1945 in Heidelberg, Germany)
- November 28 – John Willard, playwright and actor (d. 1942)
- December 2 – George Minot, physiologist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1934 (died 1950)
- December 6 – Ernest Palmer, cinematographer (died 1978)
- December 10 – Elizabeth Baker, economist and academic (died 1973)
- December 19 – King Oliver, jazz cornet player and bandleader (died 1938)
- December 26 – Bazoline Estelle Usher, African American educator (died 1992)
Full date unknown
Deaths
- January 13 – Schuyler Colfax, 17th vice president of the United States from 1869 to 1873 (born 1823)
- January 24 – Martin Delany, African American abolitionist, journalist and physician (born 1812)
- February 12 – Alexandre Mouton, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1843 to 1846 (born 1804)
- March 17 – Susan Warner (pseudonym Elizabeth Weatherell), religious and children's writer (born 1819)
- May 4 – Irvin McDowell, Union Army officer known for defeat in the First Battle of Bull Run (born 1818)
- May 17 – Jonathan Young, U.S. Navy commodore (born 1826)
- May 19 – Robert Emmet Odlum, swimming instructor, dies as result of becoming the first person to jump from the Brooklyn Bridge (born 1851)
- May 20 – Frederick Theodore Frelinghuysen, 29th United States Secretary of State (born 1817)
- July 23 – Ulysses S. Grant, 18th president of the United States from 1869 to 1877 (born 1822)
- August 10 – James W. Marshall, contractor, builder of Sutter's Mill (born 1810)
- September 3 – William M. Gwin, U.S. Senator from California from 1850 to 1855 and from 1857 to 1861 (born 1805)
- October 5 – Thomas C. Durant, railroad financier (born 1820)
- October 29 – George B. McClellan, soldier, civil engineer, railroad executive and politician (born 1826)
- November 25 – Thomas A. Hendricks, 21st vice president of the United States from March to November 1885 (born 1819)
- December 8 – William Henry Vanderbilt, entrepreneur (born 1821)
- December 21 – George S Patton, General (born 1885)
- December 13 – Benjamin Gratz Brown, politician (born 1826)
- December 15 – Robert Toombs, U.S. Senator from Georgia from 1853 to 1861 (born 1810)
- December 29 – James E. Bailey, U.S. Senator from Tennessee from 1877 to 1881 (born 1821)
See also
References
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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