|
Decades: |
- 1870s
- 1880s
- 1890s
- 1900s
- 1910s
|
---|
See also: |
|
---|
Events from the year 1890 in the United States.
Incumbents
Governors and lieutenant governors
|
Governors
- Governor of Alabama: Thomas Seay (Democratic) (starting December 1), Thomas G. Jones (Democratic) (starting December 1)
- Governor of Arkansas: James Philip Eagle (Democratic)
- Governor of California: Robert Waterman (Republican)
- Governor of Colorado: Job Adams Cooper (Republican)
- Governor of Connecticut: Morgan G. Bulkeley (Republican)
- Governor of Delaware: Benjamin T. Biggs (Democratic)
- Governor of Florida: Francis P. Fleming (Democratic)
- Governor of Georgia: John Brown Gordon (Democratic) (until November 8), William J. Northen (Democratic) (starting November 8)
- Governor of Idaho: George L. Shoup (Republican) (until December 18), N. B. Willey (Republican) (starting December 18)
- Governor of Illinois: Joseph W. Fifer (Republican)
- Governor of Indiana: Alvin P. Hovey (Republican)
- Governor of Iowa: William Larrabee (Republican) (until February 27), Horace Boies (Democratic) (starting February 27)
- Governor of Kansas: Lyman U. Humphrey (Republican)
- Governor of Kentucky: Simon B. Buckner (Democratic)
- Governor of Louisiana: Francis T. Nicholls (Democratic)
- Governor of Maine: Edwin C. Burleigh (Republican)
- Governor of Maryland: Elihu Emory Jackson (Democratic)
- Governor of Massachusetts: Oliver Ames (Republican) (until January 7), John Q. A. Brackett (Republican) (starting January 7)
- Governor of Michigan: Cyrus G. Luce (Republican)
- Governor of Minnesota: William R. Merriam (Republican)
- Governor of Mississippi: Robert Lowry (Democratic) (until January 13), John M. Stone (Democratic) (starting January 13)
- Governor of Missouri: David R. Francis (Democratic)
- Governor of Montana: Joseph Toole (Democratic)
- Governor of Nebraska: John Milton Thayer (Republican)
- Governor of Nevada: Charles C. Stevenson (Republican) (until September 21), Frank Bell (Republican) (starting September 21)
- Governor of New Hampshire: David H. Goodell (Republican)
- Governor of New Jersey: Robert Stockton Green (Democratic) (until January 21), Leon Abbett (Democratic) (starting January 21)
- Governor of New York: David B. Hill (Democratic)
- Governor of North Carolina: Daniel Gould Fowle (Democratic)
- Governor of North Dakota: John Miller (Republican)
- Governor of Ohio: Joseph B. Foraker (Republican) (until January 13), James E. Campbell (Democratic) (starting January 13)
- Governor of Oregon: Sylvester Pennoyer (Democratic)
- Governor of Pennsylvania: James A. Beaver (Republican)
- Governor of Rhode Island: Herbert W. Ladd (Republican) (until May 26), John W. Davis (Democratic) (starting May 26)
- Governor of South Carolina: John Peter Richardson III (Democratic) (until December 4), Benjamin Ryan Tillman (Democratic) (starting December 4)
- Governor of South Dakota: Arthur C. Mellette (Republican)
- Governor of Tennessee: Robert Love Taylor (Democratic)
- Governor of Texas: Lawrence Sullivan Ross (Democratic)
- Governor of Vermont: William P. Dillingham (Republican) (until October 2), Carroll S. Page (Republican) (starting October 2)
- Governor of Virginia: Fitzhugh Lee (Democratic) (until January 1), Philip W. McKinney (Democratic) (starting January 1)
- Governor of Washington: Elisha Peyre Ferry (Republican)
- Governor of West Virginia: Emanuel Willis Wilson (Democratic) (starting February 6), Aretas B. Fleming (Democratic) (starting February 6)
- Governor of Wisconsin: William D. Hoard (Republican)
- Governor of Wyoming: Francis E. Warren (Republican) (until November 24), Amos W. Barber (Republican) (starting November 24)
Lieutenant governors
|
Demographics
Events
January–June
July–December
Undated
Ongoing
Sport
Births
- January 4 – Victor Adamson, Western film director, producer, screenwriter and actor (died 1972)
- January 21 – Wesley Englehorn, American football player (died 1993)
- January 22 – Fred M. Vinson, 13th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (died 1953)
- January 28 – Robert Franklin Stroud, "Birdman of Alcatraz" (died 1963)
- February 18
- February 24 – Marjorie Main, character actress (died 1975)
- February 27
- March 11 – Vannevar Bush, science administrator (died 1974)
- March 21 – C. Douglass Buck, U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1943 to 1949 (died 1965)
- March 28 – Paul Whiteman, bandleader (died 1967)
- April 7
- April 13 – Frank Murphy, politician and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (died 1949)
- April 23 – Adelbert Ford, psychologist (died 1976)[7]
- May 1 – Laurence Wild, basketball player and 30th Governor of American Samoa (died 1971)
- May 11 – Woodall Rodgers, lawyer and politician, Mayor of Dallas (died 1961)
- May 15 – Katherine Anne Porter, author (died 1980)
- June 1 – Frank Morgan, character actor (died 1949)
- June 12 – Junius Matthews, actor (died 1978)
- June 26
- June 28 – William H. P. Blandy, admiral (d. 1954)
- June 30 – Gertrude McCoy, actress (d. 1967)
- July 22 – Rose Kennedy, philanthropist and matriarch of the Kennedy family (died 1995)
- July 26 – Daniel J. Callaghan, admiral (killed in action 1942)
- August 11 – Lillian Holley, sheriff (d. 1994)
- August 20 – H. P. Lovecraft, horror fiction author (died 1937)
- September 9 – Colonel Sanders, founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken (died 1980)
- September 20 – Jelly Roll Morton, jazz pianist, composer and bandleader (died 1941)
- September 24 – Allen J. Ellender, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1937 to 1972 (died 1972)
- October 1
- October 2 – Groucho Marx, comedian (died 1977)
- October 8 – Eddie Rickenbacker, race car driver and World War I fighter pilot (died 1973)
- October 12 – Katherine Corri Harris, socialite and actress, first wife of John Barrymore (died 1927)
- October 13 – Conrad Richter, fiction writer (died 1968)
- October 14 – Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th president of the United States from 1953 to 1961 (died 1969)
- October 20 – Sherman Minton, U.S. Senator from Indiana from 1935 to 1941, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1949 to 1956 (died 1965)
- October 25 – Floyd Bennett, aviator and explorer (died 1928)
- December 21 – Hermann Joseph Muller, geneticist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1946 (died 1967)
- December 25 – Robert Ripley, collector of odd facts (died 1949)
- December 26 – Uncle Charlie Osborne, Appalachian fiddler (died 1992)
Deaths
- January 2 – George Henry Boker, poet and playwright (born 1823)
- January 28 – Prudence Crandall, educationist (born 1803)
- February 22 – John Jacob Astor III, businessman (born 1822)
- March 2 – James E. English, U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1875 to 1876 (born 1812)
- March 19 – John S. Hager, U.S. Senator from California from 1873 to 1875 (born 1818)
- April 1 – David Wilber, politician (born 1820)
- April 19 – James Pollock, politician (born 1810)
- April 30 – Marcus Thrane, author, journalist, and the leader of the first labour movement in Norway (born 1817)
- May 3 – James B. Beck, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1877 to 1890 (born 1822 in Scotland)
- May 15 – Edward Doane, Protestant missionary in Micronesia (born 1820)
- June 11
- June 30 – Samuel Parkman Tuckerman, composer (born 1819)
- July 9 – Clinton B. Fisk, philanthropist and temperance activist (born 1828)
- July 10 – Thomas C. McCreery, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1868 to 1871 (born 1816)
- July 13 – John C. Frémont, soldier, explorer and U.S. Senator from California from 1850 to 1851 (born 1813)
- August 6 – William Kemmler, murderer, first person executed in the electric chair (born 1860)
- August 10 – John Boyle O'Reilly, poet, novelist, journalist and transportee (born 1844 in Ireland)
- September 8 – Isaac P. Christiancy, Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court and U.S. Senator from Michigan from 1875 to 1879 (born 1812)
- September 30 – Frederick H. Billings, lawyer and financier (born 1823)
- October 7 – John Hill Hewitt, songwriter (born 1801)
- October 8 – James W. Deaderick, Chief Justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court from 1876 to 1886 (born 1812)
- October 20 – Alfred B. Mullett, architect (born 1834)
- November 7 – Comanche, horse, survivor of Custer's cavalry at the Battle of the Little Bighorn
- December 15 – Sitting Bull, Native American chief (born c. 1831)
- Ann Leah Underhill, one of the Fox sisters, fraudulent medium (born 1814)
See also
References
- ^ "1890". This Day in History. 2010-02-09. Archived from the original on 2010-02-09.
- ^ Cocks, Catherine; et al. (2009). "Chronology". Historical Dictionary of the Progressive Era. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6293-7.
- ^ a b "Full List of Thunder Bay Region Shipwrecks (by name)". MSU Sea Grant Extension, Northeast District, Michigan State University. 2000. Archived from the original on 2009-10-15. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ "A Brief History of the Founding of the DAR". National Society Daughters of the American Revolution. Archived from the original on 2009-10-15. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ Ala. General Assembly. Journal of the Senate. 1890–1891 sess., 186, accessed July 28, 2023
- ^ "ONU Marching Band".
- ^ Raphelson, A. C., (1968). Psychology at university of michigan. University of Michigan Flint College, 1(2), 71-71.
External links
|
---|
18th century | |
---|
19th century | |
---|
20th century | |
---|
21st century | |
---|
By U.S. state/territory | |
---|