Speaker of the House of Representatives: Jonathan Dayton (F-New Jersey)
Congress: 4th (until March 4), 5th (starting March 4)
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Connecticut: Oliver Wolcott (Federalist) (until December 1), Jonathan Trumbull Jr. (Federalist) (starting December 1)
Governor of Delaware: Gunning Bedford Sr. (Federalist) (until September 28), Daniel Rogers (Federalist) (starting September 28)
Governor of Georgia: Jared Irwin (Democratic-Republican)
Governor of Kentucky: James Garrard (Democratic-Republican)
Governor of Maryland: John Hoskins Stone (Federalist) (until November 17), John Henry (Democratic-Republican) (starting November 17)
Governor of Massachusetts: Samuel Adams (no political party) (until June 2), Increase Sumner (Federalist) (starting June 2)
Governor of New Hampshire: John Taylor Gilman (Federalist)
Governor of New Jersey: Richard Howell (Federalist)
Governor of New York: John Jay (Federalist)
Governor of North Carolina: Samuel Ashe (Anti-Federalist)
Governor of Pennsylvania: Thomas Mifflin (no political party)
Governor of Rhode Island: Arthur Fenner (Country)
Governor of South Carolina: Charles Pinckney (Democratic-Republican)
Governor of Tennessee: John Sevier (Democratic-Republican)
Governor of Vermont:
Until August 25: Thomas Chittenden (no political party)
August 25-October 16: Paul Brigham (Democratic-Republican)
starting October 16: Isaac Tichenor (Federalist)
Governor of Virginia: James Wood (Democratic-Republican)
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: Jonathan Trumbull, Jr. (Federalist) (until December 1), John Treadwell (Federalist) (starting December 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Moses Gill (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: Stephen Van Rensselaer (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Samuel J. Potter (Democratic-Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: Robert Anderson (Federalist)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Paul Brigham (Democratic-Republican)
Events
March 4: John Adams becomes the second U.S. presidentThomas Jefferson becomes the second U.S. vice president
January 3 – The Treaty of Tripoli (a peace treaty between the United States and Tripoli) is signed at Algiers (see also 1796 in the United States).
February 22 – The last invasion of Britain: An American colonel named William Tate leads French forces in a landing near Fishguard in Wales.
March 4 – John Adams is sworn in as the second president of the United States, and Thomas Jefferson is sworn in as the second vice president.
April 17 – Sir Ralph Abercromby unsuccessfully invades San Juan, Puerto Rico, in what will be one of the largest British attacks on Spanish territories in the western hemisphere, and one of the worst defeats of the English navy for years to come.
May 10 – The first ship of the United States Navy, the frigate USS United States (1797), is commissioned.
July 8 – Senator William Blount of Tennessee becomes the first individual to be expelled from Congress for treason and conspiracy to incite rebellion.
October 21 – In Boston Harbor, the 44-gun United States Navy frigate USS Constitution is launched to fight Barbary pirates off the coast of Tripoli.
Undated
The XYZ Affair inflames tensions between France and the United States.
Ongoing
Panic of 1796–1797 (1796–1797)
XYZ Affair (1797–1798)
Births
January 1
Robert Crittenden, attorney and politician (d. 1834)
William Greene, lieutenant governor of the state of Rhode Island (d. 1883)
June 27 – Andrew W. Loomis, United States Representative from Ohio (died 1873)
Deaths
November 26 – Andrew Adams, signatory of the Articles of Confederation (born 1736)
See also
Timeline of United States history (1790–1819)
Further reading
Lathrop, John (1804). "An Account of the Deleterious Effects of Mephitic Air, or Marsb Miasmata, Experienced by Three Men, July 27, 1797. In a Well, on the Boston Pier". Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 2 (2): 81–84. Bibcode:1804MAAAS...2...81L. doi:10.2307/27670816. JSTOR 27670816.
Notes of Travel of William Henry, John Heckewelder, John Rothrock, and Christian Clewell, to Gnadenhuetten on the Muskingum, in the Early Summer of 1797. The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 10, No. 2 (July, 1886), pp. 125–157
Peterson, Charles E. (1953). "Virginia Penitentiary, 1797". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 12 (4): 27–28. doi:10.2307/987651. JSTOR 987651.
Herman R. Friis, Ralph E. Ehrenberg. Nicholas King and His Wharfing Plans of the City of Washington, 1797. Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C., Vol. 66/68, The 46th separately bound book (1966/1968), pp. 34–46.
William K. Bottorff, Roy C. Flannagan, Frances Baylor Hill. The Diary of Frances Baylor Hill of "Hillsborough" King and Queen County Virginia (1797). Early American Literature Newsletter, Vol. 2, No. 3, (Winter, 1967), pp. 3–53.
David J. Brandenburg, Millicent H. Brandenburg. The Duc De La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt's Visit to the Federal City in 1797: A New Translation. Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C., Vol. 49, The 49th separately bound book (1973/1974), pp. 35–60.
Stinchcombe, William (1975). "Talleyrand and the American Negotiations of 1797-1798". The Journal of American History. 62 (3): 575–590. doi:10.2307/2936215. JSTOR 2936215.
Lee W. Formwalt. An English Immigrant Views American Society: Benjamin Henry Latrobe's Virginia Years, 1796-1798. The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 85, No. 4 (October, 1977), pp. 387–410.
John L. Brittain and Henry Middleton Rutledge. Henry Middleton Rutledge to His Father, November 1, 1797. The South Carolina Historical Magazine, Vol. 83, No. 3 (July, 1982), pp. 235–240.
Arthur Scherr. "Vox Populi" versus the Patriot President: Benjamin Franklin Bache's Philadelphia Aurora and John Adams (1797). Pennsylvania History, Vol. 62, No.4 (Fall 1995), pp. 503–531.
Chew, Richard S. (2005). "Certain Victims of an International Contagion: The Panic of 1797 and the Hard Times of the Late 1790s in Baltimore". Journal of the Early Republic. 25 (4): 565–613. doi:10.1353/jer.2005.0069. S2CID 154865404.