Timeline of the history of the United States (1820-1859)
List of years in the United States
1833 in U.S. states
States
Alabama
Connecticut
Delaware
Georgia
Illinois
Indiana
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Mississippi
Missouri
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Tennessee
Vermont
Virginia
Washington, D.C.
List of years in the United States by state or territory
1833 Eagle map of the U.S.
Events from the year 1833 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal government
President: Andrew Jackson (D-Tennessee)
Vice President:
vacant (until March 4)
Martin Van Buren (D-New York) (starting March 4)
Chief Justice: John Marshall (Virginia)
Speaker of the House of Representatives: Andrew Stevenson (D-Virginia)
Congress: 22nd (until March 4), 23rd (starting March 4)
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama: John Gayle (Democratic)
Governor of Connecticut: John Samuel Peters (National Republican) (until May 1), Henry W. Edwards (Democratic) (starting May 1)
Governor of Delaware: David Hazzard (National Republican) (until January 15), Caleb P. Bennett (Democratic) (starting January 15)
Governor of Georgia: Wilson Lumpkin (Democratic)
Governor of Illinois: John Reynolds (Democratic)
Governor of Indiana: Noah Noble (Whig)
Governor of Kentucky: John Breathitt (Democratic)
Governor of Louisiana: André B. Roman (Whig)
Governor of Maine: Samuel E. Smith (Democratic)
Governor of Maryland: George Howard (National Republican) (until January 17), James Thomas (Whig) (starting January 17)
Governor of Massachusetts: Levi Lincoln Jr. (National Republican)
Governor of Mississippi:
until June 12: Abram M. Scott (Democratic)
June 12-November 20: Charles Lynch (Democratic)
starting November 20: Hiram Runnels (Democratic)
Governor of Missouri: Daniel Dunklin (Democratic)
Governor of New Hampshire: Samuel Dinsmoor (Democratic)
Governor of New Jersey:
until February 27: Samuel L. Southard (Whig)
February 27-October 25: Elias P. Seeley (Whig)
starting October 25: Peter Dumont Vroom (Democratic)
Governor of New York: William L. Marcy (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Governor of North Carolina: David Lowry Swain (National Republican)
Governor of Ohio: Robert Lucas (Democratic)
Governor of Pennsylvania: George Wolf (Democratic-Republican)
Governor of Rhode Island: Lemuel H. Arnold (Whig) (until May 1), John Brown Francis (Democratic) (starting May 1)
Governor of South Carolina: Robert Young Hayne (Democratic)
Governor of Tennessee: William Carroll (Democratic)
Governor of Vermont: William A. Palmer (Anti-Masonic)
Governor of Virginia: John Floyd (Democratic)
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: Thaddeus Betts (Whig) (until May 1), Ebenezer Stoddard (Democratic-Republican) (starting May 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: Zadok Casey (Democratic) (until March 1), William Lee D. Ewing (Democratic) (starting March 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: David Wallace (Whig)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: James T. Morehead (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Thomas L. Winthrop (political party unknown) (until month and day unknown), Samuel T. Armstrong (political party unknown) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Lilburn Boggs (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: John Tracy (Democratic) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Charles Collins (political party unknown) (until May 1), Jeffrey Hazard (political party unknown) (starting May 1)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Lebbeus Egerton (Anti-Masonic)
Events
March 4: Martin Van Buren becomes the eighth U.S. vice president
January–March
January 1 – Haverford College, located in Haverford, Pennsylvania, is founded by Quakers of the Society of Friends.
March 2 – President Andrew Jackson signs the Force Bill, which authorizes him to use troops to enforce Federal law in South Carolina.
March 4 – Andrew Jackson is sworn in for his second term as President of the United States,[1] and Martin Van Buren is sworn in as Vice President of the United States.
March 16 – Parley's Magazine, a periodical for young readers, publishes its first issue in Boston.
April–June
May 11 – French-American farmhand Antoine le Blanc murders family of three.[2]
June 6 – Andrew Jackson becomes the first U.S. president to ride a railroad train.
July–September
July 29 – Old State Bank erected in Decatur, Alabama.
August 5 – John Gayle is reelected the 7th governor of Alabama.
August 12 – The city of Chicago is established at the estuary of the Chicago River by 350 settlers.
August 20 – Future President of the United States Benjamin Harrison is born in Ohio. From this date until the death of former U.S. President James Madison on June 28, 1836, there are a total of 18 living presidents of the United States (2 former, 1 current, and 15 known future); more than any other time period in U.S. history.
September 2 – Oberlin College is founded in Oberlin, Ohio by John Shipherd and Philo P. Stewart.
October–December
November 12–13 – Stars Fell on Alabama: A spectacular occurrence of the Leonid meteor shower is observed in Alabama.
November 24 – Psi Upsilon is founded at Union College, becoming the fifth fraternity in the United States.
December
American Anti-Slavery Society founded in Philadelphia by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan.
Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society is founded; founder members include Sarah Mapps Douglass, Charlotte Forten Grimké and Hetty Reckless.
Ongoing
Nullification Crisis (1832–1833)
Births
Benjamin Harrison
January 2 – Frederick A. Johnson, politician (died 1893)
January 18 – Joseph S. Skerrett, admiral (died 1893)
February 6 – J. E. B. Stuart, United States Army officer; Confederate States Army general in the American Civil War (died 1864)
February 11 – Melville Fuller, 8th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (died 1910)
March 9 – Thomas W. Osborn, U.S. Senator from Florida from 1868 to 1873 (died 1898)
March 14 – Lucy Hobbs Taylor, dentist (died 1910)[3]
March 17 – Charles Edwin Wilbour, Egyptologist (died 1896)
May 24 – John Killefer, businessman and inventor (died 1926)
May 27 – Hester Martha Poole, writer, poet and art critic (died 1932)
June 10 – Pauline Cushman, born Harriet Wood, actress and Union spy in the American Civil War (died 1893)
June 19 – Mary Tenney Gray, editorial writer, club-woman, philanthropist and suffragette (died 1904)
August 7 – Powell Clayton, U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 1868 to 1871 (died 1914)
August 12
Lillie Devereux Blake, writer and reformer (died 1913)
Isaac L. Ellwood, businessman, rancher and inventor (died 1910)
August 16 – Eliza Ann Otis, poet, newspaper publisher and philanthropist (died 1904)
August 20 – Benjamin Harrison, 23rd president of the United States from 1889 to 1893 (died 1901)
September 21 – James Harvey, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1833 to 1873 (died 1894)
October 2 – William Corby, Catholic priest (died 1897)
October 8 – Edmund Clarence Stedman, poet, critic, essayist, banker and scientist (died 1908)
November 2 – Horace Howard Furness, Shakespearean scholar (died 1912)
November 12 – John Martin, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1893 to 1895 (died 1913)
November 13 – Edwin Booth, tragic actor (died 1893)
December 6 – John S. Mosby, Confederate army cavalry battalion commander in the American Civil War (died 1916)