Timeline of the history of the United States (1860-1899)
List of years in the United States
1876 in U.S. states
States
Alabama
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New York
North Carolina
Ohio
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Vermont
Virginia
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Washington, D.C.
List of years in the United States by state or territory
Events from the year 1876 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal government
President: Ulysses S. Grant (R-Illinois)
Vice President: vacant
Chief Justice: Morrison Waite (Ohio)
Speaker of the House of Representatives:
Michael C. Kerr (D-Indiana) (until August 19)
Samuel J. Randall (D-Pennsylvania) (starting December 4)
Congress: 44th
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama: George S. Houston (Democratic)
Governor of Arkansas: Augustus Hill Garland (Democratic)
Governor of California: William Irwin (Democratic)
Governor of Colorado: John Long Routt (Republican) (starting August 1)
Governor of Connecticut: Charles R. Ingersoll (Democratic)
Governor of Delaware: John P. Cochran (Democratic)
Governor of Florida: Marcellus Stearns (Republican)
Governor of Georgia: James M. Smith (Democratic)
Governor of Illinois: John Lourie Beveridge (Republican)
Governor of Indiana: Thomas A. Hendricks (Democratic)
Governor of Iowa: Cyrus C. Carpenter (Republican) (until January 13), Samuel J. Kirkwood (Republican) (starting January 13)
Governor of Kansas: Thomas A. Osborn (Republican)
Governor of Kentucky: James B. McCreary (Democratic)
Governor of Louisiana: William Pitt Kellogg (Republican)
Governor of Maine: Nelson Dingley, Jr. (Republican) (until January 5), Seldon Connor (Republican Party) (starting January 5)
Governor of Maryland: James B. Groome (Democratic) (until January 12), John Lee Carroll (Democratic) (starting January 12)
Governor of Massachusetts: William Gaston (Democratic) (until January 6), Alexander H. Rice (Republican) (starting January 6)
Governor of Michigan: John J. Bagley (Republican)
Governor of Minnesota: Cushman K. Davis (Republican) (until January 7), John S. Pillsbury (Republican) (starting January 7)
Governor of Mississippi: Adelbert Ames (Republican) (until March 29), John M. Stone (Democratic) (starting March 29)
Governor of Missouri: Charles Henry Hardin (Democratic)
Governor of Nebraska: Silas Garber (Republican)
Governor of Nevada: Lewis R. Bradley (Democratic)
Governor of New Hampshire: Person C. Cheney (Republican)
Governor of New Jersey: Joseph D. Bedle (Democratic)
Governor of New York: Samuel J. Tilden (Democratic) (until end of December 31)
Governor of North Carolina: Curtis Hooks Brogden (Republican)
Governor of Ohio: William Allen (Democratic) (until January 10), Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) (starting January 10)
Governor of Oregon: La Fayette Grover (Democratic)
Governor of Pennsylvania: John F. Hartranft (Republican)
Governor of Rhode Island: Henry Lippitt (Republican)
Governor of South Carolina: Daniel Henry Chamberlain (Republican) (until December 14), Wade Hampton III (Democratic) (starting December 14)
Governor of Tennessee: James D. Porter (Democratic)
Governor of Texas: Richard Coke (Democratic) (until December 21), Richard B. Hubbard (Democratic) (starting December 21)
Governor of Vermont: Asahel Peck (Republican) (until October 5), Horace Fairbanks (Republican) (starting October 5)
Governor of Virginia: James L. Kemper (Democratic)
Governor of West Virginia: John J. Jacob (Democratic)/(Independent)
Governor of Wisconsin: William Robert Taylor (Democratic) (until January 3), Harrison Ludington (Republican) (starting January 3)
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama: Robert F. Ligon (Democratic) (until month and day unknown), vacant (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of California: James A. Johnson (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: Lafayette Head (Republican) (starting August 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: George G. Sill (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Florida: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: Archibald A. Glenn (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: Leonidas Sexton (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Joseph Dysart (Republican) (until January 13), Joshua G. Newbold (Republican) (starting January 13)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: Melville J. Salter (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: John C. Underwood (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: Caesar Antoine (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Horatio G. Knight (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: Henry H. Holt (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Alphonso Barto (Republican) (until January 7), James Wakefield (Republican) (starting January 7)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: Alexander K. Davis (Republican) (until month and day unknown), John M. Stone (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Norman Jay Coleman (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Jewett W. Adams (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: William Dorsheimer (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio: Alphonso Hart (Republican) (until January 10), Thomas Lowry Young (Republican) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: John Latta (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Henry Tillinghast Sisson (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: Richard Howell Gleaves (Republican) (until December 14), William Dunlap Simpson (Democratic) (starting December 14)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: Thomas H. Paine (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas: Richard B. Hubbard (Democratic) (until December 21), vacant (starting December 21)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Lyman G. Hinckley (Republican) (until October 5), Redfield Proctor (Republican) (starting October 5)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: Henry Wirtz Thomas (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: Charles D. Parker (Democratic)
Events
"Centennial Mirror", showing events from 1776 (left) compared with similar events in 1876 (right)
February 2 – The National League of Professional Base Ball Clubs is formed at a meeting in Chicago, Illinois; it replaces the National Association of Professional Base Ball Players. Morgan Bulkeley of the Hartford Dark Blues is selected as the league's first president.
February 22 – Johns Hopkins University is founded in Baltimore, Maryland.
February/March – The Harvard Lampoon humor magazine is founded in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
March – Librarian Melvil Dewey first publishes the Dewey Decimal Classification system.[2]
March 2 – Secretary of War William W. Belknap resigns his office in the wake of the trader post scandal.
March 7 – Alexander Graham Bell is granted a patent for an invention he calls the telephone.[4]
March 10 – Alexander Graham Bell makes the first successful call by saying "Mr. Watson, come here, I want to see you.."
April–June
April 17 – Friends Academy is founded by Gideon Frost at Locust Valley, New York.
May 10 – The Centennial Exposition begins in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
May 18 – Wyatt Earp starts work in Dodge City, Kansas, serving under Marshal Larry Deger.
May 29 – Senate votes 37 to 29 that Secretary of War William W. Belknap cannot be barred from trial and impeachment, despite being a private citizen; however, this is far short of the two-thirds majority required and thus he is acquitted.
June 4 – The Transcontinental Express arrives in San Francisco, California via the First Transcontinental Railroad, 83 hours and 39 minutes after having left New York City.
June 11 – Rutherford B. Hayes selected by the Republicans as presidential candidate.
June 17 – Indian Wars: Battle of the Rosebud – 1,500 Sioux and Cheyenne led by Crazy Horse beat back General George Crook's forces at Rosebud Creek in Montana Territory.
June 25 – Indian Wars: Battle of the Little Bighorn – an army under Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer is defeated by 1,500-2,500 Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapaho led by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, suffering over 300 casualties.
June 27 – Samuel J. Tilden selected by the Democrats as presidential candidate.
July–September
July 4 – The United States centennial is celebrated.
Senate votes to acquit former Secretary of War William W. Belknap of all impeached charges relating to the trader post scandal.
August 2 – Wild Bill Hickok is killed during a poker game in Deadwood, Dakota.
August 7 – George S. Houston is reelected the 24th governor of Alabama defeating Noadiah Woodruff.
August 8 – Thomas Edison receives a patent for his mimeograph.
September 6 – Southern Pacific line from Los Angeles to San Francisco completed.
September 7 – In Northfield, Minnesota, Jesse James and the James-Younger Gang attempt to rob the town's bank but are surrounded by an angry mob and are nearly wiped out.
October–December
October 4 – Texas A&M University opens for classes.
October 6 – American Library Association founded in Philadelphia.
November 7
The 1876 presidential election ends indecisively with 184 Electoral College votes for Samuel J. Tilden, 165 for Rutherford B. Hayes, and 20 in dispute. The new president (Hayes) is not decided until 1877.
A failed grave robbery of the Lincoln Tomb takes place this night.
November 10 – The Centennial Exposition ends in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
November 23 – Corrupt Tammany Hall leader William Marcy Tweed (better known as Boss Tweed) is delivered to authorities in New York City after being captured in Spain.
November 25 – Indian Wars: In retaliation for the dramatic American defeat at the Battle of the Little Bighorn, United States Army troops under General Ranald S. Mackenzie sack Chief Dull Knife's sleeping Cheyenne village at the headwaters of the Powder River. The soldiers destroy all of the villagers' winter food and clothing, and then slash their ponies' throats.
December – The first American edition of Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, his first individual extended work of fiction, is published by the American Publishing Company; a British edition has appeared in early June in London with the first review appearing on June 24 in a British magazine.
December 5 – The Brooklyn Theater Fire kills at least 278, possibly more than 300.
December 6 – The first cremation in the U.S. takes place in a crematory built by Francis Julius LeMoyne.
December 29 – Ashtabula River railroad disaster: collapse of a bridge over the Ashtabula River near Ashtabula, Ohio kills 92 and injures 64, the worst U.S. railroad accident until 1918.
Undated
Emile Berliner invents an improved form of microphone which will be adopted for Alexander Graham Bell's telephone.[5]
Meharry Medical College is founded in Nashville, Tennessee, as the Medical Department of Central Tennessee College; it is the first medical school for African Americans in the South.
Lyford House, by Richardson Bay, Tiburon, California is constructed.
Heinz Tomato Ketchup introduced.
Adolphus Busch's brewery, Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis, Missouri, first markets Budweiser, a pale lager, as a nationally sold beer.
Melville Reuben Bissell files a patent for an improved carpet sweeper.[6]
First carousel at Coney Island built by Charles I. D. Looff.
Spring – Vast numbers of Indians move north to an encampment of the Sioux chief Sitting Bull in the region of the Little Bighorn River, creating the last great gathering of native peoples on the Great Plains.
September 26 – Edith Abbott, social worker and educator (died 1957)
October 10 Nash; William James Bryan, U.S. Senator from Florida from 1907 to 1908 (died 1908)
November 23 – Thomas M. Storke, U.S. Senator from California from 1938 to 1939 (died 1971)
November 24 – Walter Burley Griffin, architect (died 1937)
November 29 – Nellie Tayloe Ross, 14th Governor of Wyoming from 1925 to 1927 and director of the United States Mint from 1933 to 1953; first female state governor in the U.S. (died 1977)
December 9 – Pauline Whittier, golfer (died 1946)[8]
December 12 – Alvin Kraenzlein, hurdler (died 1928)
December 20 – Walter Sydney Adams, astronomer (died 1956)
Full date unknown
Halver Halversen, traveling jewelry auctioneer and store owner (d. ?)[9]
Deaths
January 10 – Gordon Granger, U.S. and Union Army general (born 1822)
January 15 – Eliza McCardle Johnson, First Lady of the United States, Second Lady of the United States (born 1810)
February 18 – Charlotte Cushman, actress (born 1816)
April 9 – Charles Goodyear, politician (born 1804)
April 23 – Archibald Dixon, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1852 to 1855 (born 1802)
May 7 – William Buell Sprague, clergyman and biographer (born 1795)
June 20 – John Neal, eccentric and influential writer, critic, lecturer, and activist (born 1793)[10]
June 25 – George Armstrong Custer, U.S. Army colonel (in battle) (born 1839)
August 2 – Wild Bill Hickok, gunfighter and gambler (murdered) (born 1837)
August 23 – Joseph R. Underwood, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1847 to 1853 (born 1791)
September 27 – Braxton Bragg, U.S. and Confederate Army general (born 1817)
December 3 – Samuel Cooper, United States Army officer during the Second Seminole War and the Mexican–American War, highest-ranking Confederate general during the American Civil War (born 1798)
December 9 – George Trenholm, 2nd Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury (born 1807)
^Bell, John L. Hard Times : Beginnings of the Great Depression in North Carolina, 1929-1933. Raleigh: North Carolina Dept. of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History, 1982. Print.
^Sears, Donald A. (1978). John Neal. Boston, Massachusetts: Twayne Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 080-5-7723-08.