Timeline of the history of the United States (1860-1899)
List of years in the United States
1884 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 1884 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal government
President: Chester A. Arthur (R-New York)
Vice President: vacant
Chief Justice: Morrison Waite (Ohio)
Speaker of the House of Representatives: John G. Carlisle (D-Kentucky)
Congress: 48th
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama: Edward A. O'Neal (Democratic)
Governor of Arkansas: James Henderson Berry (Democratic)
Governor of California: George Stoneman (Republican)
Governor of Colorado: James Benton Grant (Democratic)
Governor of Connecticut: Thomas M. Waller (Democratic)
Governor of Delaware: Charles C. Stockley (Democratic)
Governor of Florida: William D. Bloxham (Democratic)
Governor of Georgia: Henry D. McDaniel (Democratic)
Governor of Illinois: John Marshall Hamilton (Republican)
Governor of Indiana: Albert G. Porter (Republican)
Governor of Iowa: Buren R. Sherman (Republican)
Governor of Kansas: George W. Glick (Democratic)
Governor of Kentucky: J. Proctor Knott (Democratic)
Governor of Louisiana: Samuel D. McEnery (Democratic)
Governor of Maine: Frederick Robie (Republican)
Governor of Maryland: William T. Hamilton (Democratic) (until January 9), Robert Milligan McLane (Democratic) (starting January 9)
Governor of Massachusetts: Benjamin F. Butler (Democratic) (until January 3), George D. Robinson (Republican) (starting January 3)
Governor of Michigan: Josiah Begole (Democratic)
Governor of Minnesota: Lucius F. Hubbard (Republican)
Governor of Mississippi: Robert Lowry (Democratic)
Governor of Missouri: Thomas Theodore Crittenden (Democratic)
Governor of Nebraska: James W. Dawes (Republican)
Governor of Nevada: Jewett W. Adams (Democratic)
Governor of New Hampshire: Samuel W. Hale (Republican)
Governor of New Jersey: George C. Ludlow (Democratic) (until January 15), Leon Abbett (Democratic) (starting January 15)
Governor of New York: Grover Cleveland (Democratic)
Governor of North Carolina: Thomas Jordan Jarvis (Democratic)
Governor of Ohio: Charles Foster (Republican) (until January 14), George Hoadly (Democratic) (starting January 14)
Governor of Oregon: Z. F. Moody (Republican)
Governor of Pennsylvania: Robert E. Pattison (Democratic)
Governor of Rhode Island: Augustus O. Bourn (Republican)
Governor of South Carolina: Hugh Smith Thompson (Democratic)
Governor of Tennessee: William B. Bate (Democratic)
Governor of Texas: Oran M. Roberts (Democratic) (until January 16), John Ireland (Democratic) (starting January 16)
Governor of Vermont: John L. Barstow (Republican) (until October 2), Samuel E. Pingree (Republican) (starting October 2)
Governor of Virginia: William E. Cameron (Re-adjuster)
Governor of West Virginia: Jacob B. Jackson (Democratic)
Governor of Wisconsin: Jeremiah McLain Rusk (Republican)
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of California: John Daggett (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: William H. Meyer (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: George G. Sumner (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Florida: Livingston W. Bethel (no political party)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: William J. Campbell (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: Thomas Hanna (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Orlando H. Manning (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: David Wesley Finney (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: James R. Hindman (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: vacant (until month and day unknown), Clay Knobloch (Democratic) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Oliver Ames (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: Moreau S. Crosby (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Charles A. Gilman (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: G. D. Shands (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Robert Alexander Campbell (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska: Alfred W. Agee (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Charles E. Laughton (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: David B. Hill (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: James L. Robinson (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio: Rees G. Richards (Republican) (until January 14), John George Warwick (Democratic) (starting January 14)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: Chauncey Forward Black (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Oscar Rathbun (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: John Calhoun Sheppard (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: Benjamin F. Alexander (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas: Francis M. Martin (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Samuel E. Pingree (Republican) (until October 2), Ebenezer J. Ormsbee (Republican) (starting October 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: John F. Lewis (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: Sam S. Fifield (Republican)
Events
December 6: Washington Monument completed.
January 3 – P. J. Kennedy enters the Massachusetts House of Representatives, the first of at least 140 years of political office held by the Kennedy family.
March 27–29 – Cincinnati riots of 1884.
April 21 – Hammond, Indiana, is incorporated a city.
May 1 – The eight-hour workday is first proclaimed by the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions in the United States. May 1, called May Day or Labour Day, is now a holiday recognized in almost every industrialized country.
May 17 – Alaska becomes a United States territory.
June 13 – LaMarcus Adna Thompson opens "Gravity Pleasure Switchback Railway", one of the earliest roller coasters, at Coney Island, New York City.
August 4 – Edward A. O'Neal is reelected the 26th governor of Alabama.
August 5 – The cornerstone for the Statue of Liberty is laid on Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor.
August 10 – An earthquake measuring 5.5 Mfa (based on the felt area) affected a very large portion of the eastern United States. The shock had a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII (Very strong). Chimneys were toppled in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania. Property damage was severe in Jamaica and Amityville in New York.[1]
August 28 – The earliest known photograph of a tornado is taken by F. N. Robinson during a tornado outbreak in South Dakota.
September 5 – Staten Island Academy is founded.
October – International Meridian Conference in Washington, D.C., fixes the Greenwich meridian as the world's prime meridian.
October 6 – The United States Naval War College is established in Newport, Rhode Island.
November 4 – 1884 United States presidential election: Democratic governor of New York Grover Cleveland defeats Republican James G. Blaine in a very close contest to win the first of his non-consecutive terms.
December 1 – American Old West: Near Frisco, New Mexico, deputy sheriff Elfego Baca holds off a gang of 80 Texan cowboys who want to kill him for arresting cowboy Charles McCarthy (the cowboys were terrorizing the area's Hispanos and Baca was working against them).
December 6 – The Washington Monument is completed.
December 10 – First publication of Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, in London (UK).
December 16 – The World Cotton Centennial World's Fair opens in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Undated
Helen Hunt Jackson completes and publishes Ramona.
The water hyacinth is introduced in the U.S. and quickly becomes an invasive species.
In the "rain year" from July 1883 to June 1884, Los Angeles and San Diego receive their heaviest rainfall since instrumental records began, with Los Angeles receiving 38.18 inches (969.8 mm) and San Diego 25.97 inches (659.6 mm).[2]
September 15 – The Providence Grays win their Second(and Final) National League pennant with a 10–2 win over the Cleveland Blues, in the first ever game to be called, the World Series
Births
Harry S. Truman
January 1
Edwin C. Johnson, U.S. senator from Colorado from 1955 to 1957 (died 1970)
Papa Celestin, jazz bandleader, singer, cornetist, and trumpeter (died 1954)
January 12
Louis Horst, choreographer, composer, pianist (died 1964)
March 10 – Stuart Holmes, actor and sculptor (died 1971)
March 11 – Sheridan Downey, U.S. senator from California from 1939 to 1950 (died 1961)
March 17 – Alcide Nunez, jazz musician (died 1934)
March 21 – George D. Birkhoff, mathematician (died 1944)
March 22 – Arthur H. Vandenberg, U.S. senator from Michigan from 1928 to 1951 (died 1951)
March 31 – James P. Pope, U.S. senator from Idaho from 1933 to 1939 (died 1966)
April 1 – George A. Wilson, U.S. senator from Iowa from 1943 to 1949 (died 1953)
April 17 – Leo Frank, factory superintendent and convicted murderer (died 1915)
April 20 – Oliver Kirk, bantamweight and featherweight professional boxer (died 1960)
May 8 – Harry S. Truman, 33rd president of the United States from 1945 to 1953, 34th vice president of the United States from January to April 1945 (died 1972)
May 26 – Charles Winninger, stage and film actor (died 1969)
23 March – Henry C. Lord, railroad executive (born 1824)
31 March – Frederick Leypoldt, bibliographer (born 1835 in Germany)
3 May – Truman Smith, U.S. senator from Connecticut from 1849 to 1854 (born 1791)
6 May – Judah P. Benjamin, United States senator from Louisiana from 1853 till 1861, 1st Confederate States Attorney General, 2nd Confederate States Secretary of War, 3rd Confederate States Secretary of State, died in Paris, France (born 1811)