1871 in the United States
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Events from the year 1871 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal Government
- President: Ulysses S. Grant (R-Illinois)
- Vice President: Schuyler Colfax (R-Indiana)
- Chief Justice: Salmon P. Chase (Ohio)
- Speaker of the House of Representatives: James G. Blaine (R-Maine)
- Congress: 41st (until March 4), 42nd (starting March 4)
Events
January–March
- February 21
- March 22
- In North Carolina, William Holden becomes the first governor of a U.S. state to be removed from office by impeachment.
- The U.S. Army issues an order for the abandonment of Fort Kearny, Nebraska.
April–June
- April 20 – The U.S President Ulysses S. Grant signs the Ku Klux Klan Act.
- May 4 – The first supposedly Major League Baseball game is played.
- May 8 – The first Major League Baseball home run is hit by Ezra Sutton of the Cleveland Forest Citys.
- June 10 – Captain McLane Tilton leads 109 U.S. Marines in a naval attack on the Han River forts in Korea.
July–September
- Summer – The Harvard Summer School is founded.
- July 21–August 26 – First ever photographs of Yellowstone National Park region taken by the photographer William Henry Jackson during Hayden Geological Survey of 1871.
- July 28 – The Annie, the first boat ever launched on Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park region.
- July 30 – An explosion on the Staten Island Ferry kills 72 and injures 135
- September
- Whaling Disaster of 1871: 1,219 people abandon 33 whaling ships caught in the ice pack off the northern coast of Alaska.
- Seawanhaka Yacht Club founded at Centre Island, New York, one of the earliest surviving yacht clubs in the Western Hemisphere.
- September 2 – The disastrous Polaris expedition reaches 82°45′N, the northernmost latitude of any ship to this time.
- September 3 – New York City residents, tired of the corruption of the "Tammany Hall" political machine and "Boss" William M. Tweed, its "Grand Sachem", meet to form the 'Committee of Seventy' to reform local politics.[1]
October–December
- October 8 – Four major fires break out on the shores of Lake Michigan in Chicago, Illinois, Peshtigo, Wisconsin, Holland, Michigan, and Manistee, Michigan. The Great Chicago Fire is the most famous of these, leaving nearly 100,000 people homeless, although the Peshtigo Fire kills as many as 2,500 people, making it the deadliest fire in United States history.
- October 24 – Chinese massacre of 1871 18 Chinese immigrants in Chinatown, Los Angeles, are killed by a mob of 500 men.
- October 27 – Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall is arrested for bribery, ending his grip on New York City.
- c. November – The South Improvement Company is formed in Pennsylvania by John D. Rockefeller and a group of major railroad interests, in an early effort to organize and control the petroleum industry in the US.
- November 5 – Wickenburg massacre: Six men travelling by stagecoach are reportedly murdered by the Yavapai Indians in Arizona Territory.
- November 17 – The National Rifle Association is granted a charter by the state of New York.
- December 19
- The city of Birmingham, Alabama, is incorporated with the merger of three pre-existing towns.
- Albert L. Jones of New York receives a patent for corrugated paper.
Ongoing
- Reconstruction era (1865–1877)
- Gilded Age (1869–c. 1896)
Births
- March 1 – Ben Harney, composer and ragtime pianist (died 1938)
- May 19 – Walter Russell, polymath (died 1963)
- May 31 – John G. Townsend, Jr., U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1929 to 1941 (died 1964)
- June 17 – James Weldon Johnson, African American songwriter, author, diplomat and educator (died 1938)
- July 27 – Ollie Murray James, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1913 to 1918 (died 1918)
- August 19
- Joseph E. Widener, art collector (died 1943)
- Orville Wright, pioneer aviator (died 1948)
- August 27 – Theodore Dreiser, novelist (died 1945)
- September 9 – Magnus Johnson, U.S. Senator from Minnesota from 1923 to 1925 (died 1936)
- October 2 – Cordell Hull, United States Secretary of State, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (died 1955)
- October 11 – Harriet Boyd Hawes, archaeologist (died 1945)
- October 14 – William Howard Thompson, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1913 to 1919 (died 1928)
- October 17 – Thaddeus H. Caraway, U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 1921 to 1931 (died 1931)
- October 19
- Walter Bradford Cannon, physiologist (died 1945)
- Clyde M. Reed, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1939 to 1949 (died 1949)
- November 1 – Stephen Crane, novelist (died 1900)
- November 9 – Florence R. Sabin, American medical scientist (died 1953)
- November 10 – Winston Churchill, novelist (died 1947)[2]
- December 9 – Joe Kelley, baseball player (died 1943)
- December 20 – Henry Kimball Hadley, composer (died 1937)
Deaths
- January 15 – Edward C. Delavan, temperance movement leader (born 1793)
- February 12 – Alice Cary, poet, sister to Phoebe Cary (born 1820)
- April 2 – Jacob M. Howard, U.S. Senator from Michigan from 1862 to 1871 (born 1805)
- April 23 – James Monroe Whitfield, African American barber, poet and abolitionist (born 1822)
- May 11 – Thomas Buchanan Read, poet and portrait painter (born 1822)
- July 9 – John Slidell, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1853 to 1861 (born 1793)
- July 15 – Tad Lincoln, youngest son of President Lincoln (born 1853)
- July 31 – Phoebe Cary, poet, sister to Alice Cary (born 1824)
- September 9 – Stand Watie, Cherokee Nation leader and a general in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War (born 1806)
- September 21 – Bird Beers Chapman, delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives
- September 22 – Lewis Golding Arnold, U.S. Army officer and a brigadier general in the Union Army during the American Civil War (born 1817)
- October 26 – Robert Anderson, United States Army officer during the American Civil War, died in Nice, France (born 1805)
References
- Snay, Mitchell (2011). Horace Greeley and the Politics of Reform in Nineteenth-Century America. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 172.
- "Winston Churchill | American writer". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
External links
- Media related to 1871 in the United States at Wikimedia Commons
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