1874 in the United States
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Events from the year 1874 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal Government
- President: Ulysses S. Grant (R-Ohio)
- Vice President: Henry Wilson (R-Massachusetts)
- Chief Justice: Morrison Waite (Ohio) (starting March 4)
- Speaker of the House of Representatives: James G. Blaine (R-Maine)
- Congress: 43rd
Events
- January 1 – New York City annexes The Bronx.
- February 21 – The Oakland Daily Tribune newspaper is first publishes its first.
- March 18 – Hawaii signs a treaty with the United States granting exclusive trading rights.
- March – The Young Men's Hebrew Association in Manhattan (which continues to operate more than 140 years later as the 92nd Street Y) is founded.
- May 20 – Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis receive a U.S. patent for blue jeans with copper rivets. The price is $13.50 per dozen.
- July 1
- Philadelphia Zoo opens, the first public zoo in the U.S.
- Four-year-old Charley Ross, America's first major kidnapping for ransom victim, is taken from his home in Philadelphia.
- The Sholes and Glidden typewriter, with cylindrical platen and QWERTY keyboard, is first marketed.
- November 4 – Democrats regain the U.S. House of Representatives for the first time since 1860.
- November 7 – Harper's Weekly publishes a political cartoon by Thomas Nast considered the first important use of an elephant as a symbol for the Republican Party.[1]
- November 9 – The Sigma Kappa sorority is founded at Colby College in Waterville, Maine, by Mary Caffrey Low, Elizabeth Gorham Hoag, Ida Fuller, Frances Mann, and Louise Helen Coburn.
- November 11 – The Gamma Phi Beta sorority is founded at Syracuse University. This is the first women's Greek letter organization to be called a sorority.
- November 24 – Inventor Joseph Glidden patents barbed wire.
- November 25 – The United States Greenback Party is established as a "National Independent" political party, composed primarily of farmers financially hurt by the Panic of 1873.
- November 28 – King Kalākaua's 1874–75 state visit to the United States begins when the ship carrying him from Hawaii, USS Benicia, docks in San Francisco.
Undated
- The San Diego Natural History Museum is founded.
- Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn, laid out by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, is completed.
Ongoing
- Reconstruction era (1865–1877)
- Gilded Age (1869–c. 1896)
- Depression of 1873–79 (1873–1879)
Births
- January 4 – John W. Thomas, U.S. Senator from Idaho from 1928 to 1933 and from 1940 to 1945 (died 1945)
- January 7 – M. M. Logan, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1931 to 1939 (died 1939)
- January 9 – Helen Tufts Bailie, social reformer and activist (died 1962)
- January 29 – John D. Rockefeller Jr., financier and philanthropist, son of John D. Rockefeller (died 1960)
- April 5 – Jesse H. Jones, entrepreneur, 9th United States Secretary of Commerce (died 1956)
- April 16 – Frederick Van Nuys, U.S. Senator from Indiana from 1933 to 1944 (died 1944)
- March 5 – Daniel O. Hastings, U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1928 to 1937 (died 1966)
- March 26 – Robert Frost, poet (died 1963)
- March 29 – Lou Henry Hoover, First Lady of the United States as wife of Herbert Hoover (died 1944)
- May 20 – Augustine Lonergan, U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1933 to 1939 (died 1947)
- July 1 – Edward P. Costigan, U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1931 to 1937 (died 1939)
- August 10
- Herbert Hoover, 31st President of the United States from 1929 to 1933 (died 1964)
- Tod Sloan, jockey (died 1933)
- September 13 – Henry F. Ashurst, U.S. Senator from Arizona from 1912 to 1941 (died 1962)
- December 4 – Edwin S. Broussard, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1921 to 1933 (died 1934)
Deaths
- January 7 – John Burton Thompson, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1853 to 1859 (born 1810)
- January 17 – Chang and Eng Bunker, Thai-American conjoined twin brothers (born 1811)
- February 24 – John Bachman, Lutheran minister, social activist and naturalist (born 1790)
- March 8 – Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the U.S. from 1850 to 1853, and 12th Vice President of the U.S. from 1849 to 1850 (born 1800)
- March 11 – Charles Sumner, U.S. Senator from Massachusetts from 1851 to 1874 (born 1811)
- June 8 – Cochise, one of the greatest leaders of the Apache Indians, dies on the Chiricahua reservation in southeastern Arizona
- October 6 – Samuel M. Kier, industrialist (born 1813)
- November 20 – Jackson Morton, U.S. Senator from Florida from 1849 to 1855 (born 1794)
- Full date unknown
- Paul Jennings, slave of James Madison, writer (born 1799)
- Eliza Seymour Lee, pastry chef and restaurateur (born 1800)
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External links
Media related to 1874 in the United States at Wikimedia Commons
References
- "On This Day: November 7, 1874". The New York Times. 2001. Retrieved 2018-11-17.
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