Decades:
1860s
1870s
1880s
1890s
1900s
See also:
Events from the year 1882 in the United States .
Incumbents
Federal government
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama : Rufus W. Cobb (Democratic ) (until December 1), Edward A. O'Neal (Democratic ) (starting December 1)
Governor of Arkansas : Thomas James Churchill (Democratic )
Governor of California : George Clement Perkins (Republican )
Governor of Colorado : Frederick Walker Pitkin (Republican )
Governor of Connecticut : Hobart B. Bigelow (Republican )
Governor of Delaware : John W. Hall (Democratic )
Governor of Florida : William D. Bloxham (Democratic )
Governor of Georgia : Alfred H. Colquitt (Democratic ) (until November 4), Alexander H. Stephens (Democratic ) (starting November 4)
Governor of Illinois : Shelby Moore Cullom (Republican )
Governor of Indiana : Albert G. Porter (Republican )
Governor of Iowa : John H. Gear (Republican ) (until January 12), Buren R. Sherman (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Governor of Kansas : John P. St. John (Republican )
Governor of Kentucky : Luke P. Blackburn (Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana : Samuel D. McEnery (Democratic )
Governor of Maine : Harris M. Plaisted (Democratic )
Governor of Maryland : William T. Hamilton (Democratic )
Governor of Massachusetts : John Davis Long (Republican )
Governor of Michigan : David Jerome (Republican )
Governor of Minnesota : John S. Pillsbury (Republican ) (until January 10), Lucius F. Hubbard (Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Mississippi : John M. Stone (Democratic ) (until January 29), Robert Lowry (Democratic ) (starting January 29)
Governor of Missouri : Thomas Theodore Crittenden (Democratic )
Governor of Nebraska : Albinus Nance (Republican )
Governor of Nevada : John Henry Kinkead (Republican )
Governor of New Hampshire : Charles H. Bell (Republican )
Governor of New Jersey : George C. Ludlow (Democratic )
Governor of New York : Alonzo B. Cornell (Republican ) (until end of December 31)
Governor of North Carolina : Thomas Jordan Jarvis (Democratic )
Governor of Ohio : Charles Foster (Republican )
Governor of Oregon : W. W. Thayer (Democratic ) (until September 13), Z. F. Moody (Republican ) (starting September 13)
Governor of Pennsylvania : Henry M. Hoyt (Republican )
Governor of Rhode Island : Alfred H. Littlefield (Republican )
Governor of South Carolina : Johnson Hagood (Democratic ) (until December 1), Hugh Smith Thompson (Democratic ) (starting December 1)
Governor of Tennessee : Alvin Hawkins (Republican )
Governor of Texas : Oran M. Roberts (Democratic )
Governor of Vermont : Roswell Farnham (Republican ) (until October 5), John L. Barstow (Republican ) (starting October 5)
Governor of Virginia : Frederick W. M. Holliday (Democratic ) (until January 1), William E. Cameron (Re-adjuster ) (starting January 1)
Governor of West Virginia : Jacob B. Jackson (Democratic )
Governor of Wisconsin : William E. Smith (Republican ) (until January 2), Jeremiah McLain Rusk (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant governors
Events
January–March
April–June
July–September
October–December
Undated
Ongoing
Sport
Births
Franklin D. Roosevelt
January 6 – Sam Rayburn , Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (died 1961 )
January 12 – Milton Sills , stage and film actor (died 1930 )
January 30 – Franklin D. Roosevelt , 32nd president of the United States , served from 1933 to 1945 (died 1945 )[ 7]
February 8 – Thomas Selfridge , United States Army officer, first person killed in airplane crash (died 1908 )
February 18 – Sonora Smart Dodd , founder of Father's Day (died 1978 )
February 28 – Geraldine Farrar , operatic soprano and film actress (died 1967 )
May 9 – George Barker , painter (died 1965 )
May 23 – James Gleason , American actor, playwright, and screenwriter (died 1959 )
July 22 – Edward Hopper , painter (died 1967 )
July 24 – Lynn Thorndike , historian of medieval science and alchemy (died 1965 )
July 26 – Dixie Bibb Graves , U.S. Senator from Alabama from 1937 to 1938 (died 1965 )
September 1 – Georgina Jones , American tennis player (died 1955 )[ 8]
September 12 – George L. Berry , U.S. Senator from Tennessee from 1937 to 1938 (died 1948 )
October 5 – Robert Goddard , rocket scientist (died 1945 )
October 14 – Éamon de Valera , third president of Ireland (died 1975 in Ireland )
November 20 – Ethel May Halls , actress (died 1967 )
November 29 – Cattle Annie , outlaw with Little Britches (died 1978 )
Deaths
January 3 – Clement Claiborne Clay , U.S. Senator from Alabama from 1853 to 1862, Confederate States Senator from Alabama from 1862 to 1864 (born 1816 )
January 30 – Henry Whitney Bellows , clergyman of the Unitarian Church (born 1814 )
February 25 – James Bates , U.S. Representative from Maine from 1831 to 1833 (born 1789 )
March 4 – Milton Latham , U.S. Senator from California from 1860 to 1863 (born 1827 )
March 24 – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow , poet and professor, dies of peritonitis in his Cambridge home (born 1807 )
April 27 – Ralph Waldo Emerson , essayist and poet (born 1803 )
June 30 – Charles Guiteau , assassin of President James A. Garfield (hung) (born 1841 )
July 16 – Mary Todd Lincoln , First Lady of the United States (born 1818 )
July 19 – George N. Stearns , founder of E. C. Stearns & Company (born 1812 )
July 23 – George Perkins Marsh , diplomat, philologist and pioneer environmentalist (born 1801 )
August 8 – Gouverneur K. Warren , civil engineer and Union Army general in the American Civil War (born 1830 )
August 16 – Benjamin Harvey Hill , U.S. Senator from Georgia from 1877 to 1882 (born 1823 )
September 27 – Fernando C. Beaman , teacher, lawyer and politician from Michigan (born 1814 )
November 5 – Robert Woodward Barnwell , U.S. Senator from South Carolina from 1862 to 1865 (born 1801 )
November 8 – Richard Arnold , Union Army brigadier general (born 1828 )
December 10 – Alexander Gardner , Scottish-born Civil War photographer (born 1821 )
December 12 – Robert Morris , abolitionist and one of the first African American lawyers (born 1823 )
See also
References
^ Whitten, David O.; Whitten, Bessie Emrick (1990). Handbook of American Business History: Manufacturing . Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 182 .
^ Cooper, John. "Oscar Wilde's 1882 American Lecture Tour" . Oscar Wilde in America . Retrieved 2018-11-12 .
^ Johnson, John W. (2001). Historic U.S. Court Cases . U.S.: Taylor & Francis. p. 54.
^ In January he opened the Holborn Viaduct power station in London.
^ Collection/American Catholic Historical Society/Newspapers and Magazines/Redpath Weekly/RedpathWeekly-00001.xml "Redpath's Illustrated Weekly" , July 22, 1882. Retrieved 2011-2-17.
^ Ala. General Assembly. Journal of the Senate . 1882–1883 sess., 155 , accessed July 28, 2023
^ Burns, James MacGregor (1956). Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox . Easton Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-15-678870-0 .
^ "Olympedia – Georgina Jones" . www.olympedia.org . Retrieved 20 July 2021 .
External links
18th century 19th century 20th century 21st century By U.S. state/territory