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1986 in the United States
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Decades:
1960s
1970s
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2000s
See also:
History of the United States (1980–1991)
Timeline of the history of the United States (1970-1990)
List of years in the United States by state or territory
v
t
e
Events from the year 1986 in the United States.
Incumbents
[edit]
Federal government
[edit]
President: Ronald Reagan (R-California)
Vice President: George H. W. Bush (R-Texas)
Chief Justice:
Warren E. Burger (Virginia) (until September 26)
William Rehnquist (Virginia) (starting September 26)
Speaker of the House of Representatives: Tip O'Neill (D-Massachusetts)
Senate Majority Leader: Bob Dole (R-Kansas)
Congress: 99th
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
[edit]
Governor of Alabama: George Wallace (Democratic)
Governor of Alaska: Bill Sheffield (Democratic) (until December 1), Steve Cowper (Democratic) (starting December 1)
Governor of Arizona: Bruce Babbitt (Democratic)
Governor of Arkansas: Bill Clinton (Democratic)
Governor of California: George Deukmejian (Republican)
Governor of Colorado: Richard Lamm (Democratic)
Governor of Connecticut: William A O'Neill (Democratic)
Governor of Delaware: Michael Castle (Republican)
Governor of Florida: Bob Graham (Democratic)
Governor of Georgia: Joe Frank Harris (Democratic)
Governor of Hawaii: George Ariyoshi (Democratic) (until December 1), John D. Waihee III (Democratic) (starting December 1)
Governor of Idaho: John V. Evans (Democratic)
Governor of Illinois: James R. Thompson (Republican)
Governor of Indiana: Robert D. Orr (Republican)
Governor of Iowa: Terry E. Branstad (Republican)
Governor of Kansas: John W. Carlin (Democratic)
Governor of Kentucky: Martha Layne Collins (Democratic)
Governor of Louisiana: Edwin W. Edwards (Democratic)
Governor of Maine: Joseph E. Brennan (Democratic)
Governor of Maryland: Harry R. Hughes (Democratic)
Governor of Massachusetts: Michael Dukakis (Democratic)
Governor of Michigan: James Blanchard (Democratic)
Governor of Minnesota: Rudy Perpich (Democratic)
Governor of Mississippi: William Allain (Democratic)
Governor of Missouri: John Ashcroft (Republican)
Governor of Montana: Ted Schwinden (Democratic)
Governor of Nebraska: Bob Kerrey (Democratic)
Governor of Nevada: Richard Bryan (Democratic)
Governor of New Hampshire: John H. Sununu (Republican)
Governor of New Jersey: Thomas Kean (Republican)
Governor of New Mexico: Toney Anaya (Democratic)
Governor of New York: Mario Cuomo (Democratic)
Governor of North Carolina: James G. Martin (Republican)
Governor of North Dakota: George A. Sinner (Democratic)
Governor of Ohio: Dick Celeste (Democratic)
Governor of Oklahoma: George Nigh (Democratic)
Governor of Oregon: Victor G. Atiyeh (Republican)
Governor of Pennsylvania: Dick Thornburgh (Republican)
Governor of Rhode Island: Edward D. DiPrete (Republican)
Governor of South Carolina: Richard Riley (Democratic)
Governor of South Dakota: Charles H. Sheldon (Republican)
Governor of Tennessee: Lamar Alexander (Republican)
Governor of Texas: Mark White (Democratic)
Governor of Utah: Norman H. Bangerter (Republican)
Governor of Vermont: Madeleine M. Kunin (Democratic)
Governor of Virginia: Chuck Robb (Democratic) (until January 18), Gerald L. Baliles (Democratic) (starting January 18)
Governor of Washington: Booth Gardner (Democratic)
Governor of West Virginia: Arch A. Moore Jr. (Republican)
Governor of Wisconsin: Tony Earl (Democratic)
Governor of Wyoming: Edgar J. Herschler (Democratic)
Lieutenant governors
[edit]
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama: Bill Baxley (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska: Stephen McAlpine (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas: Winston Bryant (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of California: Leo T. McCarthy (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado: Nancy E. Dick (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: Joseph J. Fauliso (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware: Shien Biau Woo (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Florida: Wayne Mixson (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Georgia: Zell Miller (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii: John D. Waihee III (Democratic) (until December 2), Ben Cayetano (Democratic) (starting December 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho: David H. Leroy (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: George H. Ryan (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: John Mutz (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa: Robert T. Anderson (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas: Thomas R. Docking (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: Steve Beshear (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana: Robert "Bobby" Freeman (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Maryland: J. Joseph Curran (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan: Martha W. Griffiths (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota: Marlene Johnson (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: Brad Dye (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Harriett Woods (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Montana: George Turman (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska: Donald F. McGinley (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada: Bob Cashell (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico: Mike Runnels (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of New York: Warren M. Anderson (Republican) (until end of December 31)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina: Robert B. Jordan, III (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota: Ruth Meiers (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio: vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma: Spencer Bernard (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania: William Scranton, III (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Richard A. Licht (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: Michael R. Daniel (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota: Lowell C. Hansen II (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee: John S. Wilder (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas: William P. Hobby Jr. (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Utah: W. Val Oveson (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Peter Plympton Smith (Republican)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia: Richard Joseph Davis (Democratic) (until January 18), Douglas Wilder (Democratic) (starting January 18)
Lieutenant Governor of Washington: John Cherberg (Democratic)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin: James Flynn (Democratic)
Events
[edit]
January
[edit]
January 28: Space Shuttle Challenger disaster
January 12 – STS-61-C: Space Shuttle Columbia is launched with the first Hispanic-American astronaut, Dr. Franklin Chang Díaz.
January 20 – The first federal Martin Luther King Jr. Day, honoring Martin Luther King Jr., is observed.
January 23 – The first group of artists are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, which included Elvis Presley, James Brown, Little Richard, Fats Domino, Ray Charles, Chuck Berry, Sam Cooke, the Everly Brothers, Buddy Holly, and Jerry Lee Lewis.
January 24 – The Voyager 2 space probe makes its first encounter with Uranus.
January 26 – Super Bowl XX: The Chicago Bears defeat the New England Patriots 46–10 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana.
January 28
STS-51-L: Space Shuttle Challenger disintegrates 73 seconds after launch, killing the crew of seven astronauts, including schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe (see Space Shuttle Challenger disaster).
President Ronald Reagan postpones for one week the State of the Union address that had been scheduled for the evening and instead addresses the nation on the Challenger disaster.
January 31 – Two earthquakes (5.0 Mw and 4.4 Mw ) affected northeastern Ohio causing minor damage and 17 injuries. The shocks in this doublet earthquake occurred almost six hours apart with both having a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong).[1]
February
[edit]
February 4 – President Reagan delivers his fifth State of the Union Address.
February 19 – After waiting 37 years, the United States Senate approves a treaty outlawing genocide.
February 25 – People Power Revolution: President Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines goes into exile in Hawaii after 20 years of rule; Corazon Aquino becomes the first Filipino woman president, first as an interim president. Salvador Laurel becomes her vice president.
February 27 – The United States Senate allows its debates to be televised on a trial basis.
March
[edit]
Halley's Comet reaches the closest point to the Earth during its second visit to the Solar System in the 20th century. The next time it will be seen is predicted for 2061.
March 9 – United States Navy divers find the largely intact but heavily damaged crew compartment of the Space Shuttle Challenger; the bodies of all seven astronauts are still inside.
March 24 – The 58th Academy Awards, hosted by Alan Alda, Jane Fonda and Robin Williams, are held at Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, with Sydney Pollack's Out of Africa winning Best Picture, Best Director and five other awards out of 11 nominations. The film is tied in nominations by Steven Spielberg's The Color Purple.
March 26 – An article in The New York Times charges that Kurt Waldheim, former United Nations Secretary General and candidate for president of Austria, may have been involved in Nazi war crimes during World War II.
April
[edit]
April 5 – 1986 West Berlin discotheque bombing: The West Berlin discothèque, a known hangout for United States soldiers, is bombed, killing three and injuring 230; Libya is held responsible.
April 15 – Operation El Dorado Canyon: At least 15 people die after United States planes bomb targets in the Libyan capital, Tripoli, and the Benghazi region.
April 17 – British journalist John McCarthy is kidnapped in Beirut (released in August 1991) and three others are found dead; Revolutionary Cells (RZ) claims responsibility in retaliation for the U.S. bombing of Libya.
April 29
Roger Clemens sets the record for the most strikeouts in a 9-inning Major League Baseball game, striking out 20 batters.
A major fire at Los Angeles Public Library caused by arson destroys 400,000 volumes.[2]
May
[edit]
May 25: Hands Across America
May 9 – The first victim of serial killer John Wayne Gacy who hadn't been seen alive for 14 years is identified as 16-year-old Timothy McCoy of Omaha, Nebraska, who disappeared January 2, 1972 after encountering Gacy in Chicago, Illinois, and was killed the next morning.
May 16 – Top Gun, an action film featuring naval aviation and starring Tom Cruise, Anthony Edwards, Val Kilmer and Kelly McGillis, debuts in cinemas. It goes on to become the highest-grossing film of the year, netting nearly $177 million in America alone.[3]
May 25 – Hands Across America: approximately 6.5 million people form a human chain from New York City to Long Beach, California, to raise money to fight hunger and homelessness.
June
[edit]
June 4 – Jonathan Pollard pleads guilty to espionage for selling top secret United States military intelligence to Israel.
June 5–11 – Excedrin cyanide tampering crisis (see Stella Nickell).
June 8 – The Boston Celtics defeat the Houston Rockets in six games to win the NBA Championship.
June 9 – The Rogers Commission Report is released on the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster.
June 19 – American college basketball player Len Bias suffers a fatal cardiac arrhythmia from a cocaine overdose less than 48 hours after being selected 2nd overall by the Boston Celtics in the 1986 NBA draft.
July
[edit]
July 5 – The Statue of Liberty is reopened to the public after an extensive refurbishing.
July 8 – The 6.0 Mw North Palm Springs earthquake shook Southern California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII (Very strong), causing 29–40 injuries and $4.5–6 million in losses.
July 13 – The 5.8 Mw Oceanside earthquake shook the south coast of California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong), causing $700,000 in losses and one death.
July 21 – The 6.2 Mw Chalfant Valley earthquake shook eastern California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VI (Strong), causing $2.7 million in losses and two injuries.
August
[edit]
August 31: Cerritos mid-air collision
August 6 – In Louisville, Kentucky, William J. Schroeder, the second artificial heart recipient, dies after 620 days.
August 20 – In Edmond, Oklahoma, United States Postal Service employee Patrick Sherrill guns down 14 of his co-workers before committing suicide.
August 31
Aeroméxico Flight 498, a Douglas DC-9, collides with a Piper PA-28 over Cerritos, California, killing 67 on both aircraft and 15 on the ground.
The cargo ship Khian Sea departs from the docks of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, carrying 14,000 tons of toxic waste. It wanders the seas for the next 16 months trying to find a place to dump its cargo.
September
[edit]
September 5 – Pan Am Flight 73, a flight from Bombay, India, to John F. Kennedy Airport in New York, is hijacked. Twenty-one people are killed during the hijacking, including nationals from India, the United States, Pakistan, and Mexico.
October
[edit]
October 1 – U.S. President Ronald Reagan signs the Goldwater–Nichols Act into law, making official the largest reorganization of the United States Department of Defense since the Air Force was made a separate branch of service in 1947.
October 9
United States District Court Judge Harry E. Claiborne becomes the fifth federal official to be removed from office through impeachment.
The Fox Broadcasting Company (then abbreviated as FBC; now Fox) launches as the United States' fourth commercial broadcast television network, the first such attempt since 1967.
October 11 – Cold War: Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev meet in Reykjavík, Iceland, to continue discussions about scaling back their intermediate missile arsenals in Europe (the talks break down in failure).
October 22 – In New York City, WNBC Radio's traffic helicopter crashes into the Hudson River, killing traffic reporter Jane Dornacker. The last words heard on-the-air were Dornacker's screams of terror, "Hit the water! Hit the water! Hit the water!"
October 27
World Series: The New York Mets defeat the Boston Red Sox in 7 games. This is the second world series title in the Mets franchise. It is also remembered for Game 6, when Bill Buckner lets an easy ground ball hit by Mookie Wilson roll through his legs, letting the Mets win and pull even with the Red Sox in the series.
Great Basin National Park is established.
October 28 – The centennial of the Statue of Liberty's dedication is celebrated in New York Harbor.
November
[edit]
November 3 – Iran–Contra affair: The Lebanese magazine Ash-Shiraa reports that the United States has been selling weapons to Iran in secret, in order to secure the release of seven American hostages held by pro-Iranian groups in Lebanon.
November 4
Democrats regain control of the United States Senate for the first time in six years. In California, Chief Justice Rose Bird and two colleagues are removed by voters from the Supreme Court of California for opposing capital punishment.
The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands officially becomes a territory of the United States.
November 21 – Iran-Contra Affair: National Security Council member Oliver North and his secretary, Fawn Hall, start shredding documents implicating them in selling weapons to Iran and channeling the proceeds to help fund the Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
November 22 – Mike Tyson wins his first world boxing title by defeating Trevor Berbick in Las Vegas, becoming the youngest heavyweight champion ever at age 20.
November 25 – Iran-Contra Affair: U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese announces that profits from covert weapons sales to Iran were illegally diverted to the anti-communist Contra rebels in Nicaragua.
November 26 – Iran-Contra Affair: U.S. President Ronald Reagan announces that as of December 1, former Senator John Tower, former Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, and former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft will serve as members of the Special Review Board looking into the scandal (they became known as the Tower Commission). Reagan denies involvement in the scandal.
December
[edit]
December – The unemployment rate drops to 6.6%, the lowest since March 1980.
December 20 – Three African Americans are assaulted by a group of white teens in the Howard Beach neighborhood of Queens, New York. One of the victims, Michael Griffith, is run over and killed by a motorist while attempting to flee the attackers.
December 26 – After 35 years on the airwaves and holding the title of the longest-running non-news program on network television, NBC airs the final episode of daytime drama Search for Tomorrow.
December 31 – A fire at the Dupont Plaza Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, kills 97 and injures 140.
Ongoing
[edit]
Cold War (1947–1991)
Iran–Contra affair (1985–1987)
Births
[edit]
Those born in the year 1986 are considered millennials (Generation Y or Gen Y).
Chris Motionless, singer and frontman for Motionless in White
October 18 – Josh Romanski, baseball player
October 19
London Crawford, football player
Moses Stone, hip-hop artist, music producer, entrepreneur, and actor
October 20 – Ryan Bedford, Olympic speed skater
October 21
Natalee Holloway, young female who went missing in Aruba in 2005
Sean McInerney, surfer and stunt performer
Riley Skinner, football player
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, Russian-born terrorist (d. 2013)
October 22
Mike Blumel, speed skater
Chancellor, South Korean-born musician
Kyle Gallner, actor
October 23
Mark Cardenas, politician
Briana Evigan, actress and dancer
LoLa Monroe, rapper, model, and actress
Jessica Stroup, actress
October 24
Brayden Coombs, football coach
Drake, Canadian-American actor and rapper
October 25
Antwon, rapper
Didi Benami, singer and American Idol contestant
Tweety Carter, basketball player
Hannah Cohen, singer and model
Kyle Moore, football player
Eloy Pérez, boxer (d. 2019)
October 26
Robert Carroll, politician
Annabelle Dexter-Jones, British-born actress
Schoolboy Q, rapper
October 27
Jimmy Bartolotta, basketball player
Boyd Brown, politician
Chris Butler, ice hockey player
Casanova, rapper
Erica Dasher, actress
Christine Evangelista, actress
Crystal Langhorne, basketball player
Monte Money, singer, guitarist for Escape the Fate (2004–2013), and frontman for Beyond Unbroken
October 28
Helena Andrews, author, journalist, and pop culture critic
Dorrough, rapper
Tamar Kaprelian, musician and singer
Alex Zayne, wrestler
October 29
Ciron Black, football player
Italia Ricci, Canadian-born actress
Derek Theler, actor
October 31
Jim Cummings, actor and filmmaker
Lee Fang, journalist
Sean Paul Lockhart, porn actor and director
November
[edit]
Penn BadgleyMaggie GoodlanderKatie LeclercMichael KratsiosAaron SwartzJosh PeckVictor CruzKalistoCory Michael SmithJerry RoushAshley FinkKatie CassidyArjun GuptaMax Rose
November 1
Yamiche Alcindor, journalist
Penn Badgley, actor
Michelle Sechser, Olympic rower
November 2
Brandon Barklage, soccer player
Yurizan Beltran, pornographic actress, model, and mainstream actress (d. 2017)
Hannah Hart, YouTuber
Jade Jolie, drag queen and TV personality
November 3
Bethany Cosentino, singer and songwriter
Yael Averbuch West, soccer player
Davon Jefferson, basketball player
Jermaine Jones, singer
Jasmine Trias, singer
November 4
Amanda Blumenherst, golfer
Kristin Cast, author
Maggie Goodlander, politician
November 5 – Cavalier Johnson, politician, mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (2021–present)
November 6
James Ferraro, experimental musician, producer, composer and contemporary artist
Katie Leclerc, actress
Miguel Mena, Peruvian-born jockey (d. 2021)
Ben Rector, singer/songwriter and record producer
November 7
Caleb Bonham, businessman and TV personality
Amanda Busick, sports reporter
James Ferraro, musician and contemporary artist
Andy Hull, singer and frontman for Manchester Orchestra
Michael Kratsios, business executive
Patrick Trahan, football player
November 8
Kevin Bivona, musician and audio engineer
Ryan Colburn, football player
Ilya Serov, Russian-born trumpeter and singer
Aaron Swartz, computer programmer, internet activist, and co-founder of Reddit (d. 2013)
November 9
Cody Brown, football player
Kali Fajardo-Anstine, novelist and writer
November 10
Chase Coffman, football player
Aaron Crow, baseball player
Andy Mientus, actor, singer, composer, and writer
Josh Peck, actor, voice actor, comedian
Eric Thames, baseball player
November 11
Jon Batiste, musician and TV personality
Victor Cruz, football player
Anthony Purpura, rugby player
Mark Sanchez, football player
November 12 – Sean Canfield, football player
November 13
Josh Bell, baseball player
Selvish Capers, football player
Evan Strong, Paralympic snowboard cross racer
November 14
Thomas Austin, football player and coach
Michael Bihovsky, actor and composer
Matthew Bogusz, politician
Courtney Enders, drag racer
Kalisto, wrestler and luchador
Cory Michael Smith, actor
Sophie von Haselberg, actress
November 15
Winston Duke, Trinbagonian-born actor
Coye Francies, football player
Matthew Patrick, YouTuber
Jerry Roush, singer/songwriter and frontman for Sky Eats Airplane (2006–2009), Of Mice & Men (2010–2011), and Glass Cloud
Devin Thomas, football player
Jason Trost, actor and filmmaker
November 16 – Omar Mateen, Islamic terrorist, mass murderer and perpetrator of the Orlando nightclub shooting
November 17
Christina Birch, cyclist
Erik Lorig, football player
November 18 – Joseph Ashton, actor
November 19
Zane Beadles, football player
Erin Hamlin, Olympic luger
Veronica Scott, fashion designer
November 20
Chris Camozzi, mixed martial artist
Josh Carter, basketball player
Ashley Fink, actress and singer
Djuan Trent, YouTuber and pageant winner
November 21
Colleen Ballinger, Internet personality, YouTuber, and comedian
Alex Barnett, basketball player
Ben Bishop, hockey player
Kyle Bosworth, football player
November 22 – Claire Lutz, kite surfer
November 24
Dean Anna, baseball player
K. C. Asiodu, football player
Jimmy Graham, football player
Mohamed Massaquoi, football player
Kenny Phillips, football player
November 25
Randy Blake, kickboxer
Katie Cassidy, actress
Cole Escola, comedian, actor, and singer
Jason Rae, politician
November 26
Antonella Barba, singer
Trevor Morgan, actor
Lauren Nelson, beauty queen and pageant winner
November 27
Joe Cox, football player and coach
Tiffany Pham, entrepreneur, model, TV personality, author, and founder and CEO of Mogul