From Wikipedia - Reading time: 13 min
Events from the year 1868 in the United States.
| Governors and lieutenant governors
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- Governor of Alabama: Robert M. Patton (Democratic) (until July 24), William Hugh Smith (Republican) (starting July 24)
- Governor of Arkansas: Isaac Murphy (Republican) (until July 2), Powell Clayton (Republican) (starting July 2)
- Governor of California: Henry Huntly Haight (Democratic)
- Governor of Connecticut: James E. English (Democratic)
- Governor of Delaware: Gove Saulsbury (Democratic)
- Governor of Florida: David S. Walker (Democratic) (until July 4), Harrison Reed (Republican) (starting July 4)
- Governor of Georgia:
- Governor of Illinois: Richard J. Oglesby (Republican)
- Governor of Indiana: Conrad Baker (Republican)
- Governor of Iowa: William M. Stone (Republican) (until January 16), Samuel Merrill (Republican) (starting January 16)
- Governor of Kansas: Samuel J. Crawford (Republican) (until November 4), Nehemiah Green (Republican) (starting November 4)
- Governor of Kentucky: John W. Stevenson (Democratic)
- Governor of Louisiana:
- Governor of Maine: Joshua Chamberlain (Republican)
- Governor of Maryland: Thomas Swann (Democratic)
- Governor of Massachusetts: Alexander H. Bullock (Republican)
- Governor of Michigan: Henry H. Crapo (Republican)
- Governor of Minnesota: William R. Marshall (Republican)
- Governor of Mississippi: Benjamin G. Humphreys (Democratic) (until June 15), Adelbert Ames (Military) (starting June 15)
- Governor of Missouri: Thomas Clement Fletcher (Republican)
- Governor of Nebraska: David Butler (Republican)
- Governor of Nevada: Henry G. Blasdel (Republican)
- Governor of New Hampshire: Walter Harriman (Republican)
- Governor of New Jersey: Marcus Lawrence Ward (Republican)
- Governor of New York: Reuben Fenton (Republican) (until end of December 31)
- Governor of North Carolina: Jonathan Worth (Conservative) (until July 1), William Woods Holden (Republican) (starting July 1)
- Governor of Ohio: Jacob Dolson Cox (Republican) (until January 13), Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) (starting January 13)
- Governor of Oregon: George L. Woods (Republican)
- Governor of Pennsylvania: John W. Geary (Republican)
- Governor of Rhode Island: Ambrose Everett Burnside (Republican)
- Governor of South Carolina: James Lawrence Orr (Democratic) (until July 6), Robert Kingston Scott (Republican) (starting July 6)
- Governor of Tennessee: William G. Brownlow (Republican)
- Governor of Texas: Elisha M. Pease (Republican)
- Governor of Vermont: John B. Page (Republican)
- Governor of Virginia: Francis Harrison Pierpont (Republican) (until April 4), Henry H. Wells (Republican) (starting April 4)
- Governor of West Virginia: Arthur I. Boreman (Republican)
- Governor of Wisconsin: Lucius Fairchild (Republican)
Lieutenant governors[edit]
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- January 31 – Theodore William Richards, chemist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1914 (died 1928)
- February 3 – William J. Harris, U.S. Senator from Georgia from 1919 to 1932 (died 1932)
- February 5 – Maxine Elliott, actress and businesswoman (died 1940 in France)
- February 10 – William Allen White, journalist (died 1944)
- February 16 – John Rogan, second tallest person in recorded history (died 1905)
- February 20 – John Nathan Cobb, author, naturalist, conservationist, fisheries researcher and educator (died 1930)
- February 23 – W. E. B. Du Bois, African American civil rights leader (died 1963)
- April 6 – Helen Hyde, etcher and engraver (died 1919)
- April 8 – Herbert Spencer Jennings, zoologist (died 1947)
- April 12
- April 21 – Alfred Henry Maurer, modernist painter (suicide 1932)
- April 28 – Hélène de Pourtalès, born Helen Barbey, Olympic sailor (died 1945 in Switzerland)
- March 22 – Robert Millikan, physicist, recipient of Nobel Prize in Physics in 1923 (died 1953)
- May 2 – Robert W. Wood, optical physicist (died 1955)
- May 10 – Ed Barrow, baseball player and manager (died 1953)
- June 4 – Thomas F. Bayard, Jr., U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1922 to 1929 (died 1942)
- June 8 – Robert Robinson Taylor, first accredited African American architect (died 1942)
- June 28 – John F. Nugent, U.S. Senator from Idaho from 1918 to 1921 (died 1931)
- July 4 – Henrietta Swan Leavitt, astronomer (died 1921)[3]
- August 21 – Vess Ossman, ragtime banjo player (died 1923)
- August 23 – Edgar Lee Masters, poet, biographer, dramatist and lawyer (died 1950)
- September 8 – Seth Weeks, African American jazz mandolin player, composer, arranger and bandleader (died 1953)
- September 9 – Mary Hunter Austin, writer (died 1934)
- September 11 – Henry Justin Allen, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1929 to 1931 (died 1950)
- September 22 – John T. Raulston, state judge (died 1956)
- October 8 – Coleman Livingston Blease, U.S. Senator from South Carolina from 1925 to 1931 (died 1942)
- October 10 – Anne Hazen McFarland, physician and medical journal editor (unknown year of death)
- November 3 – Harry Grant Dart, cartoonist (died 1938)[4]
- November 22 – John Nance Garner, 32nd vice president of the United States from 1933 to 1941 (died 1967)
- November 23 – Mary Brewster Hazelton, portrait painter (died 1953)
- November 24 – Scott Joplin, African American ragtime composer and pianist (died 1917)
- December 14 – Louise Hammond Willis Snead, artist, writer, and composer (died 1958)
- December 17 – Frederic M. Sackett, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1925 to 1930 (died 1941)
- December 19 – Eleanor H. Porter, novelist (died 1920)
- December 25 – Eugenie Besserer, silent film actress (died 1934)
- date unknown – Luther Standing Bear, Native American film actor (died 1939)
James Buchanan
- March 4
- May 10 – Henry Bennett, politician (born 1808)
- May 23 – Kit Carson, trapper, scout and Indian agent (born 1809)
- May 24 – Emanuel Leutze, history painter (born 1816 in Germany)
- May 31 – John J. McRae, U.S. Senator from Mississippi from 1851 to 1852 (born 1815)
- June 1 – James Buchanan, 15th president of the United States from 1857 to 1861 (born 1791)
- June 6 – Daniel Pierce Thompson, novelist and lawyer (born 1795)
- June 15 – Warren Ives Bradley, children's author (born 1847)
- June 22 – Heber C. Kimball, Latter Day Saint leader (born 1801)
- July 15 – William T. G. Morton, pioneer of anaesthesia (born 1819)
- July 7 – Edward Coles, planter, politician and the second governor of Illinois (born 1786)
- August 11 – Thaddeus Stevens, politician (born 1792)
- September 17 – Hook Nose, Northern Cheyenne warrior (born c.1823)
- September 19 – William Sprague, minister and politician from Michigan (born 1809)
- October 9 – Howell Cobb, politician (born 1815)
- November 27 – Black Kettle, Southern Cheyenne Peace Chief (born 1803)
- December 25 – Linus Yale, Jr., inventor (born 1821)