From Wikipedia - Reading time: 13 min
Events from the year 1876 in the United States .
Michael C. Kerr (D -Indiana ) (until August 19)
Samuel J. Randall (D -Pennsylvania ) (starting December 4)
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governor of Alabama : George S. Houston (Democratic )
Governor of Arkansas : Augustus Hill Garland (Democratic )
Governor of California : William Irwin (Democratic )
Governor of Colorado : John Long Routt (Republican ) (starting August 1)
Governor of Connecticut : Charles R. Ingersoll (Democratic )
Governor of Delaware : John P. Cochran (Democratic )
Governor of Florida : Marcellus Stearns (Republican )
Governor of Georgia : James M. Smith (Democratic )
Governor of Illinois : John Lourie Beveridge (Republican )
Governor of Indiana : Thomas A. Hendricks (Democratic )
Governor of Iowa : Cyrus C. Carpenter (Republican ) (until January 13), Samuel J. Kirkwood (Republican ) (starting January 13)
Governor of Kansas : Thomas A. Osborn (Republican )
Governor of Kentucky : James B. McCreary (Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana : William Pitt Kellogg (Republican )
Governor of Maine : Nelson Dingley, Jr. (Republican ) (until January 5), Seldon Connor (Republican Party ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Maryland : James B. Groome (Democratic ) (until January 12), John Lee Carroll (Democratic ) (starting January 12)
Governor of Massachusetts : William Gaston (Democratic ) (until January 6), Alexander H. Rice (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Michigan : John J. Bagley (Republican )
Governor of Minnesota : Cushman K. Davis (Republican ) (until January 7), John S. Pillsbury (Republican ) (starting January 7)
Governor of Mississippi : Adelbert Ames (Republican ) (until March 29), John M. Stone (Democratic ) (starting March 29)
Governor of Missouri : Charles Henry Hardin (Democratic )
Governor of Nebraska : Silas Garber (Republican )
Governor of Nevada : Lewis R. Bradley (Democratic )
Governor of New Hampshire : Person C. Cheney (Republican )
Governor of New Jersey : Joseph D. Bedle (Democratic )
Governor of New York : Samuel J. Tilden (Democratic ) (until end of December 31)
Governor of North Carolina : Curtis Hooks Brogden (Republican )
Governor of Ohio : William Allen (Democratic ) (until January 10), Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Oregon : La Fayette Grover (Democratic )
Governor of Pennsylvania : John F. Hartranft (Republican )
Governor of Rhode Island : Henry Lippitt (Republican )
Governor of South Carolina : Daniel Henry Chamberlain (Republican ) (until December 14), Wade Hampton III (Democratic ) (starting December 14)
Governor of Tennessee : James D. Porter (Democratic )
Governor of Texas : Richard Coke (Democratic ) (until December 21), Richard B. Hubbard (Democratic ) (starting December 21)
Governor of Vermont : Asahel Peck (Republican ) (until October 5), Horace Fairbanks (Republican ) (starting October 5)
Governor of Virginia : James L. Kemper (Democratic )
Governor of West Virginia : John J. Jacob (Democratic )/(Independent )
Governor of Wisconsin : William Robert Taylor (Democratic ) (until January 3), Harrison Ludington (Republican ) (starting January 3)
Lieutenant governors [ edit ]
"Centennial Mirror", showing events from 1776 (left) compared with similar events in 1876 (right)
April 17 – Friends Academy is founded by Gideon Frost at Locust Valley, New York .
May 10 – The Centennial Exposition begins in Philadelphia , Pennsylvania .
May 18 – Wyatt Earp starts work in Dodge City, Kansas , serving under Marshal Larry Deger.
May 29 – Senate votes 37 to 29 that Secretary of War William W. Belknap cannot be barred from trial and impeachment , despite being a private citizen; however, this is far short of the two-thirds majority required and thus he is acquitted.
June 4 – The Transcontinental Express arrives in San Francisco, California via the First Transcontinental Railroad , 83 hours and 39 minutes after having left New York City .
June 11 – Rutherford B. Hayes selected by the Republicans as presidential candidate.
June 17 – Indian Wars : Battle of the Rosebud – 1,500 Sioux and Cheyenne led by Crazy Horse beat back General George Crook 's forces at Rosebud Creek in Montana Territory .
June 25 – Indian Wars: Battle of the Little Bighorn – an army under Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer is defeated by 1,500-2,500 Lakota , Cheyenne and Arapaho led by Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse , suffering over 300 casualties.
June 27 – Samuel J. Tilden selected by the Democrats as presidential candidate.
Emile Berliner invents an improved form of microphone which will be adopted for Alexander Graham Bell 's telephone.[ 5]
Meharry Medical College is founded in Nashville, Tennessee , as the Medical Department of Central Tennessee College ; it is the first medical school for African Americans in the South .
Lyford House, by Richardson Bay , Tiburon, California is constructed.
Heinz Tomato Ketchup introduced.
Adolphus Busch 's brewery, Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis , Missouri , first markets Budweiser , a pale lager , as a nationally sold beer .
Melville Reuben Bissell files a patent for an improved carpet sweeper .[ 6]
First carousel at Coney Island built by Charles I. D. Looff .
Spring – Vast numbers of Indians move north to an encampment of the Sioux chief Sitting Bull in the region of the Little Bighorn River , creating the last great gathering of native peoples on the Great Plains .
January 12
January 23 – Bess Houdini , stage assistant and wife of Harry Houdini (died 1943 )
February 4 – Sarah Norcliffe Cleghorn , poet and socialist (died 1959 )
February 16 – Mack Swain , actor and vaudevillian (died 1935 )
March 5 – John Flammang Schrank , attempted assassin of Theodore Roosevelt (died 1943 )
March 11 – Carl Ruggles , composer (died 1971 )
March 21 – Walter Tewksbury , track athlete (died 1968 )
March 31 – William H. Dieterich , U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1933 to 1939 (died 1940 )
April 9 – Park Trammell , U.S. Senator from Florida from 1917 to 1936 (died 1936 )
April 23 – Mary Ellicott Arnold , social activist (died 1968 )
June 5 – Tony Jackson , jazz pianist (died 1920 )
July 12 – Alphaeus Philemon Cole , portrait painter (died 1988 )
August 8 – Pat McCarran , Democratic United States Senator from Nevada from 1933 until 1954 (died 1954 )
August 18 – George B. Martin , U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1918 to 1919 (died 1945 )
September 13 – Sherwood Anderson , novelist (died 1941 )
September 16
September 26 – Edith Abbott , social worker and educator (died 1957 )
October 10 Nash; William James Bryan , U.S. Senator from Florida from 1907 to 1908 (died 1908 )
November 23 – Thomas M. Storke , U.S. Senator from California from 1938 to 1939 (died 1971 )
November 24 – Walter Burley Griffin , architect (died 1937 )
November 29 – Nellie Tayloe Ross , 14th Governor of Wyoming from 1925 to 1927 and director of the United States Mint from 1933 to 1953; first female state governor in the U.S. (died 1977 )
December 9 – Pauline Whittier , golfer (died 1946 )[ 8]
December 12 – Alvin Kraenzlein , hurdler (died 1928 )
December 20 – Walter Sydney Adams , astronomer (died 1956 )
January 10 – Gordon Granger , U.S. and Union Army general (born 1822 )
January 15 – Eliza McCardle Johnson , First Lady of the United States , Second Lady of the United States (born 1810 )
February 18 – Charlotte Cushman , actress (born 1816 )
April 9 – Charles Goodyear , politician (born 1804 )
April 23 – Archibald Dixon , U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1852 to 1855 (born 1802 )
May 7 – William Buell Sprague , clergyman and biographer (born 1795 )
June 20 – John Neal , eccentric and influential writer, critic, lecturer, and activist (born 1793 )[ 10]
June 25 – George Armstrong Custer , U.S. Army colonel (in battle) (born 1839 )
August 2 – Wild Bill Hickok , gunfighter and gambler (murdered) (born 1837 )
August 23 – Joseph R. Underwood , U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1847 to 1853 (born 1791 )
September 27 – Braxton Bragg , U.S. and Confederate Army general (born 1817 )
October 1 – James Lick , land baron (born 1796 )
December 3 – Samuel Cooper , United States Army officer during the Second Seminole War and the Mexican–American War , highest-ranking Confederate general during the American Civil War (born 1798 )
December 9 – George Trenholm , 2nd Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury (born 1807 )
^ Roth, Cheyna (December 28, 2023). "My Favorite Victorian Criminal Was a Bank Robber With a Secret Weapon" . Slate . ISSN 1091-2339 . Retrieved January 6, 2024 .
^ Dewey, Melvil (1876). A Classification and Subject Index for Cataloguing and Arranging the Books and Pamphlets of a Library . OCLC 78870163 . Retrieved July 31, 2012 .
^ "The Carnal Rain – Careful Investigation of the Kentucky Marvel" (PDF) . New York Herald . March 21, 1876. p. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 19, 2018.
^ U.S. Patent #174,466.
^ "Birth of the Microphone: How Sound Became Signal" . Wired . ISSN 1059-1028 . Retrieved September 19, 2023 .
^ Baxter, Albert (1891). History of the City of Grand Rapids, Michigan . Munsell.
^ "Warren Hugh Twining" . Political Graveyard. Retrieved November 7, 2011 .
^ "Olympedia – Polly Whittier" . www.olympedia.org . Retrieved July 20, 2021 .
^ Bell, John L. Hard Times : Beginnings of the Great Depression in North Carolina, 1929-1933. Raleigh: North Carolina Dept. of Cultural Resources, Division of Archives and History, 1982. Print.
^ Sears, Donald A. (1978). John Neal . Boston, Massachusetts: Twayne Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 080-5-7723-08 .