1866 in the United States explained
Events from the year 1866 in the United States.
Incumbents
Events
January–March
April–June
July–September
October–December
- October 6 - The Reno Gang commits the first train robbery in the United States, taking a total of $13,000.
- October 7–21 - The Second Plenary Council of American Roman Catholic bishops is held in Baltimore.
- November 5 - House of Representatives elections: Despite President Andrew Johnson's Swing Around the Circle tour, the Republican Party wins in a landslide.
- December 18 - The College of Wooster is founded in Ohio.[3]
Undated
- The dime novel The Dead Letter, an American Romance by 'Seeley Regester' (Metta Victoria Fuller Victor) is published in New York City as the first full-length American work of crime fiction,[4] having begun to appear serially in the January Beadle’s Monthly.
- The Minneapolis Milling Company, predecessor of General Mills, builds its own mills.
Ongoing
- Reconstruction Era (1865–1877)
Births
- January 5 - William B. Hanna, sportswriter (died 1930)
- January 6 - Caro Dawes, wife of Charles G. Dawes, Second Lady of the United States (died 1957)
- January 15 - Horatio Dresser, New Thought religious leader and writer (died 1954)
- January 23 - Lydia Field Emmet, painter and designer (died 1952)
- January 30 - Gelett Burgess, humorist (died 1951)
- February 9 - George Ade, writer, newspaper columnist and playwright (died 1944)
- February 23 - Joseph Miller Huston, architect working in Pennsylvania (died 1940)
- March 3 - William Marmaduke Kavanaugh, U.S. Senator from Arkansas in 1913 (died 1915)
- March 17 - Pierce Butler, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (died 1939)
- March 30 - George Van Haltren, baseball player (died 1945)
- April 13 - Butch Cassidy, born Robert Leroy Parker, outlaw (killed 1909 in Bolivia)
- April 14 - Anne Sullivan, tutor of Helen Keller (died 1936)
- April 24 - Claude C. Hopkins, advertising executive (died 1932)
- April 30 - Mary Haviland Stilwell Kuesel, pioneer dentist (died 1936)
- May 22 - Charles F. Haanel, New Thought author and businessman (died 1949)
- May 23 - Edgar J. Banks, antiquarian (died 1945)
- June 25 - Bertha Fowler, educator (died 1952)
- July 22 - Mary Onahan Gallery, critic (died 1941)
- August 1 - Claude Fayette Bragdon, architect (died 1946)
- August 8 - Matthew Henson, African-American explorer (died 1955)
- September 1 - James J. Corbett, heavyweight boxer (died 1933)[5]
- September 2 - Hiram Johnson, U.S. Senator from California from 1917 to 1945 (died 1945)
- September 16 - Joe Vila, sportswriter (died 1934)
- September 22
- September 25 - Thomas Hunt Morgan, geneticist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1933 (died 1944)
- November 1 – John Sheridan Weller, attorney and politician (died 1944)
- November 27 - George H. Reed, African-American screen actor (died 1952)
- November 28
Deaths
- January 16 - Phineas Quimby, physician (born 1802)
- January 31 - Thomas B. Marsh, leader of the Latter Day Saint movement (born 1800)
- February 13 - John Bernard Fitzpatrick, Catholic Bishop of Boston (born 1812)
- February 21 - Stephen Elliott Jr., Confederate brigadier general (born 1830)
- March 4 - Alexander Campbell, Scotch-Irish American founder of the Disciples of Christ (born 1788)
- March 9 - James F. Trotter, U.S. Senator from Mississippi in 1838 (born 1802)
- March 28 - Solomon Foot, politician (born 1802)
- April 1 - Chester Harding, portrait painter (born 1792)
- May 11 - George Edmund Badger, U.S. Senator from North Carolina from 1846 to 1855 (born 1795)
- May 16 - Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, son of Sacagawea, American explorer, guide, fur trapper, trader, and Military Scout. (born 1805)
- May 26 - Henry Darwin Rogers, geologist (born 1808)
- May 29 - Winfield Scott, presidential candidate in 1853, Union Civil War General (born 1786; died at West Point, New York)
- June 7 - Chief Seattle, Native American leader (born c. 1786)
- June 17 - Lewis Cass, U.S. Senator from Michigan from 1845 to 1848 and from 1849 to 1857 (born 1782)
- July 11 - James H. Lane, Union Civil War General and U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1861 to 1866 (born 1814)
- July 25 - Floride Calhoun, wife of John C. Calhoun, Second Lady of the U.S. (born 1792)
- August 1 - John Ross, Principal Chief of the Cherokee (born 1790)
- August 5 - William Burton, 39th Governor of Delaware from 1859 to 1863 (born 1789)
- September 7 - Clement Comer Clay, U.S. Senator from Alabama from 1837 to 1841 (born 1789)
- October 13 - Celadon Leeds Daboll, merchant and inventor (born 1818)
- December 20 - James Semple, U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1843 till 1847 (born 1798)
See also
- Timeline of United States history (1860–1899)
Notes and References
- Encyclopedia: Civil Rights Act of 1866. Encyclopedia of African American History. 1. Alexander, Leslie. ABC-CLIO. 2010. 699.
- Reynolds . Donald E. . 1964 . The New Orleans Riot of 1866, Reconsidered . Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association . 5 . 1 . 5–27 . 0024-6816.
- Web site: Fast Facts. The College of Wooster. 2013-04-08. 2013-04-19. https://web.archive.org/web/20130419134824/http://www.wooster.edu/about/facts. dead.
- Web site: Miranda. Orso. 2002. Victor, Metta Victoria Fuller. 2013-11-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20130515194856/http://pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/bios/Victor__Metta_Fuller.html. 2013-05-15. dead.
- Web site: James J. Corbett American boxer . Encyclopedia Britannica . 8 August 2021 . en.