1915 in the United States explained
Events from the year 1915 in the United States.
Incumbents
Events
January–March
- January - While working as a cook at New York's Sloan Hospital under an assumed name, Typhoid Mary infects 25 people, and is placed in quarantine for life.
- January 12 - The United States House of Representatives rejects a proposal to give women the right to vote.
- January 21 - Kiwanis International is founded in Detroit, Michigan.
- January 26 – Rocky Mountain National Park is established.
- January 28 - An act of the U.S. Congress designates the United States Coast Guard, begun in 1790, as a military branch over 19 years.
- February 2 - Vanceboro international bridge bombing
- February 8 - The controversial film, The Birth of a Nation, directed by D. W. Griffith, premieres in Los Angeles.
- February 12 - In Washington, D.C. the first stone of the Lincoln Memorial is put into place.
- February 20 - In San Francisco, California the Panama–Pacific International Exposition is opened.
- March 3 - NACA, the predecessor of NASA, is founded.
- March 25 - The USS F-4 submarine sinks off Hawaii; 23 are killed.
- March 28 - The first Roman Catholic Liturgy is celebrated by Archbishop John Ireland at the newly consecrated Cathedral of Saint Paul in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
April–June
- May 6 - Babe Ruth hits his first career home run off of Jack Warhop.
- May 7 - The is sunk on passage from New York to Britain by a German U-boat, killing 1,198.
- May 22 - Lassen Peak, one of the Cascade Volcanoes in Northern California, erupts, sending an ash plume 30,000 feet in the air and devastating the nearby area with pyroclastic flows and lahars. It is the only volcano to erupt in the contiguous United States between 1900 and the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.
- June 9 - U.S. Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan resigns over a disagreement regarding his nation's handling of the Lusitania sinking.
- June 12 - "The class the stars fell on" graduates from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York.
- June 21 - Guinn v. United States is decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, finding grandfather clause exemptions to literacy tests for voters to be unconstitutional.
- June 22 - The Imperial Valley earthquakes shook southeastern Southern California, causing six deaths and financial losses of $900,000. Each shock in this doublet earthquake measured 5.5 and had a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe).
July–September
October–December
Undated
Ongoing
Births
- January 1 - Tom Godwin, science fiction author (died 1980)
- January 2 - John Hope Franklin, historian (died 2009)
- January 3 - Sid Hudson, baseball player (died 2008)
- January 4 - Meg Mundy, English-born actress (died 2016)
- January 5 - Arthur H. Robinson, geographer and cartographer (died 2004)
- January 6 - Don Edwards, politician (died 2015)
- January 9 - Anita Louise, actress (died 1970)
- January 14 - Mark Goodson, television game show producer (died 1992)
- January 16 - Leslie H. Martinson, television and film director (died 2016)
- January 20 - Edward Stewart, set decorator (died 1999)
- January 22 - C. L. Franklin, minister and Civil Rights Activist, father of Aretha Franklin (died 1984)
- January 24 - Robert Motherwell, painter (died 1991)
- January 29 - John Serry, Sr., musician, composer and arranger (died 2003)
- January 30 - Ed Keats, admiral (died 2019)
- January 31
- February 5 - Robert Hofstadter, physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1990)
- February 10 - Karl Winsch, baseball player and manager (died 2001)
- February 14 - Ray Evans, composer (died 2007)
- February 16 - Jim O'Hora, college football coach (died 2005)
- February 21 - Ann Sheridan film actress (died 1967)
- February 23 - Paul Tibbets, World War II bomber pilot (Enola Gay) (died 2007)
- February 26 - Preacher Roe, baseball player (died 2008)
- February 28 - Zero Mostel, born Samuel Mostel, film and stage actor (died 1977)
- March 20
- March 29 - Helen Yglesias, novelist (died 2008)
- April 7
- April 16 - Joan Alexander, American actress (died 2009)
- May 1 - Archie Williams, athlete (died 1993)
- May 2 - Doris Fisher, singer and songwriter (died 2003)
- May 5 - Alice Faye, entertainer (died 1998)
- May 6 - Orson Welles, actor and director (died 1985)
- May 8 - Milton Meltzer, historical writer (died 2009)
- May 15 - Paul Samuelson, economist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2009)[4]
- May 26 - Sam Edwards, actor (died 2004)
- May 27 - Herman Wouk, novelist (died 2019)[5]
- June 10 - Saul Bellow, Canadian-born novelist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2005)[6]
- June 12 - David Rockefeller, banker and philanthropist (died 2017)
- June 15 - Thomas Huckle Weller, virologist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2008)
- June 17 - David "Stringbean" Akeman, country music banjo player (died 1973)
- June 19 - Pat Buttram, actor (died 1994)
- July 1 - Willie Dixon, blues musician (died 1992)
- July 5 - John Woodruff, African-American middle-distance runner (died 2007)
- July 7 - Peter H. Dominick, U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1963 to 1975 (died 1981)
- July 15 - Albert Ghiorso, nuclear scientist (died 2010)
- July 17 - Fred Ball, movie studio executive, actor and brother of Lucille Ball (died 2007)
- July 18 - Roxana Cannon Arsht, judge (died 2003)
- July 28
- July 28 - Dick Sprang, comic book artist during the golden age of comics and explorer (died 2000)
- August 4 - William Keene, actor (died 1992)
- August 5 – Mildred Burke, professional wrestler (died 1989)
- August 12 - Michael Kidd, choreographer (died 2007)
- August 13 - Katherine Loker, née Bogdanovich, philanthropist (died 2008)
- August 14 - Irene Hickson, baseball player (died 1995)
- August 19 - Ring Lardner Jr., film screenwriter (died 2000)
- August 25
- August 27 - Norman F. Ramsey, physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2011)
- August 28
- September 23 - Clifford Shull, physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2001)
- October 1 - Jerome Bruner, developmental and educational psychologist (died 2016)
- October 4 - Beverly Loraine Greene, African-American architect (died 1957)
- October 24
- October 6 - Ralph Tyler Smith, U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1969 to 1970 (died 1972)
- October 17 - Arthur Miller, playwright and essayist (died 2005)
- November 9 - Sargent Shriver, Peace Corps founder (died 2011)
- November 14 - Billy Bauer, cool jazz guitarist (died 2005)
- November 19 - Earl Wilbur Sutherland Jr., physiologist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 1974)
- November 26 - Earl Wild, pianist (died 2010)
- November 29
- November 30 - Brownie McGhee, Piedmont blues musician (died 1996)
- December 12 - Frank Sinatra, singer and actor (died 1998)
Deaths
- January 19 - Abram J. Buckles, soldier and jurist (born 1846)
- February 18 - Frank James, outlaw (born 1843)
- March 5 - Thomas R. Bard, U.S. Senator from California from 1900 until 1905 (born 1841)
- March 15 - Joseph Ackroyd, member of the New York State Senate (born 1847)
- April 1 - Laura Alberta Linton, American chemist (born 1853)
- April 14 - John Englehart, Northwest Frontier painter (born 1867)
- April 16 - Nelson W. Aldrich, U.S. Senator from Rhode Island from 1881 until 1911 (born 1841)
- April 26 - John Bunny, silent film comedian (born 1863)
- April 29 - John R. Lindgren, founder of the banking firm Haugan & Lindgren (born 1855)
- May 7 - Sinking of the RMS Lusitania:
- June 19 - Benjamin F. Isherwood, admiral (born 1822)
- July 16 - Ellen G. White, co-founder of the Seventh-day Adventist Church (born 1827)
- August 25 - Henry Overholser, businessman (born 1846)
- September 13 - Andrew L. Harris, Civil War hero and Governor of Ohio (born 1835)
- October 10 - Albert Cashier, born Jennie Hodgers, soldier (born 1843 in Ireland)
- November 14 - Booker T. Washington, African-American educator (born 1856)
- November 16 - Julius C. Burrows, U.S. Senator from Michigan from 1895 until 1911 (born 1837)
- November 21 - Dixie Haygood, magician (born 1861)
- December 22 - Rose Talbot Bullard, physician (born 1864)
See also
External links
- Web site: . 1915 . Timeline . https://archive.today/20141122203444/http://dp.la/timeline%231915#1915. November 22, 2014 . dead.
Notes and References
- https://archive.org/details/sim_new-york-times_1915-08-19_64_21026 "Grim Tragedy in Woods"
- Book: Louvish, Simon. Simon Louvish. Monkey Business. St. Martin's Press. 2000. New York. 10–11. 978-0-312-25292-2.
- News: The long legacy of the U.S. occupation of Haiti . Washington Post . 19 August 2022.
- Book: Milton Friedman. Paul Anthony Samuelson. Milton Friedman and Paul A. Samuelson Discuss the Economic Responsibility of Government. 1980. Center for Education and Research in Free Enterprise, Texas A&M University. 17.
- Book: Heinz-Dietrich Fischer. Novel / Fiction Awards, 1917-1994. 1996. Saur. 978-3-598-30180-3. 135.
- Book: The Georgia Review. 1995. University of Georgia. 76.