1875 in the United States

Events from the year 1875 in the United States.

1875
in
the United States

Decades:
  • 1850s
  • 1860s
  • 1870s
  • 1880s
  • 1890s
See also:

Incumbents

Federal government

Events

Undated

Ongoing

Births

  • January 5 J. Stuart Blackton, film producer (died 1941)
  • January 7 Thomas Hicks, runner (died 1952)
  • January 9 Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, sculptor and socialite (died 1942)
  • January 15 Thomas Burke, sprinter (died 1929)
  • January 22 D. W. Griffith, film director (The Birth of a Nation) (died 1948)
  • January 31 Horace B. Carpenter, film actor and screenwriter (died 1945)
  • March 9 Evelyn Sears, tennis player (died 1966)
  • March 25 Spencer Charters, actor (died 1943)
  • March 28 Helen Westley, actress (died 1942)
  • April 2 Walter Chrysler, automobile pioneer (died 1940)
  • April 4 Samuel S. Hinds, film actor (died 1948)
  • April 9 Jacques Futrelle, fiction writer (died in sinking of the RMS Titanic 1912)
  • April 15 James J. Jeffries, heavyweight boxer (died 1953)
  • May Paul Sarebresole, ragtime composer (died 1911)
  • May 4 John J. Blaine, U.S. Senator from Wisconsin from 1927 to 1933 (died 1934)
  • May 6 William D. Leahy, admiral (died 1959)
  • May 11 Harriet Quimby, pilot (killed in aviation accident 1912)
  • May 23 Alfred Pritchard Sloan, Jr., automobile industrialist (died 1966)
  • June 6 J. Farrell MacDonald, character actor and film director (died 1952)
  • June 25 William V. Mong, film actor, screenwriter and director (died 1940)
  • June 26 Camille Zeckwer, composer (died 1924)
  • July 1 Joseph Weil, con man (died 1976)
  • July 2 Hubert D. Stephens, U.S. Senator from Mississippi from 1923 to 1935 (died 1946)
  • July 10 Mary McLeod Bethune, African American educator (died 1955)
  • July 15 Francis Pierlot, American actor (died 1955)
  • July 19 Alice Dunbar Nelson, African American poet, journalist and political activist of the Harlem Renaissance (died 1935)
  • August 11 Raymond E. Willis, U.S. Senator from Indiana from 1941 to 1947 (died 1956)
  • August 27 Katharine McCormick, suffragist (died 1967)
  • September 1 Edgar Rice Burroughs, popular novelist (d. 1950)
  • September 16 James Cash Penney, businessman, founder of J. C. Penney (died 1971)
  • September 17 John H. Overton, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1933 to 1948 (died 1948)
  • October 23 Gilbert N. Lewis, chemist, first to isolate deuterium (died 1946)
  • October 25 Carolyn Sherwin Bailey, author and educator (died 1961)[7]
  • October 29 Alva B. Adams, U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1923 to 1924 and from 1933 to 1941 (died 1941)
  • November 6 Richard L. Murphy, U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1933 to 1936 (died 1936)
  • November 11 John Jenkins, auto racer (died 1945)
  • November 13 Jimmy Swinnerton, cartoonist and artist (died 1974)
  • November 19 Hiram Bingham III, explorer of South America and U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1924 to 1933 (died 1956)
  • November 30 Myron Grimshaw, baseball player (died 1936)
  • Percy MacKaye, dramatist and poet (died 1956)
  • December 19 Carter G. Woodson, historian, author, teacher, creator of 'Black History Month' (died 1950)

Deaths

See also

References

  1. Martin Gold, Forbidden Citizens: Chinese Exclusion and the U.S. Congress: A Legislative History (TheCapitol.Net, 2012), p. 525.
  2. Erike A. Muse, "Page Act (1875)" in Asian American History and Culture: An Encyclopedia (eds. Huping Ling & Allan W. Austin: Taylor & Francis, 2015).
  3. Lockwood, Jeffrey A. (2004). Locust: the Devastating Rise and Mysterious Disappearance of the Insect that Shaped the American Frontier. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 0738208949.
  4. Kingsbury, John E. (1915). Telephone Exchanges: Their Invention and Development. London: Longmans, Green, & Co. p. 86. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  5. Smith, Ronald A. (1988). Sports and Freedom: The Rise of Big-Time College Athletics. New York: Oxford University Press.
  6. Dorsey, Bruce Allen (2001). "Tangled Webs (and Stories) of Love". Reviews in American History. 29 (1): 78–84. doi:10.1353/rah.2001.0005. Retrieved July 20, 2019.
  7. Kirkpatrick, D.L., ed. (1978). Twentieth-century Children's Writers. London: Macmillan. p. 465. ISBN 978-0-33323-414-3.
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