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List of events
Events from the year 1881 in the United States . For the second time in history (after 1841), the country had three different presidents in one calendar year:
Rutherford B. Hayes ,
James A. Garfield , and
Chester A. Arthur .
Rutherford B. Hayes (
R -
Ohio ) (until March 4)
James A. Garfield (
R -
Ohio ) (March 4 – September 19)
Chester A. Arthur (
R -
New York ) (starting September 19)
William A. Wheeler (
R -
New York ) (until March 4)
Chester A. Arthur (
R -
New York ) (March 4 – September 19)
vacant (starting September 19)
Samuel J. Randall (
D -
Pennsylvania ) (until March 4)
J. Warren Keifer (
R -
Ohio ) (starting December 5)
Governors and
lieutenant governors
Governor of Alabama :
Rufus W. Cobb (
Democratic )
Governor of Arkansas :
William Read Miller (
Democratic ) (until January 11),
Thomas James Churchill (
Democratic ) (starting January 11)
Governor of California :
George Clement Perkins (
Republican )
Governor of Colorado :
Frederick Walker Pitkin (
Republican )
Governor of Connecticut :
Charles B. Andrews (
Republican ) (until January 5),
Hobart B. Bigelow (
Republican ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Delaware :
John W. Hall (
Democratic )
Governor of Florida :
George Franklin Drew (
Democratic ) (until January 4),
William D. Bloxham (
Democratic ) (starting January 4)
Governor of Georgia :
Alfred H. Colquitt (
Democratic )
Governor of Illinois :
Shelby Moore Cullom (
Republican )
Governor of Indiana :
Isaac P. Gray (
Democratic ) (until January 10),
Albert G. Porter (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Iowa :
John H. Gear (
Republican )
Governor of Kansas :
John P. St. John (
Republican )
Governor of Kentucky :
Luke P. Blackburn (
Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana :
Louis A. Wiltz (
Democratic ) (until October 16),
Samuel D. McEnery (
Democratic ) (starting October 16)
Governor of Maine :
Daniel F. Davis (
Republican ) (until January 13),
Harris M. Plaisted (
Democratic )
Governor of Maryland :
William T. Hamilton (
Democratic )
Governor of Massachusetts :
John Davis Long (
Republican )
Governor of Michigan :
Charles Croswell (
Republican ) (until January 1),
David Jerome (
Republican ) (starting January 1)
Governor of Minnesota :
John S. Pillsbury (
Republican )
Governor of Mississippi :
John M. Stone (
Democratic )
Governor of Missouri :
John Smith Phelps (
Democratic ) (until January 10),
Thomas Theodore Crittenden (
Democratic ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Nebraska :
Albinus Nance (
Republican )
Governor of Nevada :
John Henry Kinkead (
Republican )
Governor of New Hampshire :
Natt Head (
Republican ) (until June 2),
Charles H. Bell (
Republican ) (starting June 2)
Governor of New Jersey :
George B. McClellan (
Democratic ) (until January 18),
George C. Ludlow (
Democratic ) (starting January 18)
Governor of New York :
Alonzo B. Cornell (
Republican )
Governor of North Carolina :
Thomas Jordan Jarvis (
Democratic )
Governor of Ohio :
Charles Foster (
Republican )
Governor of Oregon :
W. W. Thayer (
Democratic )
Governor of Pennsylvania :
Henry M. Hoyt (
Republican )
Governor of Rhode Island :
Alfred H. Littlefield (
Republican )
Governor of South Carolina :
Johnson Hagood (
Democratic )
Governor of Tennessee :
Albert S. Marks (
Democratic ) (until January 17),
Alvin Hawkins (
Republican ) (starting January 17)
Governor of Texas :
Oran M. Roberts (
Democratic )
Governor of Vermont :
Roswell Farnham (
Republican )
Governor of Virginia :
Frederick W. M. Holliday (
Democratic )
Governor of West Virginia :
Henry M. Mathews (
Democratic ) (until March 4),
Jacob B. Jackson (
Democratic ) (starting March 4)
Governor of Wisconsin :
William E. Smith (
Republican )
March 4:
James A. Garfield becomes the 20th U.S. president
Chester A. Arthur becomes the 20th U.S. vice president
January 25 –
Thomas Edison and
Alexander Graham Bell form the
Oriental Telephone Company .
February 2 – The 5.6
Parkfield earthquake affects central California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII (Very strong ). Some damage occurred near Imusdale northwest of Parkfield, including cracks in the roads, fallen chimneys, and partially collapsed buildings.
[1]
February 5 –
Phoenix, Arizona , is incorporated.
February 14 –
Pine City, Minnesota , is incorporated.
[2]
February 19 –
Kansas becomes the first
U.S. state to
prohibit all
alcoholic beverages .
February 22 –
Cleopatra's Needle is erected in
Central Park ,
New York City .
March –
Barnum & Bailey's "Greatest Show on Earth" opens in
Madison Square Garden .
March 4 –
James A. Garfield is sworn in as the 20th
president of the United States , and
Chester A. Arthur is sworn in as the 20th
vice president .
March 15 – First plots of
Abilene, Texas , are auctioned; the town is incorporated later in the year.
September 19: Vice President
Chester A. Arthur becomes the 21st U.S. president after the death of
Garfield
July 2 –
Assassination of James A. Garfield :
James A. Garfield ,
President of the United States , is shot by
lawyer
Charles J. Guiteau at the
Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station in Washington, D.C. He survives the shooting but suffers from
infection of his wound, dying on September 19.
July 4 – The
Tuskegee Institute opens in
Alabama .
July 14 –
Billy the Kid is shot and killed by
Pat Garrett outside
Fort Sumner .
July 20 –
Indian Wars :
Sioux chief
Sitting Bull leads the last of his fugitive people in surrender to United States troops at
Fort Buford in
Montana .
Summer – First ever
summer camp held, on Chocorua Island in
Grafton County, New Hampshire .
August 27 – The fifth hurricane of the
1881 Atlantic hurricane season hits Florida and the Carolinas, killing about 700.
September 5 – The
Thumb Fire in the
U.S. state of
Michigan destroys over a million acres (4,000 km²) and kills 282 people.
September 12 –
Francis Howell High School (Howell Institute) in
St. Charles, Missouri , and
Stephen F. Austin High School in
Austin, Texas , open on the same day, putting them in a tie for the title of the oldest public
high school west of the
Mississippi River .
September 19 – President
James A. Garfield dies weeks after being shot. Vice President
Chester A. Arthur becomes the 21st
president of the United States .
January 8 –
Henrik Shipstead , U.S. Senator from Minnesota from 1923 to 1947 (died
1960 )
January 15 –
John Rodgers , U.S. Navy officer, naval aviation pioneer (died in aviation accident
1926 )
January 21 –
Arch McCarthy , baseball player
January 31 –
Irving Langmuir , chemist, recipient of the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1932 (died
1957 )
February 17 –
Bess Streeter Aldrich , fiction writer (died
1954 )
February 28 –
Otto Dowling , U.S. Navy officer and 25th
Governor of American Samoa (died
1946 )
March 4
March 12 –
Arthur Raymond Robinson , U.S. Senator from Indiana from 1925 to 1935 (died
1961 )
March 13 –
Louis Chauvin , ragtime pianist (died
1908 )
March 29 –
Raymond Hood , Art Deco architect (died
1934 )
April 16 –
Alice Corbin Henderson , poet (died
1949 )
May 14
June 9 –
Marion Leonard , silent film actress (died
1956 )
July 2 –
Royal Hurlburt Weller , politician (died
1929 )
July 4 –
Ulysses S. Grant III , soldier and planner (died
1968 )
July 8 –
Mantis James Van Sweringen , financier (died
1935 )
July 11 –
Louise Marion Bosworth , social scientist (died
1982 )
July 22
July 30 –
Smedley Butler , U.S. Marine Corps general (died
1940 )
August 3 –
Nathan Post , 7th and 10th Governor of American Samoa (died
1938 )
August 10 –
Witter Bynner , poet and scholar (died
1968 )
August 12 –
Cecil B. DeMille , film director (died
1959 )
August 20 –
Edgar Albert Guest , poet (died 1959)
September 8 –
Harry Hillman , track athlete (died
1945 )
September 26 –
Hiram Wesley Evans , Ku Klux Klan Imperial Wizard (died
1966 )
October 1 –
William Boeing , engineer and airplane manufacturer (died 1956)
October 10 –
David Baird Jr. , U.S. Senator from New Jersey from 1929 to 1930 (died
1955 )
October 22 –
Clinton Davisson , physicist, recipient of the
Nobel Prize in Physics in 1937 (died
1958 )
October 30 –
Elizabeth Madox Roberts , novelist and poet (died
1941 )
November 5 –
George A. Malcolm , lawyer,
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines and educator (died 1961)
November 9 –
Margaret Reed Lewis , cell biologist (died
1970 )
November 15 –
Franklin Pierce Adams (F.P.A.), columnist, critic, writer and wit, member of the
Algonquin Round Table (died 1960)
November 20 –
Arthur Marshall , ragtime composer and performer (died
1968 )
December 3 –
Henry Fillmore , American composer and bandleader (died 1956)
December 5 –
Martin W. Clement , president of the
Pennsylvania Railroad from 1935 to 1948 (died 1966)
December 12 –
Doris Keane , stage actress (died 1945)
December 16 –
Daniel F. Steck , U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1926 to 1931 (died 1950)
George Steidler
James A. Garfield
January 3 –
Anna McNeill Whistler , James Whistler's mother and subject of his painting (born
1804 )
February 14 –
Fernando Wood , New York City mayor (born
1812 )
February 23 –
Robert F. R. Lewis , naval officer (born
1826 )
April 24 –
James T. Fields , publisher (born
1817 )
May 21 –
Thomas A. Scott , industrialist (born
1823 )
June 18 –
Henry S. Lane , U.S. Senator from Indiana from 1836 to 1837 and from 1854 to 1858 (born
1811 )
July 14 –
Billy The Kid , Old West gunfighter (killed) (born
1859 )
July 17 –
Jim Bridger , explorer and trapper (born 1804)
August 10 –
Orville Hickman Browning , U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1866 to 1869 (born
1806 )
September 7 –
Sidney Lanier , musician and dialect poet (born
1842 )
September 13 –
Ambrose Burnside , Union Army general, railroad executive, inventor, industrialist and Rhode Island Senator (born
1824 )
September 15 –
Susan May Williams , railroad heiress, wife of
Jérôme Napoléon Bonaparte (born
1812 )
September 19 –
James A. Garfield , 20th president of the U.S. from March to September 1881 (assassinated) (born
1831 )
September 22 –
Solomon L. Spink , U.S. Congressman from Illinois (born 1831)
October 3 –
Orson Pratt , religious leader (born
1811 )
October 8 –
Joseph Carter Abbott , U.S. Senator from North Carolina from 1868 to 1871 (born
1825 )
October 12 –
Josiah Gilbert Holland , novelist and poet (born
1819 )
October 26 – shot in the
gunfight at the O.K. Corral
October 31 –
George W. DeLong , naval officer and Arctic explorer (starvation) (born
1844 )
November 23 –
Abijah Gilbert , U.S. Senator from Florida from 1869 to 1875 (born
1806 )
December 4 –
Wood Hite , outlaw and cousin of Jesse and Frank James (shot) (born
1850 )
December 13 –
John Quidor , painter (born
1801 )