Decades: 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s See also:
Events from the year 1905 in the United States .
Incumbents vacant (until March 4) Charles W. Fairbanks (R -Indiana ) (starting March 4) Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors Governor of Alabama : William D. Jelks (Democratic ) Governor of Arkansas : Jeff Davis (Democratic ) Governor of California : George Pardee (Republican ) Governor of Colorado : Governor of Connecticut : Abiram Chamberlain (Republican ) (until January 4), Henry Roberts (Republican ) (starting January 4) Governor of Delaware : John Hunn (Republican ) (until January 17), Preston Lea (Republican ) (starting January 17) Governor of Florida : William Sherman Jennings (Democratic ) (until January 3), Napoleon B. Broward (Democratic ) (starting January 3) Governor of Georgia : Joseph M. Terrell (Democratic ) Governor of Idaho : John T. Morrison (Republican ) (until January 2), Frank R. Gooding (Republican ) (starting January 2) Governor of Illinois : Richard Yates, Jr. (Republican ) (until January 9), Charles S. Deneen (Republican ) (starting January 9) Governor of Indiana : Winfield T. Durbin (Republican ) (until January 9), J. Frank Hanly (Republican ) (starting January 9) Governor of Iowa : Albert B. Cummins (Republican ) Governor of Kansas : Willis J. Bailey (Republican ) (until January 9), Edward W. Hoch (Republican ) (starting January 9) Governor of Kentucky : J. C. W. Beckham (Democratic ) Governor of Louisiana : Newton Crain Blanchard (Democratic ) Governor of Maine : John Fremont Hill (Republican ) (until January 4), William T. Cobb (Republican ) (starting January 4) Governor of Maryland : Edwin Warfield (Democratic ) Governor of Massachusetts : John L. Bates (Republican ) (until January 5), William L. Douglas (Democratic ) (starting January 5) Governor of Michigan : Aaron T. Bliss (Republican ) (until January 1), Fred M. Warner (Republican ) (starting January 1) Governor of Minnesota : Samuel Rinnah Van Sant (Republican ) (until January 4), John A. Johnson (Democratic ) (starting January 4) Governor of Mississippi : James K. Vardaman (Democratic ) Governor of Missouri : Alexander Monroe Dockery (Democratic ) (until January 9), Joseph W. Folk (Democratic ) (starting January 9) Governor of Montana : Joseph Toole (Democratic ) Governor of Nebraska : John H. Mickey (Republican ) Governor of Nevada : John Sparks (Silver ) Governor of New Hampshire : Nahum J. Bachelder (Republican ) (until January 5), John McLane (Republican ) (starting January 5) Governor of New Jersey : Franklin Murphy (Republican ) (until January 17), Edward C. Stokes (Republican ) (starting January 17) Governor of New York : Frank W. Higgins (Republican ) (starting January 1) Governor of North Carolina : Charles Brantley Aycock (Democratic ) (until January 11), Robert Broadnax Glenn (Democratic ) (starting January 11) Governor of North Dakota : Frank White (Republican ) (until January 4), Elmore Y. Sarles (Republican ) (starting January 4) Governor of Ohio : Myron T. Herrick (Republican ) Governor of Oregon : George Chamberlain (Democratic ) Governor of Pennsylvania : Samuel W. Pennypacker (Republican ) Governor of Rhode Island : Lucius F. C. Garvin (Democratic ) (until January 4), George H. Utter (Republican ) (starting January 4) Governor of South Carolina : Duncan Clinch Heyward (Democratic ) Governor of South Dakota : Charles N. Herreid (Republican ) (until January 3), Samuel H. Elrod (Republican ) (starting January 3) Governor of Tennessee : James B. Frazier (Democratic ) (until March 21), John I. Cox (Democratic ) (starting March 21) Governor of Texas : S. W. T. Lanham (Democratic ) Governor of Utah : Heber Manning Wells (Republican ) (until January 2), John Christopher Cutler (Republican ) (starting January 2) Governor of Vermont : Charles J. Bell (Republican ) Governor of Virginia : Andrew Jackson Montague (Democratic ) Governor of Washington : Henry McBride (Republican ) (until January 9), Albert E. Mead (Republican ) (starting January 9) Governor of West Virginia : Albert B. White (Republican ) (until March 4), William M. O. Dawson (Republican ) (starting March 4) Governor of Wisconsin : Robert M. La Follette, Sr. (Republican ) Governor of Wyoming : Fenimore Chatterton (Republican ) (until January 2), Bryant B. Brooks (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant governors Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : Russell M. Cunningham (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of California : Alden Anderson (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Colorado : Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut : Henry Roberts (Republican ) (until January 4), Rollin S. Woodruff (Republican ) (starting January 4) Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : Philip L. Cannon (Republican ) (until January 17), Isaac T. Parker (Republican ) (starting January 17) Lieutenant Governor of Idaho : James M. Stevens (Republican ) (until January 2), Burpee L. Steeves (Republican ) (starting January 2) Lieutenant Governor of Illinois : William Northcott (Republican ) (until January 9), Lawrence Sherman (Republican ) (starting January 9) Lieutenant Governor of Indiana : Newton W. Gilbert (Republican ) (until January 9), Hugh T. Miller (Republican ) (starting January 9) Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : John Herriott (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : David J. Hanna (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : William P. Thorne (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana : Jared Y. Sanders, Sr. (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Curtis Guild, Jr. (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Michigan : Alexander Maitland (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : Ray W. Jones (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : John Prentiss Carter (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : Thomas Lewis Rubey (Democratic ) (until January 9), John C. McKinley (Republican ) (starting January 9) Lieutenant Governor of Montana : Frank G. Higgins (Democratic ) (until October 15), Edwin L. Norris (Democratic ) (starting October 15) Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska : Edmund G. McGilton (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Lemuel Allen (political party unknown) Lieutenant Governor of New York : Matthew Linn Bruce (Republican ) (starting January 1) Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : Wilfred D. Turner (Democratic ) (until January 11), Francis D. Winston (Democratic ) (starting January 11) Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota : David Bartlett (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : Warren G. Harding (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania : William M. Brown (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : George H. Utter (Republican ) (until January 3), Frederick Jackson (Republican ) (starting January 3) Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : John Sloan (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota : George W. Snow (Republican ) (until January 3), John E. McDougall (Republican ) (starting January 3) Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : Lieutenant Governor of Texas : George D. Neal (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : Charles H. Stearns (Republican ) Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : Joseph Edward Willard (Democratic ) Lieutenant Governor of Washington : vacant (until January 9), Charles E. Coon (Republican ) (starting January 9) Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin : James O. Davidson (Republican )
Events March 4: Charles W. Fairbanks becomes the 26th U.S. vice president
January–June January 6 – The Senate confirms the nomination of William D. Crum , an African-American, to the office of collector of customs at Charleston, South Carolina after Crum's nomination by President Theodore Roosevelt.[ 1] January 30 – The Supreme Court renders its unanimous decision in the landmark case of Swift & Co. v. United States , allowing the federal government to regulate monopolies.[ 2] March 4 – President Theodore Roosevelt begins his first full term. Charles W. Fairbanks is sworn in as Vice President of the United States . March 10 – In Cleveland, Ohio , Cassie Chadwick is sentenced for 14 years in prison for fraud. March 17 – Franklin D. Roosevelt marries his fifth cousin Eleanor Roosevelt ; President Roosevelt, the bride's uncle, gives her away. March 20 – Grover Shoe Factory disaster : A boiler explosion, building collapse and fire in Brockton, Massachusetts kills 58. March 24 – Toastmasters International is founded by Ralph C. Smedley in Bloomington, Illinois .[ 3] March 27 – Plumas National Forest is established. April 6 – Lochner v. New York : The Supreme Court of the United States invalidates New York's 8-hour-day law. April 6–July 19 – The 1905 Chicago Teamsters' strike ; 21 people die and 416 are injured in the violence.[ 4] May–June – John C. Merriam leads the Saurian Expedition , a paleontological research mission in northern Nevada . May 6 – Klamath National Forest is established. May 10 – The 1905 Snyder, Oklahoma tornado destroys much of Snyder, Oklahoma , killing at least 97. May 12 – Gunnison National Forest is established. May 15 – Las Vegas, Nevada is founded when 110 acres (45 ha), in what later becomes downtown, are auctioned off. May 15 – Saint Tikhon's Orthodox Monastery is founded in South Canaan Township in western Wayne County, in the northeastern corner of Pennsylvania. May 29 – Sawtooth National Forest is established. June 1–October 14 – The Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition is held in Portland, Oregon , celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Lewis and Clark Expedition . June 2 – Lassen National Forest is established. June 3 – San Juan and Payette National Forest is established. June 14 – Uncompahgre National Forest is established. June 24 – The founding convention of the Industrial Workers of the World , A radical workers union, which had great impact during the first two decades of the 20th century.
July–December September 5: Treaty of Portsmouth September 11: Ninth Avenue derailment
Undated
Ongoing
Sport
Births January 3 – Anna May Wong , film actress (died 1961 ) January 7 - Sterling Holloway , actor (died 1992 ) January 7 – James Simpson Jr. , race car driver and politician (died 1960 ) January 11 – Dorothy Hale , socialite (suicide 1938 ) January 19 – Oveta Culp Hobby , government official and businesswoman (died 1995 ) January 24 – J. Howard Marshall , billionaire businessman (died 1995 )[ 9] January 27 – Howard McNear , actor (died 1969 )[ 10] February 6 – Merze Tate , African American academic (died 1996 ) February 10 March 15 – Nat Perrin , comedy screenwriter (died 1998 ) March 17 – Lillian Yarbo , actress (died 1996 )[ 12] March 18 – Thomas Townsend Brown , inventor (died 1985 ) April 9 – J. William Fulbright , U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 1945 to 1974 (died 1995 ) May 11 – Catherine Bauer Wurster , architect and public housing advocate (died 1964 ) May 15 – Joseph Cotten , actor (died 1994 ) May 16 – Henry Fonda , actor (died 1982 )[ 13] May 18 – Ruth Alexander , pioneering American pilot (died 1930 ) June 10 – Sally Childs , language training specialist (died 1988 )[ 14] June 20 – Lillian Hellman , playwright (born 1984 )[ 15] July 4 – Irving Johnson , sailor and author (died 1991 ) July 15 – Dorothy Fields , lyricist (died 1974 ) July 18 – Robert Elton Brooker , business executive (died 2000 ) July 21 – David M. Kennedy , U.S. 60th Secretary of Treasury, 8th U.S. Representative to N.A.T.O., Special Representative of The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ and Latter-day Saints (died 1996 ) August 2 – Ruth Nelson , actress (died 1992 )[ 16] August 21- Friz Freleng , animator, cartoonist, director, producer, and composer (died 1995 ) August 23 – Abbie Rowe , White House photographer (died 1967 ) October 5 – John Hoyt , actor, editorial board member of The Yale Record (died 1991 ) October 6 – Helen Wills , tennis player (died 1998 ) October 7 – Andy Devine , character actor (died 1977 ) October 11 – Fred Trump , real estate developer, father of Donald Trump (died 1999 ) October 23 – Gertrude Ederle , swimmer (died 2003 )[ 17] November 1 – Eric Siday , bandleader, electronic composer (died 1976 ) November 3 – Joseph H. Ball , U.S. Senator from Minnesota from 1940 to 1942 and 1943 to 1949 (died 1993 ) November 4 – Nannie Doss , serial killer who murdered eleven people (died 1965) November 13 – Frank Levingston , supercentenarian (died 2016 ) November 19 November 26 – Bob Johnson , baseball player (died 1982 ) November 27 – Astrid Allwyn , actress (died 1978 ) December 7 – Leonard Goldenson , television executive (died 1999 ) December 23 – Paul Caraway , general, High Commissioner, United States Civil Administration of the Ryukyu Islands (died 1985 ) December 24 – Howard Hughes , business magnate, investor, director, pilot, and philanthropist (died 1976 )
Deaths January 2 – Clara Augusta Jones Trask , dime novelist (born 1839 ) January 6 January 19 – Benjamin F. Rice , U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 1868 to 1873 (born 1828 ) January 22 – Clara Harrison Stranahan , college co-founder and trustee (born 1831 ) January 27 – Watson Heston , cartoonist (born 1846 ) January 28 – Cordelia A. Greene , physician, reformer, benefactor (born 1831 ) February 8 – John Leary , politician, 37th Mayor of Seattle (born 1837 ) February 15 – Lew Wallace , Union general in the American Civil War and politician (born 1827 ) February 20 – Jeremiah W. Farnham , merchant captain (born c. 1828) February 27 – George S. Boutwell , U.S. Senator from Massachusetts from 1851 to 1853 (born 1818 ) March 1 – Edward O. Wolcott , U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1889 to 1901 (born 1848 ) March 6 – John Henninger Reagan , U.S. Senator from Texas , Acting Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury , Confederate States Postmaster General (born 1818 ) March 9 – William B. Bate , 23rd Governor of Tennessee from 1883 to 1887 and U.S. Senator from Tennessee from 1887 to 1905 (born 1826 ) March 18 – Joseph Roswell Hawley , U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1881 to 1905 (born 1826) April 21 – Orville H. Platt , U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1879 to 1905 (born 1827 ) April 28 – Fitzhugh Lee , 40th Governor of Virginia, U.S. Army general, Confederate cavalry general (born 1835 ) May 5 – William M. Robbins , U.S. Representative from North Carolina (born 1828 ) May 12 – Sam S. Shubert , theater owner (born 1878 ) May 23 – Mary Livermore , journalist, abolitionist and women's rights advocate (born 1820 ) July 1 – John Hay , author, biographer and 37th United States Secretary of State (born 1838 ) July 24 – Adolf Cluss , engineer architect (born 1825 in Germany) August 1 – Andrew Wylie , judge (born 1814 ) August 21 – Mary Mapes Dodge , children's author (b. 1831 ) September 5 – Touch the Clouds , Minneconjou chief (b. c. 1838 ) September 12 – John Rogan , second tallest person in recorded history (b. 1868 ) October 6 – Hibbard H. Shedd , politician and novelist (born 1847 ) December 3 – John Bartlett , lexicographer and publisher (born 1820 )
See also
References ^ The American Monthly Review of Reviews (February 1905) pp. 154-156 ^ The American Monthly Review of Reviews (March 1905) pp. 283-286. ^ "History" Archived November 13, 2022, at the Wayback Machine , Toastmasters International. ^ Fitch, Solidarity for Sale, 2006. ^ "A Brief History" . Juilliard School. Retrieved 2019-05-10 . ^ "The "Great Storms" of 1905 and 1913 | Great Lakes Steamship Society" . Archived from the original on 2019-07-17. Retrieved 2019-07-17 . ^ "Chorus performers from "The Sho-gun" " . digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu . ^ Gregory, Rick (1980). "Robertson County and the Black Patch War, 1904-1909" . Tennessee Historical Quarterly . 39 (3): 341– 358. ISSN 0040-3261 . JSTOR 42626100 . ^ Marie France Pochna (1996). Christian Dior: The Man who Made the World Look New . Arcade Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-55970-340-6 . ^ Ronald L. Smith (1993). Comic Support: Second Bananas in the Movies . Carol Publishing Group. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-8065-1399-7 . ^ John Chilton (1978). McKinney's Music: A Bio-discography of McKinney's Cotton Pickers . Bloomsbury Book Shop. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-9501290-1-3 . ^ Smallwood, Bill (March 16, 1947). "Delightful Side". Los Angeles Sentinel . p. 17. ProQuest 562108876 . Billye [sic] Yarbo and Nat Cole both birthday on the 17th. ^ Allan Hunter (1991). Chambers Film and Television Handbook . Chambers. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-550-17250-1 . ^ Rawson, Margaret H. "The 1973 Samuel T. Orton Award." Bulletin of the Orton Society XXIV (1974): 7-10. ^ "Lillian Hellman | American playwright" . Encyclopedia Britannica . Retrieved 14 December 2020 . ^ "Ruth Nelson" . IBDb . Retrieved November 1, 2022. ^ "Gertrude Ederle | Biography & Facts | Britannica" . www.britannica.com . Retrieved 7 March 2022 .
External links
18th century 19th century 20th century 21st century By U.S. state/territory