1854 in the United States List of events
Events from the year 1854 in the United States .
Incumbents
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama : John A. Winston (Democratic )
Governor of Arkansas : Elias Nelson Conway (Democratic )
Governor of California : John Bigler (Democratic )
Governor of Connecticut : Charles H. Pond (Democratic ) (until May 3), Henry Dutton (Whig ) (starting May 3)
Governor of Delaware : William H. H. Ross (Democratic )
Governor of Florida : James E. Broome (Democratic )
Governor of Georgia : Herschel V. Johnson (Democratic )
Governor of Illinois :Joel Aldrich Matteson (Democratic )
Governor of Indiana : Joseph A. Wright (Democratic )
Governor of Iowa : Stephen P. Hempstead (Democratic ) (until December 9), James W. Grimes (Whig ) (starting December 9)
Governor of Kentucky : Lazarus W. Powell (Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana : Paul Octave Hébert (Democratic )
Governor of Maine : William G. Crosby (Whig )
Governor of Maryland : Enoch Louis Lowe (Democratic ) (until January 11), Thomas W. Ligon (Democratic ) (starting January 11)
Governor of Massachusetts : John H. Clifford (Whig ) (until January 12), Emory Washburn (Whig ) (starting January 12)
Governor of Michigan : Andrew Parsons (Democratic )
Governor of Mississippi :
Governor of Missouri : Sterling Price (Democratic )
Governor of New Hampshire : Noah Martin (Democratic ) (until June 8), Nathaniel B. Baker (Democratic ) (starting June 8)
Governor of New Jersey : George F. Fort (Democratic ) (until January 17), Rodman M. Price (Democratic ) (starting January 17)
Governor of New York : Horatio Seymour (Democratic ) (until end of December 31)
Governor of North Carolina : David Settle Reid (Democratic ) (until December 6), Warren Winslow (Democratic ) (starting December 6)
Governor of Ohio : William Medill (Democratic )
Governor of Pennsylvania : William Bigler (Democratic )
Governor of Rhode Island : Francis M. Dimond (Democratic ) (until May 2), William W. Hoppin (Whig ) (starting May 2)
Governor of South Carolina : John Lawrence Manning (Democratic ) (until December 11), James Hopkins Adams (Democratic ) (starting December 11)
Governor of Tennessee : Andrew Johnson (Democratic )
Governor of Texas : Elisha M. Pease (Democratic )
Governor of Vermont : John S. Robinson (Democratic ) (until October 13), Stephen Royce (Whig )/(Republican ) (starting October 13)
Governor of Virginia : Joseph Johnson (Democratic )
Governor of Wisconsin : Leonard J. Farwell (Whig ) (until January 2), William A. Barstow (Democratic ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant governors
Events
January–June
March 31: Perry (center ) signs the Convention of Kanagawa
July–December
Kansas Territory
Nebraska Territory
July 4 – Henry David Thoreau delivers his fierce speech, Slavery in Massachusetts in Framingham, MA , harping on American politicians and journalists, all the while calling for action against the injustice of slavery within the Union.
July 6 – In Jackson, Michigan , the first convention of the Republican Party is held.
July 8 – An anti-Catholic riot in Bath, Maine , destroys a church used by Irish Catholics .
July 13 – Bombardment of San Juan del Norte : The USS Cyane attacks San Juan del Norte , Nicaragua .
August 7–8 – Know Nothings riot against immigrants in St. Louis, Missouri , leading to 10 deaths.[ 2]
August 9 – Walden first published.
August 19 – Grattan massacre : A group of U.S. Army soldiers in Nebraska Territory are killed by Lakota Sioux warriors after they killed Chief Conquering Bear , starting the First Sioux War .
September 28 or 29 – Sloop USS Albany (1846) is lost off the coast of Venezuela with all hands.
October 1 – The watch company founded in 1850 in Roxbury , Massachusetts by Aaron Lufkin Dennison relocates to Waltham to become the Waltham Watch Company , pioneer in the American System of Watch Manufacturing .
October 9–11 – The controversial Ostend Manifesto is secretly drafted. The document implies that the U.S. should acquire Cuba from Spain by any means necessary.
October 16 – Abraham Lincoln , in his "Peoria speech ", expresses opposition to the Kansas–Nebraska Act , Popular Sovereignty , and slavery in the United States .[ 3]
November 29 – Bleeding Kansas : A pro-slavery Democrat , John Wilkins Whitfield , is elected as the Congressional Delegate for Kansas Territory .
December 26 – The Treaty of Medicine Creek is signed in Washington Territory . The U.S. acquires land from various Native American tribes and in return creates three reservations.
Undated
Ongoing
Births
January 1 – Louis Saint-Gaudens , sculptor (died 1913 )
January 9 – Lady Randolph Churchill , born Jennie Jerome, American-born British socialite and mother of Winston Churchill (died 1921 in the United Kingdom )
January 29 – Fred Baker , physician and naturalist (died 1938 )
February 2 – Emily Elizabeth Holman , architect (died 1925 )
February 26 – Mary M. Cohen , social economist and proto-feminist (died 1911 )
March 14 – Thomas R. Marshall , 28th vice president of the United States from 1913 to 1921 (died 1925)
March 31 – Jane Toppan , born Honora Kelley, serial killer (died 1938 )
May 11 – Albion Woodbury Small , sociologist (died 1926 )
May 24 – John Riley Banister , law officer and Texas Ranger (died 1918 )
June 9 – John F. Shafroth , U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1913 to 1919 (died 1922 )
June 14 – Dave Rudabaugh , outlaw and gunfighter (killed 1886 in Mexico)
June 24 – Eleanor Norcross , painter (died 1923 )
July 3/4 – King O'Malley , politician in Australia (died 1953 in Australia )
July 12 – George Eastman , photographic inventor (Eastman Kodak ) (suicide 1932 )
July 23 – Birt Acres , cinematographic inventor (died 1918 in the United Kingdom )
July 30 – John Sharp Williams , U.S. Senator from Mississippi from 1911 to 1923 (died 1932)
August 2 – Francis Marion Crawford , novelist (died 1909 )
August 18 – James Paul Clarke , 18th governor of Arkansas from 1895 to 1897 and U.S. Senator from Arkansas from 1903 to 1916 (died 1916 )
September 1 – Florence Trail , educator and author (died 1944 )
October 3 – William C. Gorgas , physician, Surgeon General (died 1920)
October 26 – C. W. Post , cereal manufacturer (died 1914 )
October 31 – Laton Alton Huffman , photographer of the American frontier and Native American life (died 1931 )
November 6 – John Philip Sousa , composer and conductor ("The Stars and Stripes Forever ") (died 1932)
November 13 – George Whitefield Chadwick , composer (died 1931)
December 16 – Austin M. Knight , admiral (died 1927 )
December 25 – Ida Dixon , socialite and golf course architect (died 1916 )
Deaths
January 18 – Robert M. Charlton , U.S. Senator from Georgia from 1852 to 1853 (born 1807 )
March 11 – Willard Richards , religious leader (born 1804 )
April 6 – William Strickland , architect and civil engineer (born 1788 )
April 30 – William Matthews , first American-born Roman Catholic priest (born 1770 )
July 31 – Samuel Wilson , meat-packer thought to be the real-life basis for Uncle Sam (born 1766 in the Province of Massachusetts Bay )
August 14 – Solomon W. Downs , U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1847 to 1853 (born 1801 )
August 19 – Conquering Bear , Lakota chief
August 21 – Thomas Clayton , lawyer, U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1824 to 1827 and from 1837 to 1847 (born 1777 )
August 29 – John Black , U.S. Senator from Mississippi from 1832 to 1838 (born 1800 )
October 8 – Gideon Tomlinson , U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1831 to 1837 (born 1780 )
October 28 – James P. Carrell , composer and songbook compiler (born 1787 )
November 9 – Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton , wife of Alexander Hamilton , co-founder and deputy director of the first private orphanage in New York City (born 1757 )
December 28 – James Morehead , U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1841 to 1847 (born 1797 )
Full date unknown – Henry Bibb , author and abolitionist , born a slave (born 1815 )
See also
References
External links