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| Decades: |
- 1800s
- 1810s
- 1820s
- 1830s
- 1840s
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| See also: |
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Events from the year 1820 in the United States.
Incumbents
- Henry Clay (DR-Kentucky) (until October 28)
- John W. Taylor (DR-New York) (starting November 15)
State governments
| Governors and lieutenant governors
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Governors
- Governor of Alabama: William Wyatt Bibb (Democratic-Republican) (until July 10), Thomas Bibb (Democratic-Republican) (starting July 10)
- Governor of Connecticut: Oliver Wolcott Jr. (Toleration)
- Governor of Delaware:
- Governor of Georgia: John Clark (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of Illinois: Shadrach Bond (Independent)
- Governor of Indiana: Jonathan Jennings (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of Kentucky: Gabriel Slaughter (Democratic-Republican) (until August 29), John Adair (Democratic-Republican) (starting August 29)
- Governor of Louisiana: Jacques Villeré (Democratic-Republican) (until December 18), Thomas Bolling Robertson (Democratic-Republican) (starting December 18)
- Governor of Maine: William King (Democratic-Republican) (starting March 15)
- Governor of Maryland: Samuel Sprigg (Democratic)
- Governor of Massachusetts: John Brooks (Federalist)
- Governor of Mississippi: David Holmes (Democratic-Republican) (until January 5), George Poindexter (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of New Hampshire: Samuel Bell (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of New Jersey: Isaac Halstead Williamson (Federalist)
- Governor of New York: DeWitt Clinton (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of North Carolina: John Branch (Democratic-Republican) (until December 7), Jesse Franklin (Democratic-Republican) (starting December 7)
- Governor of Ohio: Ethan Allen Brown (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of Pennsylvania: William Findlay (Democratic-Republican) (until December 19), Joseph Hiester (Democratic-Republican) (starting December 19)
- Governor of Rhode Island: Nehemiah R. Knight (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of South Carolina: John Geddes (Democratic-Republican) (until December 7), Thomas Bennett, Jr. (Democratic-Republican) (starting December 7)
- Governor of Tennessee: Joseph McMinn (Democratic-Republican)
- Governor of Vermont: Jonas Galusha (Democratic-Republican) (until October 15), Richard Skinner (Democratic-Republican) (starting October 15)
- Governor of Virginia: Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr. (Democratic-Republican)
Lieutenant governors
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Demographics
Events
Undated
Ongoing
Births
- February 1 – George Hendric Houghton, Episcopal clergyman (died 1897)
- February 4 – David C. Broderick, U.S. Senator from California from 1857 to 1859 (died 1859)
- February 6
- February 8 – William Tecumseh Sherman, Civil War general (died 1891)[1]
- February 15 – Susan B. Anthony, suffragist (died 1906)
- March 1 – George Davis, Confederate States Senator from North Carolina, 4th and last Confederate States Attorney General (died 1896)
- March 3 – Henry D. Cogswell, temperance campaigner and philanthropist (died 1900)
- March 17 – William F. Raynolds, military engineer (died 1894)
- March 24
- April 8 – John Taylor Johnston, businessman and patron of the arts (died 1893)
- April 17 – Alexander Cartwright, baseball pioneer (died 1892 in Hawaii)
- April 26 – Alice Cary, poet and short story writer, sister to Phoebe Cary (died 1871)
- May 23 – Lorenzo Sawyer, 9th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of California (died 1891)
- May 30 – Edward Doane, Protestant missionary (died 1890)
- June 2 – Willard Saulsbury, Sr., U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1859 to 1871 (died 1892)
- July 5 – Luke Pryor, U.S. Senator from Alabama in 1880 (died 1900)
- July 23 – Julia Gardiner Tyler, First Lady of the United States (died 1889)
- July 31 – John W. Garrett, banker, railroad president and philanthropist (died 1884)
- August 26 – James Harlan, U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1865 to 1866 (died 1899)
- August 30 – George Frederick Root, songwriter (died 1895)
- September 2 – Lucretia Peabody Hale, journalist and author (died 1900)[2]
- September 3 – George Hearst, U.S. Senator from California from 1887 to 1891 (died 1891)
- September 20 – John F. Reynolds, U.S. Army general (killed 1863)
- October 5 – David Wilber, politician (died 1890)
- October 28 – John Henry Hopkins, Jr., Episcopal clergyman and hymnist (died 1891)
- November 13 – Eugene Casserly, U.S. Senator from California from 1869 to 1873 (died 1883)
- December 12 – James L. Pugh, U.S. Senator from Alabama from 1880 to 1897 (died 1907)
- December 19 – Mary Livermore, born Mary Ashton Rice, journalist, abolitionist and women's rights advocate (died 1905)
- December 21 – William H. Osborn, railroad president and philanthropist (died 1894)
- December 29 – John S. Barbour, Jr., U.S. Senator from Virginia from 1889 to 1892 (died 1892)
- Eagle Woman, Lakota leader (died 1888)
Deaths
- February 5 – William Ellery, signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court (born 1729)
- March 11 – Benjamin West, American-born painter of historical scenes (born 1738)
- March 22 – Stephen Decatur, U.S. Navy commander (born 1779)
- April 14 – Levi Lincoln Sr., statesman from Massachusetts (born 1749)
- April 20 – James Morris III, Continental Army officer from Connecticut (born 1752)
- July 10 – William Wyatt Bibb, U.S. Senator from Georgia from 1813 to 1816, 1st Governor of Alabama (born 1781)
- August 12 – Manuel Lisa, fur trader (born 1772)
- September 3 – Benjamin Henry Latrobe, architect (born 1764 in Great Britain)
- September 21 – Joseph Rodman Drake, poet (born 1795; consumption)
- September 26 – Daniel Boone, pioneer (born 1734)
- September 29 – Barthelemy Lafon, Creole architect, engineer, city planner, surveyor and smuggler (born 1769 in France)
- October 4 – Thomas Hope, architect (born 1757 in Great Britain)
- November 8 – Lavinia Stoddard, poet and educationalist (born 1787)
See also
References
Further reading
- Daniel Blowe (1820). A geographical, historical, commercial, and agricultural view of the United States of America; forming a complete emigrant's directory through every part of the republic ... London: Edwards & Knibb. OL 14686561M.
External links
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| 18th century | |
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| 19th century | |
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| 20th century | |
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| 21st century | |
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| By U.S. state/territory | |
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