1825 in the United States
The following are events from the year 1825 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal Government">Federal government of the United States">Federal Government
- President: James Monroe , John Quincy Adams
- Vice President: Daniel D. Tompkins , John C. Calhoun
- Chief Justice: John Marshall
- Speaker of the House of Representatives: Henry Clay , John W. Taylor
- Congress: 18th, 19th
Governors
- Governor of Alabama: Israel Pickens , John Murphy
- Governor of Connecticut: Oliver Wolcott, Jr.
- Governor of Delaware: Samuel Paynter
- Governor of Georgia: George M. Troup
- Governor of Illinois: Edward Coles
- Governor of Indiana: William Hendricks , James B. Ray
- Governor of Kentucky: Joseph Desha
- Governor of Louisiana: Henry Johnson
- Governor of Maine: Albion K. Parris
- Governor of Maryland: Samuel Stevens, Jr.
- Governor of Massachusetts:
- * until February 6: William Eustis
- * February 6-May 26: Marcus Morton
- * starting May 26: Levi Lincoln, Jr.
- Governor of Mississippi: Walter Leake , Gerard Brandon
- Governor of Missouri: Frederick Bates , Abraham J. Williams
- Governor of New Hampshire: David L. Morril
- Governor of New Jersey: Isaac Halstead Williamson
- Governor of New York: DeWitt Clinton
- Governor of North Carolina: Hutchins Gordon Burton
- Governor of Ohio: Jeremiah Morrow
- Governor of Pennsylvania: John Andrew Shulze
- Governor of Rhode Island: James Fenner
- Governor of South Carolina: Richard Irvine Manning I
- Governor of Tennessee: William Carroll
- Governor of Vermont: Cornelius P. Van Ness
- Governor of Virginia: James Pleasants , John Tyler
Lieutenant Governors
- Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut: David Plant
- Lieutenant Governor of Illinois: Adolphus Hubbard
- Lieutenant Governor of Indiana: John H. Thompson
- Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky: Robert B. McAfee
- Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts: Marcus Morton , vacant
- Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi: Gerard C. Brandon
- Lieutenant Governor of Missouri: Benjamin Harrison Reeves , vacant
- Lieutenant Governor of New York: vacant, James Tallmadge, Jr.
- Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island: Charles Collins
- Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina: William Bull
- Lieutenant Governor of Vermont: Aaron Leland
Events
January–March
- January 10 - Indianapolis becomes the capital of Indiana.
- February 9 - After no presidential candidate receives a majority of U.S. Electoral College votes, the United States House of Representatives elects John Quincy Adams President of the United States in a contingent election.
- February 12 - Treaty of Indian Springs: The Lower Creek Council, led by William McIntosh, cedes a large amount of Creek territory in Georgia to the United States government.
- March 4 - John Quincy Adams is sworn in as the sixth President of the United States.
- March 17 - The Norfolk & Dedham Group is founded as The Norfolk Mutual Fire Insurance Company.
April–June
- April 30 - Upper Creek chief Menawa leads an attack that assassinates William McIntosh for signing the Treaty of Indian Springs.
- May 11 - American Tract Society is founded.
- June 3 - Kansa Nation cedes its territory to the United States.
- June 11 - The first cornerstone is laid for Fort Hamilton in New York City.
July–September
- July 14 - The Jefferson Literary and Debating Society is founded by 16 disgruntled members of the now-defunct Patrick Henry Society in Room 7, West Lawn, of the University of Virginia.
- August 19 - First Treaty of Prairie du Chien at Fort Crawford, Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin
October–December
- October 26 - The Erie Canal opens, granting passage from Albany, New York to Lake Erie.
- November 7 - Treaty of St. Louis: 1,400 Missouri Shawnees are forcibly relocated from Missouri to Kansas.
- November 12 - New Echota designated capital of the Cherokee Nation.
- November 26 - At Union College in Schenectady, New York a group of college students form Kappa Alpha Society as the first college social fraternity.
Undated
- The Osage Nation cedes traditional lands by treaty.
- The Cherokee Nation officially adopts Sequoyah's syllabary.
- Vancouver, Washington is established by Dr. John McLoughlin on behalf of the Hudson's Bay Company.
- Ypsilanti, Michigan is established.
- Vicksburg, Mississippi is incorporated.
- New Harmony, Indiana established as a social experiment, built by the Harmony Society and sold to Robert Owen.
- The United States Postal Service starts a dead letter office.
- Centenary College of Louisiana is founded in Jackson, Louisiana. The campus later moves to Shreveport, Louisiana.
Ongoing
- Era of Good Feelings
Births
- January 5 - John Mason Loomis, lumber tycoon, Union militia colonel in the American Civil War and philanthropist
- January 11
- * Clement V. Rogers, Cherokee politician and father of Will Rogers
- * Bayard Taylor, poet and travel writer
- January 25 - George Pickett, Confederate general in the American Civil War
- February 11 - Frank Pidgeon, baseball pitcher
- April 7 - John H. Gear, U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1895 to 1900
- April 17 - Jerome B. Chaffee, U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1876 to 1879
- June 1 - John Hunt Morgan, Confederate general in the American Civil War
- July 2 - Richard Henry Stoddard, critic and poet
- July 10 - Benjamin Paul Akers, sculptor
- July 15 - Joseph Carter Abbott, U.S. Senator from North Carolina from 1868 to 1871
- July 19 - George H. Pendleton, politician
- August 7 - Jacob Wrey Mould, New York architect, illustrator, linguist and musician
- August 10 - Edmund Spangler, carpenter and stagehand employed at Ford's Theatre at the time of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln
- September 13 - William Henry Rinehart, sculptor
- September 17 - Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar II, politician and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
- September 24 - Frances Harper, née Watkins, African American poet and abolitionist
- October 8 - Paschal Beverly Randolph, occultist
- November 9 - A. P. Hill, Confederate general
- December 18 - John S. Harris, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1868 to 1871
- December 30
- * Newton Booth, U.S. Senator from California from 1875 to 1881
- * Samuel Newitt Wood, politician
Deaths
- January 8 - Eli Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin and milling machine
- March 1 - John Haggin, "Indian fighter" and early settler of Kentucky
- March 4 - Hercules Mulligan, tailor and spy during the American Revolutionary War
- March 25 - Raphaelle Peale, still-life painter
- June 1 - Daniel Tompkins, sixth Vice President of the United States from 1817 to 1825
- June 4 - Morris Birkbeck, writer and social reformer
- June 14 - Pierre Charles L'Enfant, architect and civil engineer
- August 16 - Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, politician and soldier
- August 27 - Lucretia Maria Davidson, poet
- December 28 - James Wilkinson, soldier and statesman