1895 in the United States
Events from the year 1895 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal Government">Federal government of the United States">Federal Government
- President: Grover Cleveland
- Vice President: Adlai E. Stevenson I
- Chief Justice: Melville Fuller
- Speaker of the House of Representatives: Charles Frederick Crisp , Thomas Brackett Reed
- Congress: 53rd, 54th
Governors
Lieutenant Governors
Events
- February 9 - Mintonette, later known as volleyball, is created by William G. Morgan at Holyoke, Massachusetts.
- March 1 - William Lyne Wilson is appointed United States Postmaster General.
- May 27 - In re Debs: The Supreme Court of the United States decides that the federal government has the right to regulate interstate commerce, legalizing the military suppression of the Pullman Strike.
- June 28 - The United States Court of Private Land Claims rules that James Reavis's claim to Barony of Arizona is "wholly fictitious and fraudulent".
- July 4 - Katharine Lee Bates' lyrics for "America the Beautiful" are first published.
- July 6 - Van Cortlandt Golf Course opens in The Bronx as the country's first and oldest public golf course.
- August 19 - American frontier murderer and outlaw John Wesley Hardin is killed by an off-duty policeman in a saloon in El Paso, Texas.
- September 3 - The first professional American football game is played, in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, between the Latrobe YMCA and the Jeannette Athletic Club.
- September 18 - Booker T. Washington delivers the Atlanta Compromise speech.
- November 5 - George B. Selden is granted the first U.S. patent for an automobile.
- November 20 - USS Indiana, the first battleship in the United States Navy comparable to foreign battleships of this time, is commissioned.
- November 25 - Oscar Hammerstein opens the Olympia Theatre, the first theatre to be built in New York City's Times Square district.
- November 28 - Chicago Times-Herald race: The first American automobile race in history is sponsored by the Chicago Times-Herald. Press coverage first arouses significant U.S. interest in the automobile.
- December 24 - George Washington Vanderbilt II officially opens his Biltmore Estate on Christmas Eve, inviting his family and guests to celebrate his new home in Asheville, North Carolina.
Undated
- W. E. B. Du Bois becomes the first African American to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard University.
- The gold reserve of the U.S. Treasury is saved when J. P. Morgan and the Rothschilds loan $65 million worth of gold to the United States government.
- Temple Cup: Cleveland Spiders defeat Baltimore Orioles, 4 games to 1
Ongoing
- Gilded Age
- Gay Nineties
- Progressive Era
Births
- January 1
- * Bert Acosta, aviator
- * J. Edgar Hoover, 1st Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
- January 4 - Leroy Grumman, aeronautical engineer, test pilot and industrialist
- January 11 - Laurens Hammond, inventor
- January 23 - Harry Darby, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1949 to 1950
- February 2 - George Halas, football player
- February 6 - Babe Ruth, baseball player
- March 4
- * Milt Gross, comic book illustrator and animator
- * Shemp Howard, actor and comedian
- March 15 - Virgil Chapman, U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1949 to 1951
- March 27 - Ruth Snyder, murderer
- March 28 - Spencer W. Kimball, president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- May 2 - Lorenz Hart, lyricist
- May 11 - William Grant Still, "the Dean" of African American composers
- May 15 - Prescott Bush, U.S. Senator from Connecticut from 1952 to 1963
- May 25 - Dorothea Lange, documentary photographer and photojournalist
- May 28 - Samuel D. Jackson, U.S. Senator from Indiana in 1944
- June 10
- * William C. Feazel, U.S. Senator from Louisiana in 1948
- * Hattie McDaniel, African American film actress
- June 24 - Jack Dempsey, heavyweight boxer
- July 12 - Richard Buckminster Fuller, architect
- July 13 - Bradley Kincaid, folk singer
- July 26 - Gracie Allen, comic actress
- August 12 - Lynde D. McCormick, admiral
- September 22 - Elmer Austin Benson, U.S. Senator from Minnesota from 1935 to 1936 and 24th Governor of Minnesota from 1937 to 1939
- September 29 - Joseph Banks Rhine, parapsychologist
- October 4 - Buster Keaton, born Joseph Frank Keaton, silent film comedian
- October 6 - Caroline Gordon, writer and critic
- October 19 - Lewis Mumford, historian & philosopher of science
- October 23 - Clinton Presba Anderson, U.S. Senator from New Mexico from 1949 to 1973
- October 30 - Dickinson W. Richards, physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- November 10 - John Knudsen Northrop, airplane manufacturer
- November 14 - Walter Freeman, neurologist
- November 29 - Busby Berkeley, film director and choreographer
- December 2 - W. Conway Pierce, chemist
- December 20 - Susanne Langer, philosopher
- December 24 - Marguerite Williams, African American geologist
- December 28 - Carol Ryrie Brink, author
Deaths
- January 9 - Aaron Lufkin Dennison, watchmaker
- February 20 - Frederick Douglass, African American rights activist and former slave
- March 22 - Henry Coppée, historian and biographer
- April 22 - James F. Wilson, U.S. Senator from Iowa from 1883 to 1895.
- May 28 - Walter Q. Gresham, politician
- June 23
- * Thomas Shaw, buffalo soldier and Medal of Honor recipient
- * James Renwick, Jr., architect
- June 29 - Green Clay Smith, politician
- July 28 - Edward Beecher, theologian
- August 1 - Hugh O'Brien, 31st Mayor of Boston, Massachusetts
- August 6 - George Frederick Root, composer
- August 22 - Luzon B. Morris, politician
- October 2 - Robert Crozier, U.S. Senator from Kansas from 1873 to 1874
- October 6 - L. L. Langstroth, beekeeper
- October 8 - William Mahone, civil engineer and Confederate Army major general
- November 4 - Eugene Field, children's author
- Full date unknown - John Miley, Methodist theologian