Events from the year 1925 in the United States .
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(August 2021 )
vacant (until March 4)
Charles G. Dawes (R -Illinois ) (starting March 4)
Frederick H. Gillett (R -Massachusetts ) (until March 4)
Nicholas Longworth (R -Ohio ) (starting December 7)
More information Governors and lieutenant governors ...
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama : William W. Brandon (Democratic )
Governor of Arizona : George W. P. Hunt (Democratic )
Governor of Arkansas : Thomas Chipman McRae (Democratic ) (until January 13), Tom Jefferson Terral (Democratic ) (starting January 13)
Governor of California : Friend Richardson (Republican )
Governor of Colorado : William Ellery Sweet (Democratic ) (until January 13), Clarence Morley (Republican ) (starting January 13)
Governor of Connecticut :
Governor of Delaware : William D. Denney (Republican ) (until January 20), Robert P. Robinson (Republican ) (starting January 20)
Governor of Florida : Cary A. Hardee (Democratic ) (until January 6), John W. Martin (Democratic ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Georgia : Clifford Walker (Democratic )
Governor of Idaho : Charles C. Moore (Republican )
Governor of Illinois : Len Small (Republican )
Governor of Indiana : Emmett Forrest Branch (Republican ) (until January 12), Edward L. Jackson (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Governor of Iowa : Nathan E. Kendall (Republican ) (until January 15), John Hammill (Republican ) (starting January 15)
Governor of Kansas : Jonathan M. Davis (Democratic ) (until January 12), Ben S. Paulen (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Governor of Kentucky : William J. Fields (Democratic )
Governor of Louisiana : Henry L. Fuqua (Democratic )
Governor of Maine : Percival Proctor Baxter (Republican ) (until January 7), Owen Brewster (Republican ) (starting January 7)
Governor of Maryland : Albert C. Ritchie (Democratic )
Governor of Massachusetts : Channing H. Cox (Republican ) (until January 8), Alvan T. Fuller (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Governor of Michigan : Alex Groesbeck (Republican )
Governor of Minnesota : J. A. O. Preus (Republican ) (until January 6), Theodore Christianson (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Mississippi : Henry L. Whitfield (Democratic )
Governor of Missouri : Arthur M. Hyde (Republican ) (until January 12), Samuel Aaron Baker (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Governor of Montana : Joseph M. Dixon (Republican ) (until January 4), John E. Erickson (Democratic ) (starting January 4)
Governor of Nebraska : Charles W. Bryan (Democratic ) (until January 8), Adam McMullen (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Governor of Nevada : James G. Scrugham (Democratic )
Governor of New Hampshire : Fred H. Brown (Democratic ) (until January 1), John Gilbert Winant (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Governor of New Jersey : George Sebastian Silzer (Democratic )
Governor of New Mexico : James F. Hinkle (Democratic ) (until January 1), Arthur T. Hannett (Democratic ) (starting January 1)
Governor of New York : Al Smith (Democratic )
Governor of North Carolina : Cameron Morrison (Democratic ) (until January 14), Angus Wilton McLean (Democratic ) (starting January 14)
Governor of North Dakota : Ragnvald A. Nestos (Republican ) (until January 7), Arthur G. Sorlie (Republican ) (starting January 7)
Governor of Ohio : A. Victor Donahey (Democratic )
Governor of Oklahoma : Martin E. Trapp (Democratic )
Governor of Oregon : Walter M. Pierce (Democratic )
Governor of Pennsylvania : Gifford Pinchot (Republican )
Governor of Rhode Island : William S. Flynn (Democratic ) (until January 6), Aram J. Pothier (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of South Carolina : Thomas Gordon McLeod (Democratic )
Governor of South Dakota : William H. McMaster (Republican ) (until January 6), Carl Gunderson (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Tennessee : Austin Peay (Democratic )
Governor of Texas : Pat Morris Neff (Democratic ) (until January 20), Miriam A. Ferguson (Democratic ) (starting January 20)
Governor of Utah : Charles R. Mabey (Republican ) (until January 5), George Dern (Democratic ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Vermont : Redfield Proctor, Jr. (Republican ) (until January 8), Franklin S. Billings (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Governor of Virginia : Elbert Lee Trinkle (Democratic )
Governor of Washington : Louis Folwell Hart (Republican ) (until January 12), Roland H. Hartley (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Governor of West Virginia : Ephraim F. Morgan (Republican ) (until March 4), Howard M. Gore (Republican ) (starting March 4)
Governor of Wisconsin : John J. Blaine (Republican )
Governor of Wyoming : Frank E. Lucas (Republican ) (until January 5), Nellie Tayloe Ross (Democratic ) (starting January 5)
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : Charles S. McDowell (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of California : Clement Calhoun Young (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado : Robert F. Rockwell (Republican ) (until January 13), Sterling Byrd Lacy (Democratic ) (starting January 13)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut :
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : J. Danforth Bush (Republican ) (until January 20), James H. Anderson (Republican ) (starting January 20)
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho : H. C. Baldridge (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois : Fred E. Sterling (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana : James J. Nejdl (Republican ) (until January 12), F. Harold Van Orman (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : John Hammill (Republican ) (until January 15), Clem F. Kimball (Republican ) (starting January 15)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : Ben Sanford Paulen (Republican ) (until January 12), De Lanson Alson Newton Chase (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : Henry Denhardt (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana : Oramel H. Simpson (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Alvan T. Fuller (Republican ) (until January 8), Frank G. Allen (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan : Thomas Read (Republican ) (until January 1), George W. Welsh (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : Louis L. Collins (Republican ) (until January 6), William I. Nolan (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : Dennis Murphree (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : Hiram Lloyd (Republican ) (until January 12), Philip Allen Bennett (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Montana : Nelson Story Jr. (political party unknown) (until month and day unknown), W. S. McCormack (political party unknown) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska : Fred G. Johnson (Republican ) (until January 8), George A. Williams (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Maurice J. Sullivan (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico : vacant (until January 1), Edward G. Sargent (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of New York : Seymour Lowman (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : William B. Cooper (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), Jacob E. Long (Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota : Frank H. Hyland (Republican ) (until January 7), Walter Maddock (Republican ) (starting January 7)
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : Earl D. Bloom (Democratic ) (until January 12), Charles H. Lewis (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma : vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania : David J. Davis (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : Felix A. Toupin (Republican ) (until January 6), Nathaniel W. Smith (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : E. B. Jackson (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota : Carl Gunderson (Republican ) (until January 6), Alva Clark Forney (Republican ) (starting January 6)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : Eugene J. Bryan (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), Lucius D. Hill (Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : Thomas Whitfield Davidson (Democratic ) (until January 20), Barry Miller (Democratic ) (starting January 20)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : Franklin S. Billings (Republican ) (until January 8), Walter K. Farnsworth (Republican ) (starting January 8)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : Junius Edgar West (Democrat )
Lieutenant Governor of Washington : William J. Coyle (Republican ) (until January 12), W. Lon Johnson (Republican ) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin : George F. Comings (Republican ) (until January 5), Henry A. Huber (Republican ) (starting January 5)
Close
January–March
March 4: Charles G. Dawes becomes the 30th U.S. vice president
January 27–February 1 – The 1925 serum run to Nome (the "Great Race of Mercy") relays diphtheria antitoxin by dog sled across the U.S. Territory of Alaska to combat an epidemic .
February 21 – First issue of The New Yorker magazine is published under the editorship of Harold Ross .[1]
March 2 – In an appeal originating in a Prohibition era bootlegging case, Carroll v. United States is decided in the Supreme Court , affirming the motor vehicle exception , that a warrantless search of an automobile does not contravene the Fourth Amendment , subject to probable cause and exigent circumstances .[2]
March 4 – Calvin Coolidge becomes the first president of the United States to have his inauguration broadcast on radio . Charles G. Dawes is sworn in as the 30th vice president .
March 15 – The Phi Lambda Chi fraternity (original name "The Aztecs") is founded on the campus of Arkansas State Teacher's College in Conway, Arkansas (the modern-day University of Central Arkansas ).
March 18 – The Tri-State Tornado rampages through Missouri , Illinois and Indiana , killing 695 people and injuring 2,027. It hits the towns of Murphysboro, Illinois ; Gorham, Illinois ; Ellington, Missouri ; and Griffin, Indiana . The storm's damage path is indicated at 378 km (235 mi).[3]
March 21 – Tennessee Governor Austin Peay signs the Butler Act , prohibiting the teaching of evolution in the state's public schools.
March 31 – Radio station WOWO in Ft. Wayne, Indiana , begins broadcasting.
April–June
April 1 – Frank Heath and his horse Gypsy Queen leave Washington, D.C. to begin a two-year journey to visit all 48 states.
April 10 – F. Scott Fitzgerald publishes The Great Gatsby .
April 18 – University of Miami chartered in Coral Gables, Florida .
May 8 – African American Tom Lee rescues 32 people from the M.E. Norman , a steamboat sinking in the Mississippi .
May 25 – The National Forensic League is founded for the promotion of public speaking and debate in the United States.
June 6 – The Chrysler Corporation is founded as an automobile manufacturer by Walter Percy Chrysler .
June 13 – Charles Francis Jenkins achieves the first synchronized transmission of pictures and sound, using 48 lines, and a mechanical system. A 10-minute film of a miniature windmill in motion is sent across 5 miles from Anacostia to Washington, D.C. The images are viewed by representatives of the National Bureau of Standards , the U.S. Navy , the Department of Commerce and others. Jenkins calls this "the first public demonstration of radiovision".
June 17 – 1st National Spelling Bee held in Washington, D.C.
June 27 – The 6.6 Montana earthquake affects the central part of the state with a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe ). Because the affected area is mostly rural, financial losses are limited to $150,000, though the damage is considered severe.[4]
June 29 – The 6.8 Santa Barbara earthquake affects the central coast of California with a maximum Mercalli intensity of IX (Violent ), destroying much of downtown Santa Barbara, California and leaving 13 people dead.
October– December
October 6 – Xavier University of Louisiana , America's first and only historically black Catholic university is founded in New Orleans , Louisiana . In 2000, it becomes the only Catholic university to have been founded by a saint . (Another university 's founder is canonized in 2006.)
October 15 – The Pittsburgh Pirates defeat the Washington Senators , 4 games to 3, to win their 2nd World Series Title in baseball.
November 11 – City of Chicago , Illinois renames Municipal Grant Park Stadium, as Soldier Field , in honor of US soldiers killed in combat during World War I .
November 21 – Lava Beds National Monument is established in California.
November 28 – The weekly country music radio program Grand Ole Opry is first broadcast on WSM radio in Nashville, Tennessee , as the "WSM Barn Dance".
December 12 – The first motel in the world, the Milestone Mo-Tel (later the Motel Inn of San Luis Obispo), opens in San Luis Obispo , California [7] (architect: Arthur Heineman ).
December 16 – Alpha Phi Omega , a national service fraternity, is founded at Lafayette College in Pennsylvania.
January
Lee Van Cleef
Edgar Ray Killen
Paul Newman
Douglas Engelbart
January 1
January 2 – Larry Harmon , American entertainer and television producer (d. 2008 )
January 4
January 6 – John DeLorean , American car maker (d. 2005 )
January 7 – Harry Stradling Jr. , American cinematographer (d. 2017 )
January 8 – Tharon Musser , American designer (d. 2009 )[13]
January 9 – Lee Van Cleef , American actor (d. 1989 )
January 10 – Elizabeth Virginia Hallanan , American judge (d. 2004 )
January 11
January 12
January 13
January 15 – Ruth Slenczynska , American pianist
January 16
January 17
January 18 – Art Paul , American graphic designer (d. 2018 )
January 21 – Charles Aidman , American actor (d. 1993 )
January 22 – Bobby Young , American professional baseball player (d. 1985 )
January 24 – Maria Tallchief , American ballerina (d. 2013 )
January 25 – Barbara Carroll , American jazz pianist (d. 2017 )
January 26
January 29
January 30 – Douglas Engelbart , pioneer in human–computer interaction (d. 2013 )
January 31 – Benjamin Hooks , American civil rights activist, minister, and attorney (d. 2010 )
March
March 1 – Keith Harvey Miller , American politician (d. 2019 )
March 4 – Dale Barnstable , American basketball player (d. 2019 )
March 6 – Clyde Biggers , American football coach (d. 1976 )
March 7 – Rene Gagnon , U.S. Marine (d. 1979 )
March 8 – John Harland Bryant , American physician (d. 2017 )
March 9 – G. William Miller , American politician (d. 2018 )
March 12 – G. William Whitehurst , American politician
March 13
March 14 – Joseph A. Unanue , American chief executive (d. 2013 )
March 15 – Art Murakowski , American football player (d. 1985 )
March 16 – Mary Hinkson , African-American dancer and choreographer (d. 2014 )[14]
March 19 – Brent Scowcroft , American general and diplomat (d. 2020 )
March 20 – Romana Acosta Bañuelos , American public servant (d. 2018 )
March 23 – Robie Lester , American Grammy-nominated voice artist and singer (d. 2005 )
March 25 – Flannery O'Connor , American author (d. 1964 )
March 28 – Dorothy DeBorba , American child actress (d. 2010 )
March 31 – John Wesley Hanes III , American civil servant (d. 2018 )
June
Tony Curtis
Barbara Bush
Audie Murphy
June Lockhart
Virginia Patton
Cara Williams
June 3 – Tony Curtis , American actor (d. 2010 )
June 5
June 6 – Fitzhugh L. Fulton , American pilot (d. 2015 )
June 7
June 8
June 9
June 10 – Nat Hentoff , American historian, novelist, jazz and country music critic, and syndicated columnist (d. 2017 )
June 11 – William Styron , American writer (d. 2006 )
June 12 – Richard Paul Conaboy , American judge (d. 2018 )
June 14 – Pierre Salinger , American politician (d. 2004 )
June 16 – Lewis Morley , American photographer (d. 2013 )
June 17 – Alexander Shulgin , American psychopharmacologist (d. 2014 )
June 19 – Wendell Erickson , American politician (d. 2018 )
June 20 – Audie Murphy , American World War II hero and actor (d. 1971 )
June 21
June 22
June 23
June 24 – Ogden R. Reid , United States Representative from New York (d. 2019 )
June 25
June 26 – Richard X. Slattery , American actor (d. 1997 )
June 27
June 28 – Ray Boyle , American actor (d. 2022 )
June 29
June 30 – Fred Schaus , American basketball player, head coach and athletic director (d. 2010 )
September
Hank Thompson
B. B. King
Marty Robbins
September 1 – Arvonne Fraser , American women's rights activist (d. 2018 )
September 2 – Ike Franklin Andrews , American politician (d. 2010 )
September 3 – Hank Thompson , American country musician (d. 2007 )
September 8 – Jacqueline Ceballos , American feminist
September 12
September 13
September 15 – Peggy Webber , American actress
September 16
September 17 – Dorothy Loudon , American actress, singer (d. 2003 )
September 19 – Franklin Sousley , U.S. Marine flag raiser on Iwo Jima (d. 1945 )
September 20 – Bobby Nunn , R&B singer (d. 1986 )
September 25
September 26 – Marty Robbins , American singer-songwriter and racing driver (d. 1982 )
September 28 – Carolyn Morris , American female professional baseball player (d. 1996 )
September 29 – John Tower , American politician (d. 1991 )
October
Art Buchwald
Johnny Carson
Warren Christopher
October 2 – Paul Goldsmith , American NASCAR driver (d. 2024 )
October 3
October 5
October 6 – Hiroshi Miyamura , American Medal of Honor recipient (d. 2022 )
October 7 – Mildred Earp , American baseball player (d. 2017 )
October 8 – Eleanor Anne Young , American religious sister, research scientist, and educator (d. 2007 )
October 10
October 11 – Elmore Leonard , American novelist (d. 2013 )
October 13 – Lenny Bruce , American comic (d. 1966 )
October 15 – Ted Lerner , American real estate developer and baseball team owner (d. 2023 )
October 16 – Daniel J. Evans , American politician (d. 2024 )
October 20
October 22 – Robert Rauschenberg , American painter (d. 2008 )
October 23 – Johnny Carson , American comedian and television host (d. 2005 )
October 24 – Al Feldstein , American comic book artist (d. 2014 )
October 25 – John J. Snyder , Roman Catholic bishop (d. 2019 )
October 27 – Warren Christopher , American diplomat (d. 2011 )
October 29 – Dominick Dunne , American writer (d. 2009 )
October 31 – Robert Rheault , American army officer (d. 2013 )
December
Julie Harris
Sammy Davis Jr.
Dick Van Dyke
December 1 – Martin Rodbell , American biochemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1998 )
December 2 – Julie Harris , American actress (d. 2013 )
December 8
December 11
December 13
December 15 – Kasey Rogers , American actress (d. 2006 )
December 19 – Robert B. Sherman , American songwriter (d. 2012 )
December 21
December 23 – Harry Guardino , American actor (d. 1995 )[22]
December 25
December 26 – Jimmy Roselli , American singer (d. 2011 )[23]
December 27 – Wilson Frost , American politician (d. 2018 )
December 29 – Pete Dye , American golf course architect (d. 2020 )
December 30 – Shirley Herz , American Broadway theatre press representative (d. 2013 )
December 31 – Dick Manville , American baseball player (d. 2019 )
January 4 – Nellie Cashman , Irish-born prospector (born 1845 )[25]
January 8 – George Bellows , realist painter (born 1882 )
January 20 – Grace Meigs Crowder , physician and public health official (born 1881 )[26]
January 22 – Fanny Bullock Workman , geographer, writer and mountain climber (born 1859 )[27]
January 26 – Caspar F. Goodrich , admiral (born 1847 )
January 31 – George Washington Cable , novelist (born 1844 )[28]
February 1 – Ellen Hamlin , Second Lady of the United States as wife of Hannibal Hamlin (born 1835 )
February 7 – Edward Jobson , actor (born 1860 )
February 18 – James Lane Allen , fiction writer (born 1849 )
February 23 – Samuel Berger , Olympic boxer (born 1884 )
March 4 – John Montgomery Ward , baseball player (born 1860)
March 10 – Myer Prinstein , Olympic long jumper (born 1878 in Poland)
March 13 – Lucille Ricksen , silent film actress (born 1910 )
March 14 – Walter Camp , American football coach (born 1859 )[29]
March 30 – William J. McConnell , U.S. Senator from Idaho from 1890 to 1891 (born 1839 )
April 8 – Emma Curtis Hopkins , spiritual writer (born 1849)
April 13 – Elwood Haynes , inventor (born 1857 )
April 14 – John Singer Sargent , portrait painter (born 1856 in Florence; died in London)
April 19 – John Walter Smith , politician (born 1845 )
May 12 – Amy Lowell , poet (born 1874 )[30]
May 15 – Nelson A. Miles , general (born 1839 )
May 20 – Elias M. Ammons , Governor of Colorado (born 1860)
May 25 – Henry W. Petrie , popular music composer (born 1857 )
June 1 – Thomas R. Marshall , 28th vice president of the United States from 1913 to 1921 (born 1854 )
June 2 – James Ellsworth , mineowner and banker (born 1849)
June 16 – Emmett Hardy , jazz cornet player (born 1903 ; TB)
June 18 – Robert M. La Follette , politician (born 1855 )
June 26 – James A. Barber , Medal of Honor recipient (born 1841 )
July 7 – Clarence Hudson White , photographer (born 1871 )
July 26 – William Jennings Bryan , lawyer and politician (born 1860)
July 29 – Mark Fenton , silent film actor (born 1866 )
August 4 – Charles W. Clark , baritone (born 1865 )
August 5 – Jennie Lee , silent film actress (born 1848 )
August 7 – George Gray , U.S. Senator from Delaware from 1885 to 1899 (born 1840 )
August 16 – Edna Hicks , blues singer (born 1895 ; killed in fire)
August 17 – Junius George Groves , slave-born potato farmer (born 1859 )
September 13 – Emily Elizabeth Holman , architect (born 1854 )
September 17 – Carl Eytel , painter of the Southwest (born 1862 in Württemberg)
October 7 – Christy Mathewson , baseball player (born 1880 )
October 10 – James Buchanan Duke , tobacco and electric power industrialist (born 1856 )
October 17 – John I. Beggs , businessman (born 1847 )
November 1 – Lester Cuneo , actor (born 1888 )
November 3 – Lucile McVey , silent film comedy actress (born 1890 )
November 21 – Robert Wrenn , tennis player (born 1873 )
December 7 – James O. Barrows , actor (born 1855)
December 8 – Marguerite Marsh , silent film actress (born 1888)
December 22 – Mary Thurman , silent film actress (born 1895)
December 28 – Raymond P. Rodgers , admiral (born 1849 )
December 31 – J. Gordon Edwards director (born 1867 in Canada )
Johns, Robert H. (2013). "The 1925 Tri-State Tornado Damage Path And Associated Storm System". Electronic Journal of Severe Storms Metereology : 1–33.
Moran, Jeffrey P. (2002). The Scopes Trial: A Brief History with Documents . Bedford/St. Martin's.
Evjen, Victor H. (2014). "The Federal Probation System: The Struggle To Achieve It And Its First 25 Years". Federal Probation : 1–17.
"Dr. William Arce" . ABCA Hall of Fame . American Baseball Coaches Association. Retrieved 21 December 2023 .
Literature of Travel and Exploration: R to Z, index , ed. Jennifer Speake , p. 1296