Decades: 
1910s 
1920s 
1930s  
1940s 
1950s  
 See also: 
 
President Roosevelt at the Grand Coulee Dam  in Washington, 1937  
Events from the year 1937 in the United States .
 
Incumbents 
Joseph Taylor Robinson  (D -Arkansas ) (until July 14) 
Alben W. Barkley  (D -Kentucky ) (starting July 22) 
Governors  and lieutenant governors 
 
Governors 
Governor of Alabama : Bibb Graves  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Arizona : Benjamin Baker Moeur  (Democratic ) (until January 4), Rawghlie Clement Stanford  (Democratic ) (starting January 4) 
Governor of Arkansas : Junius Marion Futrell  (Democratic ) (until January 12), Carl Edward Bailey  (Democratic ) (starting January 12) 
Governor of California : Frank Merriam  (Republican ) 
Governor of Colorado :
 
Governor of Connecticut : Wilbur Lucius Cross  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Delaware : C. Douglass Buck  (Republican ) (until January 19), Richard C. McMullen  (Democratic ) (starting January 19) 
Governor of Florida : David Sholtz  (Democratic ) (until January 5), Fred P. Cone  (Democratic ) (starting January 5) 
Governor of Georgia : Eugene Talmadge  (Democratic ) (until January 12), Eurith D. Rivers  (Democratic ) (starting January 12) 
Governor of Idaho : C. Ben Ross  (Democratic ) (until January 4), Barzilla W. Clark  (Democratic ) (starting January 4) 
Governor of Illinois : Henry Horner  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Indiana : Paul V. McNutt  (Democratic ) (until January 11), M. Clifford Townsend  (Democratic ) (starting January 11) 
Governor of Iowa : Clyde L. Herring  (Democratic ) (until January 14), Nelson G. Kraschel  (Democratic ) (starting January 14) 
Governor of Kansas : Alfred M. Landon  (Republican ) (until January 11), Walter A. Huxman  (Democratic ) (starting January 11) 
Governor of Kentucky : Happy Chandler  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Louisiana : Richard W. Leche  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Maine : Louis J. Brann  (Democratic ) (until January 6), Lewis O. Barrows  (Republican ) (starting January 6) 
Governor of Maryland : Harry W. Nice  (Republican ) 
Governor of Massachusetts : James Michael Curley  (Democratic ) (until January 7), Charles F. Hurley  (Democratic ) (starting January 7) 
Governor of Michigan : Frank Fitzgerald  (Republican ) (until January 1), Frank Murphy  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Governor of Minnesota : Hjalmar Petersen  (Farmer-Labor ) (until January 4), Elmer A. Benson  (Farmer-Labor ) (starting January 4) 
Governor of Mississippi : Hugh L. White  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Missouri : Guy Brasfield Park  (Democratic ) (until January 11), Lloyd C. Stark  (Democratic ) (starting January 11) 
Governor of Montana : Elmer Holt  (Democratic ) (until January 4), Roy E. Ayers  (Democratic ) (starting January 4) 
Governor of Nebraska : Robert Leroy Cochran  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Nevada : Richard Kirman, Sr.  (Democratic ) 
Governor of New Hampshire : Styles Bridges  (Republican ) (until January 7), Francis P. Murphy  (Republican ) (starting January 7) 
Governor of New Jersey : Harold G. Hoffman  (Republican ) 
Governor of New Mexico : Clyde Tingley  (Democratic ) 
Governor of New York : Herbert H. Lehman  (Democratic ) 
Governor of North Carolina : John C. B. Ehringhaus  (Democratic ) (until January 7), Clyde R. Hoey  (Democratic ) (starting January 7) 
Governor of North Dakota : Walter Welford  (Republican ) (until January 6), William Langer  (Republican ) (starting January 6) 
Governor of Ohio : Martin L. Davey  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Oklahoma : Ernest W. Marland  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Oregon : Charles H. Martin  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Pennsylvania : George Howard Earle III  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Rhode Island : Theodore Francis Green  (Democratic ) (until January 5), Robert E. Quinn  (Democratic ) (starting January 2) 
Governor of South Carolina : Olin D. Johnston  (Democratic ) 
Governor of South Dakota : Tom Berry  (Democratic ) (until January 5), Leslie Jensen  (Republican ) (starting January 5) 
Governor of Tennessee : Harry Hill McAlister  (Democratic ) (until January 15), Gordon Browning  (Democratic ) (starting January 15) 
Governor of Texas : James V. Allred  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Utah : Henry H. Blood  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Vermont : Charles M. Smith  (Republican ) (until January 7), George David Aiken  (Republican ) (starting January 7) 
Governor of Virginia : George C. Peery  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Washington : Clarence D. Martin  (Democratic ) 
Governor of West Virginia : Herman G. Kump  (Democratic ) (until January 18), Homer A. Holt  (Democratic ) (starting January 18) 
Governor of Wisconsin : Philip La Follette  (Wisconsin Progressive ) 
Governor of Wyoming : Leslie A. Miller  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant governors 
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : Thomas E. Knight  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas : William Lee Cazort  (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), Robert L. Bailey  (Democratic )  (starting month and day unknown) 
Lieutenant Governor of California : George J. Hatfield  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado : Raymond Herbert Talbot  (Democratic ) (until January 1), Frank J. Hayes  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut : T. Frank Hayes  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : Roy F. Corley  (Republican ) (until January 19), Edward W. Cooch  (Democratic ) (starting January 19) 
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho : G. P. Mix  (Democratic ) (until January 3), Charles C. Gossett  (Democratic ) (starting January 3) 
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois : Thomas Donovan  (Democratic ) (until January 4), John H. Stelle  (Democratic ) (starting January 4) 
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana : M. Clifford Townsend  (Democratic ) (until January 11), Henry F. Schricker  (Democratic ) (starting January 11) 
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : Nelson G. Kraschel  (Democratic ) (until January 14), John K. Valentine  (Democratic ) (starting January 14) 
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : Charles W. Thompson  (Republican ) (until month and day unknown), William M. Lindsay  (Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown) 
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : Keen Johnson  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana : Earl K. Long  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Joseph L. Hurley  (Democratic ) (until January 7), Francis E. Kelly  (Democratic ) (starting January 7) 
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan :
 
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : William B. Richardson  (Republican ) (until January 4), Gottfrid Lindsten  (Republican ) (starting January 4) 
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : Jacob Buehler Snider  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : Frank Gaines Harris  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Montana : William P. Pilgeram  (Democratic )  (until month and day unknown), Hugh R. Adair  (political party unknown) (starting month and day unknown) 
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska : Walter H. Jurgensen  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Fred S. Alward  (political party unknown) 
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico : Louis Cabeza de Baca (Democratic ) (until January 1), Hiram M. Dow  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Lieutenant Governor of New York : M. William Bray  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : Alexander H. Graham  (Democratic ) (until January 7), Wilkins P. Horton  (Democratic ) (starting January 7) 
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota : vacant (until January 6), Thorstein H. H. Thoresen  (Republican ) (starting January 6) 
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : Harold G. Mosier  (Democratic ) (until January 11), Paul P. Yoder  (Democratic ) (starting January 11) 
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma : James E. Berry  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania : Thomas Kennedy  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : Robert E. Quinn  (Democratic ) (until January 5), Raymond E. Jordan  (Democratic ) (starting January 5) 
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : Joseph Emile Harley  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota : Robert Peterson  (Democratic ) (until January 5), Donald McMurchie  (Republican ) (starting January 5) 
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : Bryan Pope (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : Walter Frank Woodul  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : George D. Aiken  (Republican ) (until January 7), William H. Wills  (Republican ) (starting January 7) 
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : James H. Price  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Washington : Victor A. Meyers  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin :
until January 4: vacant 
January 4-October 16: Henry A. Gunderson  (Progressive) 
starting October 16: vacant  
  
Events 
 January–March 
January 11 – The first issue of Look   magazine goes on sale. 
January 12 – Adventurer and filmmaker Martin Johnson, of Martin and Osa Johnson  fame, is killed along with four others in the crash of Western Air Express Flight 7  in mountainous terrain near Saugus, California . 
January 19
 
January 20 – Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes  swears in Franklin D. Roosevelt  for a second term. This is the first time Inauguration Day  in the United States occurs on this date, in response to the ratification in 1933 of the 20th amendment  to the U.S. Constitution. Inauguration has occurred on January 20 ever since. John Nance Garner  is sworn in for a second term as Vice President of the United States . 
January 26 – Michigan  celebrates its Centennial  Anniversary of statehood. 
January 31 – The Ohio River floods ,  killing 385 people and leaving one million homeless. Property losses reach $500 million ($10.2 billion when adjusted for inflation as of September 2022). 
February 5 – President  Franklin D. Roosevelt  proposes a plan  to enlarge the Supreme Court of the United States . 
February 6 – John Steinbeck 's novella  of the Great Depression  Of Mice and Men   is published. 
February 11 – A sit-down strike ends when General Motors  recognizes the United Automobile Workers  Union. 
February 15 – Life  magazine publishes the photograph At the Time of the Louisville Flood   by  Margaret Bourke-White , depicting black victims of the Ohio River floods.[ 2]  
February 16 – Wallace H. Carothers  receives a patent  for nylon .[ 3]  
March 2 – The Steel Workers Organizing Committee , precursor to United Steelworkers , signs a collective bargaining  agreement with U.S. Steel . 
March 4 – The 9th Academy Awards , hosted by George Jessel , are presented at Biltmore Hotel  in Los Angeles , with Robert Z. Leonard 's The Great Ziegfeld   winning the Outstanding Production . The film was among two others (being Mervyn LeRoy 's Anthony Adverse   and William Wyler 's Dodsworth  ) to each receive the most nominations with seven, while Anthony Adverse  won the most awards with four. Frank Capra  receives his second Best Director  award for Mr. Deeds Goes to Town  . 
March 17 – The Atherton Report  (private investigator Edwin Atherton 's report detailing vice and police corruption in San Francisco) is released. 
March 18
 
March 26
 
March 28 – Sculptor Robert George Irwin  kills three people in Turtle Bay, Manhattan . 
March – The first issue of the comic book  Detective Comics   is published in the United States. Twenty-seven issues later, Detective Comics  introduces Batman . The comic goes on to become the longest continually published comic magazine in American history; it is still published as of 2024.  
 April–June 
May 6: Hindenburg disaster   
May 27: The Golden Gate Bridge  opens to pedestrian traffic  
April 12 – NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel  : The Supreme Court of the United States  rules that the National Labor Relations Act  is constitutional. 
April 13 – Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument  is established. 
April 17 – The animated short Porky's Duck Hunt  , directed by Tex Avery  for the Looney Tunes   series, featuring the debut of Daffy Duck , is released. 
May – 7 million unemployed in the USA. 
May 6 – Hindenburg disaster : The German airship Hindenburg  bursts into flame when mooring to a mast in Lakehurst, New Jersey . 
May 7 – An enquiry begins into the Hindenburg disaster . 
May 27 – In California , the Golden Gate Bridge  opens to pedestrian traffic, creating a vital link between San Francisco  and Marin County . The next day, President Franklin D. Roosevelt  pushes a button in Washington, D.C. , signaling the start of vehicle traffic over the Golden Gate Bridge. 
May 30 – Memorial Day massacre : the Chicago Police Department shot and killed ten unarmed demonstrators during labor strike at US Steel in Chicago.[ 4]  
June 14 – Pennsylvania  becomes the first (and only) of the United States to celebrate Flag Day  officially as a state holiday . 
June 20 – The first transpolar flight in history  successfully arrives at Vancouver, Washington . 
June 24 – The U.S. Navy's first two fast battleships , North Carolina   and Washington  , are ordered from the New York  and Philadelphia Naval Shipyards , respectively. 
June 25 – In The Bronx , an extended Orchard Beach  recreation area opens, turning Hunter Island  into a peninsula.  
 July–September 
September 20: The Federal Art Project  opens a Watercolors and Drawings show at  the new Federal Art Gallery, NYC  
July 2
 
July 4 – The Lost Colony   historical drama is first performed in an outdoor theater in the location where it is set, Roanoke Island , North Carolina . 
July 5 – The canned precooked meat product Spam  is introduced by the Hormel  company. 
July 14 – A world record-breaking non-stop flight lands near San Jacinto , California  
July 22 – New Deal : The United States Senate  votes down President Franklin D. Roosevelt 's proposal to add more justices to the Supreme Court of the United States . 
July 24 – Alabama  drops rape  charges against the so-called Scottsboro Boys . 
September 7 – CBS  broadcasts a two-and-a-half hour memorial concert nationwide on radio in memory of George Gershwin, live from the Hollywood Bowl .  Many celebrities appear, including Oscar Levant , Fred Astaire , Otto Klemperer , Lily Pons , and members of the original cast of Porgy and Bess  . The concert is recorded and released complete years later in what is excellent sound for its time, on CD . The Los Angeles Philharmonic  is the featured orchestra. 
September 18 – African American writer Zora Neale Hurston  publishes her novel Their Eyes Were Watching God  . 
September 20 – USS Yorktown   is commissioned. 
September 26 – Street & Smith  launches a half-hour radio program, The Shadow  , with Orson Welles  in the title role.  
 October–December 
October 1
 
October 5 – Roosevelt  gives his famous Quarantine Speech   in Chicago . 
October 10 – The New York Yankees  defeat the New York Giants (baseball) , 4 games to 1, to win their 6th World Series Title. 
October 15 – Ernest Hemingway 's novel To Have and Have Not   is first published. 
December 12
Panay incident : Japanese bombers sink the American gunboat USS Panay  . 
Mae West  makes a risque guest appearance on the NBC  Chase and Sanborn Hour  that eventually results in her being banned from radio. 
December 21 – Walt Disney 's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs  , the first feature-length animated cartoon  with sound, opens and becomes a smash hit. 
December 22 – The Lincoln Tunnel , connecting New York City  to Weehawken, New Jersey , under the Hudson River  opens to road traffic. 
December 25 – At the age of 70, conductor Arturo Toscanini  conducts the NBC Symphony Orchestra  on radio  for the first time, beginning his successful 17-year tenure with that orchestra.  This first concert consists of music by Vivaldi  (at a time when he was still seldom played), Mozart , and Brahms . Millions tune in to listen, including U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt .  
Advertisement for 1937 Graham  Custom Series 120 Supercharger Four-door Sedan  
Undated 
Ongoing 
Births 
January 
Philip Glass  
Suzanne Pleshette  
January 4 
 
January 6  – Underwood Dudley , American mathematician 
January 7  – Harvey Evans , American actor (d. 2021 ) 
January 10 
 
January 13  – George Reisman , American economist 
January 14 
 
January 15  – Margaret O'Brien , American actress 
January 16  – Francis George , American cardinal (d. 2015 ) 
January 19  – Fred J. Lincoln , American actor, director, producer and screenwriter (d. 2013 ) 
January 22  – Joseph Wambaugh , American author (d. 2025 ) 
January 25 
 
January 29  – Bobby Scott , American musician, producer and songwriter (d. 1990 ) 
January 31 
 
February 
Garrett Morris  
Roberta Flack  
Nancy Wilson  
February 1 
 
February 2 
 
February 4 
 
February 5  – Stuart Damon , American actor (d. 2021 ) 
February 8  – Joe Raposo , American composer and songwriter (d. 1989 ) 
February 9  – William Lawvere , American mathematician  (d. 2023 ) 
February 10 
 
February 11  – Greg Noll ,  American surfing pioneer (d. 2021 )[ 6]  
February 12  – Charles Dumas , American athlete (d. 2004 ) 
February 14 
 
February 15 
 
February 17  – Mary Ann Mobley , American actress (d. 2014 ) 
February 19  – Robert Walker , American blues  guitarist (d. 2017 ) 
February 20 
 
February 21  – Ted Savage , American baseball player (d. 2023 )[ 8]  
February 23  – J. W. Lockett , American football player (d. 1999 ) 
February 25  – Bob Schieffer , American television journalist 
February 27  – Barbara Babcock , American actress 
March 
Bobby Driscoll  
Warren Beatty  
March 2  – Denny Crum , American basketball coach (d. 2023 )[ 9]  
March 3  – Bobby Driscoll , American actor (d. 1968 ) 
March 4  – Leslie H. Gelb , American foreign policy expert (d. 2019 ) 
March 6  – Ivan Boesky , stock trader and convicted felon (d. 2024 )[ 10]  
March 8  – Richard Fariña , American folk music  singer, novelist (d. 1966 ) 
March 16  – William L. Armstrong , American politician (d. 2016 ) 
March 17 
 
March 20 
 
March 22  – Angelo Badalamenti , American composer (d. 2022 )[ 11]  
March 23 
 
March 26  – Wayne Embry , American basketball player and team executive 
March 27  – Thomas Aquinas Daly , American painter 
March 29  – Billy Carter , American farmer, businessman, brewer and politician (d. 1988 ) 
March 30  – Warren Beatty , American actor, director 
April 
Colin Powell  
Billy Dee Williams  
George Takei  
Jack Nicholson  
April 2  – Paul Kanjorski , American politician 
April 3 
 
April 5 
 
April 6 
 
April 7  – Charlie Thomas , American R&B musician (d. 2023 ) 
April 8  – Seymour Hersh , American investigative journalist and political writer 
April 12 
 
April 13  – Lanford Wilson , American playwright (d. 2011 ) 
April 15 
 
April 16  – George Steele , American professional wrestler and actor (d. 2017 ) 
April 17  – Don Buchla , American electronic-instrument designer (d. 2016 ) 
April 18  – Robert Hooks , African-American actor, producer and activist 
April 19  – Elinor Donahue , American actress 
April 20  – George Takei , Japanese-American actor, director, author and activist 
April 21  – David Lucas , American rock and roll composer, singer and music producer 
April 22 
 
April 23  – Don Massengale , American professional golfer (d. 2007 ) 
April 24  – Joe Henderson , American rhythm and blues , gospel music  singer (d. 1964 ) 
April 26  – Bob Boozer , American professional basketball player (d. 2012 ) 
April 27  – Sandy Dennis , American actress (d. 1992 ) 
April 28  – Diane Hoh , American author 
May 
Dick Dale  
George Carlin  
Yvonne Craig  
May 2  – Lorenzo Music , American voice actor (d. 2001 ) 
May 4 
 
May 6  – Rubin Carter , African-American boxer wrongfully convicted of murder (d. 2014 ) 
May 8  – Dennis DeConcini , American politician 
May 9  – Alison Jolly , American primatologist  (d. 2014 ) 
May 10 
 
May 12  – George Carlin , American stand-up comedian, actor, author and social critic  (d. 2008 ) 
May 13 
 
May 15 
 
May 16 
 
May 17  – Hazel R. O'Leary , U.S. Secretary of Energy  
May 18  – Brooks Robinson , American baseball player (d. 2023 ) 
May 24 
 
May 25  – Mark Shields , American political analyst  (d. 2022 ) 
May 30  – Deanna Lund , American actress (d. 2018 ) 
June 
Morgan Freeman  
Waylon Jennings  
Robert Coleman Richardson  
June 1  – Morgan Freeman , African-American actor 
June 2  – Sally Kellerman , American actress (d. 2022 )[ 13]  
June 3 
 
June 4  – Gorilla Monsoon , American professional wrestler, announcer (d. 1999 ) 
June 7  – Red Grooms , American painter and illustrator 
June 8 
 
June 11  – David Mumford , American mathematician 
June 12  – Sidney M. Wolfe , American physician (d. 2024 )[ 15]  
June 13  – Eleanor Holmes Norton , African-American politician 
June 15  – Waylon Jennings , American country singer (d. 2002 ) 
June 16  – Jim Dine , American painter 
June 18 
 
June 21 
 
June 25  – Eddie Floyd , African-American soul-R&B singer and songwriter 
June 26 
 
June 27 
 
June 28  – Ron Luciano , American baseball umpire, writer (d. 1995 ) 
June 30 
 
July 
Ned Beatty  
Bill Cosby  
Hunter S. Thompson  
July 2 
 
July 4 
 
July 6  – Ned Beatty , American actor (d. 2021 )[ 17]  
July 7 
 
July 12 
Bill Cosby , African-American actor, comedian, educator and convicted sex offender 
Bruce W. Klunder , American Presbyterian minister and civil rights activist (d. 1964 ) 
July 16 
 
July 18  – Hunter S. Thompson , American author, journalist (d. 2005 ) 
July 19 
 
July 20  – Dick Hafer , American Christian cartoonist (d. 2003 ) 
July 27  – Don Galloway , American actor (d. 2009 )[ 18]  
July 29 
 
July 31  — Sab Shimono , American actor 
August 
Dustin Hoffman  
August 1  – Al D'Amato , American politician 
August 3  – Roland Burris , American politician 
August 4 
 
August 5  – Herb Brooks , American hockey coach (d. 2003 ) 
August 6  – Charlie Haden , American jazz bassist (d. 2014 ) 
August 7  – Magic Slim , African-American blues singer and guitarist (d. 2013 ) 
August 8  – Dustin Hoffman , American actor, director 
August 14  – Alberta Nelson , American actress (d. 2006 ) 
August 21 
 
August 26  – Don Bowman , American comedian, country music singer, songwriter, and radio host (d. 2013 ) 
August 27  – Alice Coltrane , African-American jazz harpist, organist, pianist and composer (d. 2007 ) 
August 31  – Bobby Parker , American rock musician (d. 2013 ) 
September 
Jared Diamond  
Don Bluth  
September 1 
 
September 5  – A. George Pradel , American police officer, politician (d. 2018 ) 
September 6  – Jo Anne Worley , American actress, comedian (Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In  ) 
September 7  – John Phillip Law , American actor (d. 2008 ) 
September 8  – Barbara Frum , American radio and television journalist (d. 1992 ) 
September 10 
 
September 13  – Don Bluth , American animator, film director, producer, writer, production designer, video game designer and animation instructor 
September 15 
 
September 19  – Abner Haynes , American football player (d. 2024 ) 
September 20 
 
September 26  – Jerry Weintraub , American film producer, talent agent (d. 2015 ) 
September 28 
 
October 
Johnnie Cochran  
October 2  – Johnnie Cochran , African-American attorney (d. 2005 ) 
October 4  – Leon Thomas , American jazz and blues singer (d. 1999 ) 
October 5  – Barry Switzer , American football coach 
October 8  – Frank Cignetti Sr. , American football player and coach (d. 2022 ) 
October 10  – Danny Kaleikini , American singer and entertainer (d. 2023 ) 
October 15  – Linda Lavin , American actress and singer  (d. 2024 ) 
October 20  – Wanda Jackson , American singer, songwriter, pianist and guitarist 
October 22  – Alan Ladd Jr. , American film executive and producer (d. 2022 ) 
October 24  – John Goetz , American professional baseball player (d. 2008 ) 
October 25  – Jeanne Black , American singer (d. 2014 ) 
October 26  – John "Jabo" Starks , African-American drummer (d. 2018 ) 
October 28  – Lenny Wilkens , American basketball player, coach 
October 31  – Tom Paxton , American folk singer-songwriter 
November 
Loretta Swit  
November 1  – Bill Anderson , American country music singer, songwriter and game show host 
November 2 
 
November 4 
 
November 5  – Harris Yulin , American actor (d. 2025 ) 
November 6  – Eugene Pitt , American musician (d. 2018 ) 
November 7  – Wayne Yates , American basketball player (d. 2022 ) 
November 9  – Vernon Taylor , American rockabilly musician 
November 12 
 
November 15  – Little Willie John , African-American rock and roll , rhythm and blues  singer (d. 1968 ) 
November 20  – Ruth Laredo , American pianist (d. 2005 ) 
November 21 
 
November 30  – Luther Ingram , African-American R&B singer, songwriter (d. 2007 ) 
December 
Thad Cochran  
Jane Fonda  
Deaths 
Jean Harlow  shortly before her death in 1937 
January 1 – J. Gresham Machen , Presbyterian theologian (born 1881 ) 
January 2 – Ross Alexander , actor (born 1907 ) 
January 11 – Emma Amelia Cranmer , prohibition reformer and suffragist (born 1858 ) 
January 13 – Martin Johnson , adventurer and filmmaker (born 1884 ) 
January 21 – Marie Provost , actress (born 1896 ) 
February 7 – Elihu Root , statesman and diplomat, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize  in 1912 (born 1845 ) 
February 11 – Walter Burley Griffin , architect and town planner (born 1876 ) 
March 1 – DeWitt Jennings , actor (born 1871 ) 
March 5 – Jenova Martin , Norwegian-born suffragist and writer (born 1866 )[ 24]  
March 15 – H. P. Lovecraft , horror fiction author (born 1890 ) 
March 29 – William Edward White , African American baseball player (born 1860 ) 
April 10 – Ralph Ince , film director (born 1887 ) 
April 14 – Ned Hanlon , baseball manager (born 1857 ) 
April 16 – Jay Johnson Morrow , military engineer and politician, 3rd Governor of the Panama Canal Zone  (born 1870 ) 
May 14 – John Burke , 24th Treasurer of the United States  (born 1859 ) 
May 23 – John D. Rockefeller , oil industry business magnate and philanthropist (born 1839 ) 
June 7 – Jean Harlow , actress and sex symbol (born 1911 ) 
July 2 – Amelia Earhart , aviator, missing on flight (born 1897 ) 
July 9 – Oliver Law , labor organizer and Army officer, killed in Spanish Civil War (born 1899 ) 
July 11 – George Gershwin , popular composer (born 1898 ) 
July 14 – Joseph Taylor Robinson , politician (born 1872 ) 
July 29 – Ella Maria Ballou , writer (born 1852 ) 
August 11 – Edith Wharton , novelist (born 1862 ) 
August 21 – Hannah J. Patterson , suffragist and social activist (born 1879 ) 
August 27 – Andrew Mellon , banker and Secretary of the Treasury (born 1855 ) 
September 8 – Anna Hempstead Branch , poet (born 1875 ) 
September 11 –  Loraine Wyman , folk singer and dulcimer player (born 1885 ) 
September 13 – Ellis Parker Butler , humorist (born 1869 ) 
September 21 – Osgood Perkins , actor (born 1892 ) 
September 22 – Ruth Roland , actress (born 1892) 
September 26 – Bessie Smith , African American blues singer (born 1894 ) 
September 29 – Ray Ewry , field athlete (born 1873 ) 
October 6 – Blind Uncle Gaspard , Cajun musician (born 1880 ) 
October 22 – George Horace Lorimer , newspaper editor (born 1867 ) 
November 6 – Colin Campbell Cooper , painter (born 1856 ) 
November 25 – Raymond Stanton Patton , admiral (born 1882 ) 
November 30 – James O. McKinsey , accountant and pioneer of management consulting (born 1889 ) 
December 6 – Florence Griswold , curator (born 1850 ) 
December 21
 
December 25 – Newton D. Baker , United States Secretary of War  (born 1871 ) 
December 29 – Don Marquis , poet (born 1878 )[ 25]  
Undated
Rabbit Brown , country blues singer (born c. 1880) 
Redoshi , penultimate survivor of the transatlantic slave trade (born c. 1848 in West Africa)  
See also 
References 
^   Syrett, Nicholas L. (2016). "Chapter Eight: Marriage Comes Early in the Mountains: The Persistence of Child Marriage in the Rural South". American Child Bride: A History of Minors and Marriage in the United States  . University of North Carolina Press. doi :10.5149/northcarolina/9781469629537.003.0009 . ISBN  978-1-4696-2953-7 .  
 
^   Sexton, Robby (May 7, 2014). "World's Highest Standard of Living" . Art Institute of Chicago . Retrieved March 14, 2025. 
 
^   U.S. patent 2,071,250   "Linear Condensation Polymers", filed July 1931, issued February 1937 
 
^   "Riding the Rails: Timeline of the Great Depression" . American Experience  . USA: Public Broadcasting Service . Retrieved 24 August  2016 . 
 
^   "New Deal | Definition, History, Programs, Summary, & Facts | Britannica" . www.britannica.com . Retrieved 14 March  2023 . 
 
^   Greg Noll, South Bay surfer and legendary big-wave rider, dies  
 
^   Jessie Maple, pioneering American cinematographer, dies aged 76  
 
^   Funds Being Raised for RBI program of Cardinals Care in Memory of Ted Savage  
 
^   Hall of Fame men's basketball coach Denny Crum dies at 86  
 
^   Ivan Boesky, Wall Street financier who coined ‘greed is good’, dies aged 87  
 
^   Angelo Badalamenti, David Lynch’s composer on Twin Peaks, Blue Velvet and more, dies aged 85  
 
^   Obituary: Craig Breedlove, land speed record king  
 
^   Chung, Christine (25 February 2022). "Sally Kellerman, Oscar-Nominated 'MASH' Actress, Is Dead at 84" . The New York Times . Retrieved 25 February  2022 .  
 
^   Pa. representative dies after battle with lymphoma  
 
^   Sidney M. Wolfe, Scourge of the Pharmaceutical Industry, Dies at 86  
 
^   Sherwin, Martin J. 1937-  
 
^   Vigdor, Neil (2021-06-14). "Ned Beatty, Actor Known for 'Network' and 'Deliverance,' Dies at 83" . The New York Times . Retrieved 14 June  2021 .  
 
^   Hayward, Anthony (April 5, 2009). "Don Galloway - Character actor in the TV crime drama A Man Called Ironside" . The Guardian . Retrieved July 22,  2015 .  
 
^   Michelle Obama's mother, Marian Robinson, dies at 86  
 
^   Jon Reynolds, Vietnam POW for more than seven years, dies at 84  
 
^   John Canley, Medal of Honor recipient from Arkansas, dies at age 84  
 
^   "Jane Fonda" . Britannica Presents 100 Women Trailblazers . 25 March 2020. Retrieved 26 July  2021 . 
 
^   Karol Bobko, First to Pilot the Challenger Into Space, Dies at 85  
 
^   Cudmore, Victoria. "Biographical Sketch of Jenova Martin" . Alexander Street . Retrieved 19 September  2024 .  
 
^   "Don Marquis | American writer | Britannica" . www.britannica.com . Retrieved 24 March  2022 . 
 
  
External links 
18th century 19th century 20th century 21st century By U.S. state/territory