Decades: 
1980s 
1990s 
2000s  
2010s 
2020s  
 See also: 
 
Events from the year 2003 in the United States .
Incumbents 
Federal government 
Tom Daschle  (D -South Dakota ) (until January 3) 
Bill Frist  (R -Tennessee ) (starting January 3) 
Governors  and lieutenant governors 
 
Governors 
Governor of Alabama : Don Siegelman  (Democratic ) (until January 20), Bob Riley  (Republican ) (starting January 20) 
Governor of Alaska : Frank Murkowski  (Republican ) 
Governor of Arizona : Jane Dee Hull  (Republican ) (until January 6), Janet Napolitano  (Democratic ) (starting January 6) 
Governor of Arkansas : Mike Huckabee  (Republican ) 
Governor of California : Gray Davis  (Democratic ) (until November 17), Arnold Schwarzenegger  (Republican ) (starting November 17) 
Governor of Colorado : Bill Owens  (Republican ) 
Governor of Connecticut : John G. Rowland  (Republican ) 
Governor of Delaware : Ruth Ann Minner  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Florida : Jeb Bush  (Republican ) 
Governor of Georgia : Roy Barnes  (Democratic ) (until January 13), Sonny Perdue  (Republican ) (starting January 13) 
Governor of Hawaii : Linda Lingle  (Republican ) 
Governor of Idaho : Dirk Kempthorne  (Republican ) 
Governor of Illinois : George Ryan  (Republican ) (until January 13), Rod Blagojevich  (Democratic ) (starting January 13) 
Governor of Indiana : Frank O'Bannon  (Democratic ) (until September 13), Joe Kernan  (Democratic ) (starting September 13) 
Governor of Iowa : Tom Vilsack  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Kansas : Bill Graves  (Republican ) (until January 13), Kathleen Sebelius  (Democratic ) (starting January 13) 
Governor of Kentucky : Paul E. Patton  (Democratic ) (until December 9), Ernie Fletcher  (Republican ) (starting December 9) 
Governor of Louisiana : Murphy J. Foster, Jr.  (Republican ) 
Governor of Maine : Angus King  (Independent ) (until January 8), John Baldacci  (Democratic ) (starting January 8) 
Governor of Maryland : Parris N. Glendening  (Democratic ) (until January 15), Robert L. Ehrlich, Jr.  (Republican ) (starting January 15) 
Governor of Massachusetts : Jane Swift  (Republican ) (until January 2), Mitt Romney  (Republican ) (starting January 2) 
Governor of Michigan : John Engler  (Republican ) (until January 1), Jennifer Granholm  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Governor of Minnesota : Jesse Ventura  (Independence ) (until January 6), Tim Pawlenty  (Republican ) (starting January 6) 
Governor of Mississippi : Ronnie Musgrove  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Missouri : Bob Holden  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Montana : Judy Martz  (Republican ) 
Governor of Nebraska : Mike Johanns  (Republican ) 
Governor of Nevada : Kenny Guinn  (Republican ) 
Governor of New Hampshire : Jeanne Shaheen  (Democratic ) (until January 9), Craig Benson  (Republican ) (starting January 9) 
Governor of New Jersey : Jim McGreevey  (Democratic ) 
Governor of New Mexico : Gary Johnson  (Republican ) (until January 1), Bill Richardson  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Governor of New York : George Pataki  (Republican ) 
Governor of North Carolina : Mike Easley  (Democratic ) 
Governor of North Dakota : John Hoeven  (Republican ) 
Governor of Ohio : Bob Taft  (Republican ) 
Governor of Oklahoma : Frank Keating  (Republican ) (until January 13), Brad Henry  (Democratic ) (starting January 13) 
Governor of Oregon : John Kitzhaber  (Democratic ) (until January 13), Ted Kulongoski  (Democratic ) (starting January 13) 
Governor of Pennsylvania : Mark S. Schweiker  (Republican ) (until January 21), Ed Rendell  (Democratic ) (starting January 21) 
Governor of Rhode Island : Lincoln C. Almond  (Republican ) (until January 7), Donald Carcieri  (Republican ) (starting January 7) 
Governor of South Carolina : Jim Hodges  (Democratic ) (until January 15), Mark Sanford  (Republican ) (starting January 15) 
Governor of South Dakota : William J. Janklow  (Republican ) (until January 7), Mike Rounds  (Republican ) (starting January 7) 
Governor of Tennessee : Don Sundquist  (Republican ) (until January 18), Phil Bredesen  (Democratic ) (starting January 18) 
Governor of Texas : Rick Perry  (Republican ) 
Governor of Utah : Mike Leavitt  (Republican ) (until November 5), Olene S. Walker  (Republican ) (starting November 5) 
Governor of Vermont : Howard Dean  (Democratic ) (until January 9), Jim Douglas  (Republican ) (starting January 9) 
Governor of Virginia : Mark Warner  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Washington : Gary Locke  (Democratic ) 
Governor of West Virginia : Bob Wise  (Democratic ) 
Governor of Wisconsin : Scott McCallum  (Republican ) (until January 6), Jim Doyle  (Democratic ) (starting January 6) 
Governor of Wyoming : Jim Geringer  (Republican ) (until January 6), Dave Freudenthal  (Democratic ) (starting January 6) 
Lieutenant governors 
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : Steve Windom  (Republican ) (until January 20), Lucy Baxley  (Democratic ) (starting January 20) 
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska : Loren Leman  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas : Winthrop Paul Rockefeller  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of California : Cruz Bustamante  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado : Joe Rogers  (Republican ) (until January 14), Jane E. Norton  (Republican ) (starting January 14) 
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut : Jodi Rell  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : John Carney  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Florida : Frank Brogan  (Republican ) (until March 3), Toni Jennings  (Republican ) (starting March 3) 
Lieutenant Governor of Georgia : Mark Taylor  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii : Duke Aiona  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho : Jack Riggs  (Republican ) (until January 6), Jim Risch  (Republican ) (starting January 6) 
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois : Corinne Wood  (Republican ) (until January 13), Pat Quinn  (Democratic ) (starting January 13) 
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana :
 
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : Sally Pederson  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : Gary Sherrer  (Republican ) (until January 13), John E. Moore  (Democratic ) (starting January 13) 
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : Steve Henry  (Democratic ) (until December 9), Steve Pence  (Republican ) (starting December 9) 
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana : Kathleen Blanco  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Maryland : Kathleen Kennedy Townsend  (Democratic ) (until January 15), Michael Steele  (Republican ) (starting January 15) 
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Jane Swift  (Republican ) (until January 2), Kerry Healey  (Republican ) (starting January 2) 
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan : Dick Posthumus  (Republican ) (until January 1), John D. Cherry  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : Mae Schunk  (Independence) (until January 6), Carol Molnau  (Republican ) (starting January 6) 
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : Amy Tuck  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : Joe Maxwell  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Montana : Karl Ohs  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska : Dave Heineman  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Lorraine Hunt  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico : Walter Dwight Bradley  (Republican ) (until January 1), Diane Denish  (Democratic ) (starting January 1) 
Lieutenant Governor of New York : Mary Donohue  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : Bev Perdue  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota : Jack Dalrymple  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : vacant (until January 13), Jennette Bradley  (Republican ) (starting January 13) 
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma : Mary Fallin  (Republican ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania : Robert Jubelirer  (Republican ) (until January 21), Catherine Baker Knoll  (Democratic ) (starting January 21) 
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : Charles J. Fogarty  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : Bob Peeler  (Republican ) (until January 15), André Bauer  (Republican ) (starting January 15) 
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota : Carole Hillard  (Republican ) (until January 7), Dennis Daugaard  (Republican ) (starting January 7) 
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : John S. Wilder  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : Bill Ratliff  (Republican ) (until January 21), David Dewhurst  (Republican ) (starting January 21) 
Lieutenant Governor of Utah : Olene S. Walker  (Republican ) (until November 5), Gayle McKeachnie  (Republican ) (starting November 5) 
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : Doug Racine  (Democratic ) (until January 9), Brian Dubie  (Republican ) (starting January 9) 
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : Tim Kaine  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Washington : Brad Owen  (Democratic ) 
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin : Margaret A. Farrow  (Republican ) (until January 6), Barbara Lawton  (Democratic ) (starting January 6) 
  
Events 
January 
January – Sky marshals  are introduced on U.S. airlines in an attempt to prevent hijackings.[ 2]  
January 3 
 
January 4  – In American football , the Atlanta Falcons  defeat the Green Bay Packers  in a 27–7  upset, handing the Packers their first ever playoff loss at Lambeau Field .[ 3]  
January 8  – US Airways Express Flight 5481  crashes at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport  in Charlotte, North Carolina , killing all 21 people aboard. 
January 15  – Eldred v. Ashcroft  : The Supreme Court of the United States  allows the extension of copyright terms in the U.S. 
January 16  – STS-107 : Space Shuttle Columbia   is launched on what turns out to be its last flight. 
January 23  – The last signal is received from NASA's Pioneer 10   spacecraft, some 7.5 billion miles from Earth. 
January 24  – The newly created United States Department of Homeland Security  begins operations. 
January 25  – An international group of volunteers  leaves London for Baghdad  to act as voluntary human shields , hoping to avert a U.S. invasion. 
January 26  – Super Bowl XXXVII : The Tampa Bay Buccaneers  defeat the Oakland Raiders  48–21 at Qualcomm Stadium  in San Diego  to win their first Super Bowl title. 
January 28  – State of the Union Address . 
January 30  – Iraq disarmament crisis : The leaders of the United Kingdom , Czech Republic , Denmark , Hungary , Italy , Poland , Portugal , Romania  and Spain  release a statement (The Letter of the Eight  ) demonstrating support for the United States' plans to invade Iraq . 
February 
February 1: Space Shuttle Columbia  is destroyed  on re-entry  
March 
March 1 
 
March 5  – Lockyer v. Andrade  , Ewing v. California  : In two separate opinions, the Supreme Court of the United States , by 5–4 margins, upholds California's "three strikes " law. 
March 11  – Iraq disarmament crisis : Iraqi fighters threaten two U.S. U-2 surveillance planes , on missions for U.N. weapons inspectors, forcing them to abort their mission and return to base. 
March 16  – Iraq disarmament crisis : The leaders of the United States, Britain , Portugal , and Spain  meet at a summit in the Azores Islands . U.S. President Bush calls March 17 the "moment of truth", meaning that the "coalition of the willing " will make its final effort to extract a resolution from the U.N. Security Council , giving Iraq an ultimatum to disarm immediately or be disarmed by force. 
March 17  – Iraq disarmament crisis : U.S. President George W. Bush  gives an ultimatum: Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein  and his sons must either leave Iraq, or face military action at a time of the U.S.'s choosing. 
March 18 
 
March 19  – The first American bombs drop on Baghdad  after Iraqi  President Saddam Hussein  and his sons do not comply with U.S. President George W. Bush's 48-hour mandate demanding their exit from Iraq . 
March 20  – The US-led Iraq War  begins.[ 2]  
March 22  – The United States and the United Kingdom begin their shock and awe  campaign, with a massive air strike on military targets in Baghdad. 
March 23 
 
March 30 
 
April 
April 9: M1A1 Abrams pose for a photo under the "Hands of Victory" in Ceremony Square, Baghdad, Iraq .  
May 
May 1: President George W. Bush 's Mission Accomplished Speech   
May 1  – President George W. Bush lands on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln  , where he gives a speech announcing the end of major combat in the 2003 Invasion of Iraq .[ 2]   A banner behind him declares "Mission Accomplished ". 
May 3  – The Old Man of the Mountain , a rock formation in New Hampshire , crumbles after heavy rain. 
May 4  – Top Thrill Dragster  opens in Cedar Point  in Sandusky, Ohio  as the world's tallest, fastest roller coaster. 
May 4 –10  – A major severe weather outbreak spawns more tornadoes than any week in U.S. history; 393 tornadoes are reported in 19 states. 
May 21  – Ruben Studdard  wins season 2 of American Idol  . 
May 23  – Dewey , the first deer  cloned by scientists at Texas A&M University , is born. 
May 25  – After docking in Miami  at 05:00, the SS Norway   (old SS France ) is severely damaged by a boiler explosion at 06:30, killing seven and injuring 17 crew members. A few weeks later it is announced by Norwegian Cruise Line  that she will never sail again as a commercial ocean liner . 
May 28  – President George W. Bush authorizes $350 billion worth of tax cuts over 10 years.[ 2]  
May 30  – Pixar Animation Studios ' fifth feature film, Finding Nemo  , is released in theaters, becoming the studio's biggest financial success up to that point. 
May 31  – Eric Rudolph , perpetrator of the Centennial Olympic Park bombing  in 1996, is captured in Murphy, North Carolina . 
June 
June – As a result of the early 2000s recession, as well as the jobless recovery  that followed, unemployment peaks at 6.3%, the highest since April 1994. 
June 4  – Martha Stewart  and her broker are indicted  for using privileged investment information and then obstructing a federal investigation. Stewart also resigns as chairperson and chief executive officer of Martha Stewart Living  . 
June 14  – Ennis shooting : A gunman goes on a shooting spree in Madison County, Montana . The gunman kills one man and injures six others, before being involved in a chase and shootout with responding police. He is sentenced to 11 life terms, the longest prison sentence in Montana state history. 
June 15  – The San Antonio Spurs  win their second NBA Championship after defeating the New Jersey Nets , 88-77, in Game 6 of the 2003 NBA Finals . 
June 19  – The U.S. Census Bureau  announces that with 37 million, Hispanics  constitute the largest minority in the USA (compared with 36 million African Americans ).[ 7]  
June 22  – The largest hailstone  ever recorded falls in Aurora, Nebraska . 
June 23  – Grutter v. Bollinger  : The Supreme Court of the United States  upholds affirmative action  in university admissions. 
June 26 
 
June 29  – A balcony collapse  in Chicago kills 13. 
June 30  – In Irvine, California , Joseph Hunter Parker kills two Albertsons  employees with a sword , before being shot to death by the police . 
July 
August 
September 
October 
November 
December 
Ongoing 
Births 
January 
Kyle Rittenhouse  
Jaeden Martell  
Ricardo Pepi  
January 1  – Nikhil Kumar , table tennis player 
January 2  – Cyrus Arnold , actor 
January 3 
 
January 4 
 
January 5  – Sean Bettenhausen , soccer player 
January 6  – MattyBRaps , singer/songwriter, rapper, and dancer 
January 7  – Abel Mendoza , soccer player 
January 9 
 
January 11  – Sota Kitahara , soccer player 
January 13 
 
January 14  – Brittain Gottlieb , soccer player 
January 16 
 
January 18  – Jonathan Perez , soccer player 
January 19  – Katherine Valli , para badminton  player 
January 20  – J. J. McCarthy , football player 
January 21  – Garren Stitt , actor and singer 
January 22  – Michael Halliday , soccer player 
January 23 
 
January 27 
 
January 28  – Carson Hocevar , dirt track and stock car racing driver 
February 
Olivia Rodrigo  
Isra Hirsi  
March 
Sunisa Lee  
March 1 
 
March 6 
 
March 8 
 
March 9 
 
March 10 
 
March 11  – Mikaela Jenkins , Paralympic swimmer  
March 12 
 
March 15  – Quinn Ewers , football player 
March 17  – Dante Huckaby , soccer player 
March 19  – Chase Stillman , American-born Canadian ice hockey player 
March 20  – Alex Monis , soccer player 
March 22  – Eric Kinzner , soccer player 
March 23  – Jacob Greene , soccer player 
March 26  – Bhad Bhabie , rapper, songwriter, and internet personality 
March 27  – Grant Hampton , soccer player 
April 
Elsie Fisher  
May 
JoJo Siwa  
May 1  – Lizzy Greene , actress[ 11]  
May 2  – Chaz Lucius , ice hockey player 
May 5  – Danny Leyva , soccer player 
May 7  – Kevin Paredes , soccer player 
May 8  – Logan Edra , breakdancer 
May 10 
 
May 11 
 
May 13 
 
May 14  – Javier Casas , soccer player 
May 15  – Max Kaeser , race car driver 
May 16 
 
May 18  – Travis Hunter , American football player 
May 19  – JoJo Siwa , dancer, singer, actress, and YouTube  personality 
May 20  – OsamaSon , rapper 
May 21 
 
May 24 
 
May 27  – Caden Clark , soccer player 
June 
Breanna Yde  
June 1  – Emjay Anthony , actor and model 
June 2  – Jeremy Ray Taylor , actor 
June 3  – Nathan Bittle , basketball player 
June 4  – Brady House , baseball player 
June 10  – Lauren Hogg , activist 
June 11  – Breanna Yde , actress 
June 17 
 
June 19  – Frank Mozzicato , baseball player 
June 20  – Hans Niemann , chess grandmaster  
June 21  – Issa Mudashiru , soccer player 
June 23 
 
June 24  – Marcus Fiesel , murder victim (d. 2006 ) 
June 25  – Carson Williams , baseball player 
June 26  – Sam Mayer , stock car racing driver 
June 28  – Joshua Baez , baseball player 
June 29  – Alexys Nycole Sanchez, child actress 
June 30  – Fabrizio Bernal , soccer player 
July 
Storm Reid  
August 
Quvenzhané Wallis  
August 5  – Arquimides Ordonez , soccer player 
August 6  – Brandon Huntley-Hatfield , basketball player 
August 8  – Adam Lundegard , soccer player 
August 10  – Joshua Saavedra , soccer player 
August 14  – Tega Ikoba , soccer player 
August 15  – Coby Jones , soccer player 
August 18 
 
August 22  – Christian Nydegger, soccer player 
August 24 
Jalen Neal , soccer player 
Andre Zuluaga, soccer player  
August 25  – AJ Griffin , basketball player 
August 26 
 
August 28 
 
September 
Jack Dylan Grazer  
Aidan Gallagher  
September 1  – Jonathan Gómez , soccer player 
September 2  – Cristian Nava , soccer player 
September 3 
 
September 6  – Sean McTague , soccer player 
September 7  – Diego Luna , soccer player 
September 8 
 
September 9  – Luke Hughes , ice hockey player 
September 10  – Carissa Yip , chess player 
September 14  – Lateef Omidiji , soccer player 
September 18  – Aidan Gallagher , actor 
September 20  – Thomas Matthew Crooks , attempted assassin of Donald Trump  (d. 2024 ) 
September 26  – Hanna Harrell , figure skater 
September 28  – Caden Stafford , soccer player 
September 30  – Martin Damm , tennis player 
October 
Hudson Yang  
Korbin Albert  
November 
Justin Che  
December 
Daniel Dye  
Deaths 
January 
Richard Crenna  
February 
The crew of STS-107   
Fred Rogers  
Michael P. Anderson , astronaut (b. 1959 ) 
David M. Brown , astronaut and physician (b. 1956 ) 
Kalpana Chawla , India-born American astronaut and aerospace engineer (b. 1961 ) 
Laurel Clark , astronaut and physician (b. 1961 ) 
Rick Husband , commander astronaut (b. 1957 ) 
William McCool , astronaut (b. 1961 ) 
Ilan Ramon , Israeli fighter pilot and astronaut (b. 1954 ) 
February 2  – Lou Harrison , American composer (b. 1917 ) 
February 3  – Lana Clarkson , actress and model (b. 1962 ) 
February 10 
 
February 16  – Eleanor "Sis" Daley , wife of Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley  (b. 1907 ) 
February 17  – Pete Schrum , American actor (b. 1934 ) 
February 19  – Johnny Paycheck , American singer and songwriter (b. 1938 ) 
February 20  – Orville Freeman , 29th Governor of Minnesota from 1955 through1959 (b. 1918 ) 
February 21  – Julie Mitchum , American actress (b. 1914 ) 
February 23  – Howie Epstein , American musician and producer (b. 1955 ) 
February 27  – Fred Rogers , American educator, minister, songwriter, writer, and television host (b. 1928 ) 
March 
Michael Jeter  
March 2  – Hank Ballard , American singer and songwriter (b. 1927 ) 
March 3  – Ann A. Bernatitus , American U.S. Navy nurse (b. 1912 ) 
March 9  – Stan Brakhage , American filmmaker (b. 1933 ) 
March 12 
 
March 14  – Amanda Davis , American writer and teacher (b. 1971 ) 
March 16  – Rachel Corrie , American activist and diarist (b. 1979 ) 
March 20  – Sailor Art Thomas , American bodybuilder and wrestler (b. 1924 ) 
March 22  – Milton G. Henschel , American minister and executive (b. 1920 ) 
March 26  – Daniel Patrick Moynihan , American politician (b. 1926 ) 
March 30  – Michael Jeter , American actor (b. 1952 )[ 13]  
March 31  - Anne Gwynne , American actress (b. 1918 )[ 14]  
April 
Nina Simone  
April 2  – Edwin Starr  American soul singer (b. 1942 ) 
April 4  – Anthony Caruso , American actor (b. 1916 ) 
April 6  – David Bloom , American journalist (b. 1963 ) 
April 8  – Bing Russell , American actor (b. 1926 ) 
April 10  – Little Eva , American singer (b. 1943 ) 
April 11  – Cecil Howard Green , British-American geophysicist and businessman (b. 1900 ) 
April 17 
 
April 16  – Graham Jarvis , Canadian actor (b. 1930 ) 
April 17  – Robert Atkins , American physician, namesake of the Atkins diet  (b. 1930 ) 
April 20  – Ruth Hale , writer and actress (b. 1908 ) 
April 21  – Nina Simone , American singer, songwriter, pianist, arranger, and civil rights activist (b. 1933 ) 
April 22  – Mike Larrabee , American Olympic athlete (b. 1933 ) 
April 26  – Peter Stone , American screenwriter (b. 1930 ) 
May 
Robert Stack  
May 1  – Miss Elizabeth , American wrestling manager and valet (b. 1960 ) 
May 3  – Suzy Parker , American model and actress (b. 1932 ) 
May 9 
 
May 14 
 
May 15  – June Carter Cash , American singer, dancer, songwriter, actress, comedian, and writer (b. 1929 ) 
May 17  – Pop Ivy , American-Canadian football player and coach (b. 1916 ) 
May 24  – Rachel Kempson , British actress (b. 1910 ) 
May 26  – Kathleen Winsor , American writer (b. 1919 ) 
May 28  – Martha Scott , American actress (b. 1912 ) 
June 
Gregory Peck  
Katharine Hepburn  
June 2 
 
June 6  – Ken Grimwood , American writer (b. 1944 ) 
June 7  – Trevor Goddard , English actor (b. 1962 ) 
June 10  – Donald Regan , 66th United States Secretary of the Treasury (b. 1918 ) 
June 11 
 
June 12  – Gregory Peck , American actor (b. 1916 ) 
June 14  – Jimmy Knepper , American musician (b. 1927 ) 
June 15  – Hume Cronyn , Canadian-American actor (b. 1911 ) 
June 18  – Larry Doby , American baseball player and manager (b. 1923 ) 
June 20  – Bob Stump , American politician (b. 1927 ) 
June 21  – Leon Uris , American writer (b. 1924 ) 
June 23  – Maynard Jackson , American politician (b. 1938 ) 
June 25  – Lester Maddox , American politician (b. 1915 ) 
June 26  – Strom Thurmond , American politician (b. 1902 ) 
June 29  – Katharine Hepburn , American actress (b. 1907 ) 
June 30  – Buddy Hackett , American comedian and actor (b. 1924 ) 
July 
Bob Hope  
July 1  – Herbie Mann , musician (b. 1930 ) 
July 4  – Barry White , singer and songwriter (b. 1944 ) 
July 6  – Buddy Ebsen , actor and dancer (b. 1908 ) 
July 12  – Benny Carter , musician (b. 1907 ) 
July 15  – Tex Schramm , American football executive (b. 1920 ) 
July 16 
 
July 17  – Rosalyn Tureck , pianist and harpsichordist (b. 1913 ) 
July 25 
 
July 27  – Bob Hope , English-American actor, singer, dancer, and comedian (b. 1903 ) 
July 28  – Greg Guidry , American singer-songwriter (b. 1954 ) 
July 30  – Sam Phillips , record producer (b. 1923 ) 
August 
Charles Bronson  
August 3  – Roger Voudouris , American singer-songwriter and guitarist (b. 1954 ) 
August 4  – Frederick Chapman Robbins , American Nobel pediatrician and virologist (b. 1916 ) 
August 6  – Julius Baker , American flute player (b. 1915 ) 
August 9  – Gregory Hines , American actor, singer, dancer, and choreographer (b. 1946 ) 
August 11  – Herb Brooks , American hockey player and coach (b. 1937 ) 
August 21  – Wesley Willis , American musician (b. 1963 ) 
August 23  – Bobby Bonds , American baseball player (b. 1946 ) 
August 26  – Wilma Burgess , American country musician (b. 1939 ) 
August 28  – Brian Douglas Wells , criminal and murder victim (b. 1956 ) 
August 30  – Charles Bronson , American actor (b. 1921 ) 
September 
John Ritter  
Johnny Cash  
Althea Gibson  
September 1 
 
September 3  – Ma Dunjing , Chinese General, died in Los Angeles , California  (b. 1910 ) 
September 5  – Gisele MacKenzie , Canadian-American singer and actress (b. 1927 ) 
September 6  – Harry Goz , American actor (b. 1932 ) 
September 7  – Warren Zevon , American singer, songwriter, and musician (b. 1947 ) 
September 9 
 
September 11 
 
September 12  – Johnny Cash , American singer, songwriter, musician, and actor (b. 1932 ) 
September 13  – Frank O'Bannon , 47th Governor of Indiana from 1997 to 2003. (b. 1930 ) 
September 14  – John Serry Sr. , Italian-American musician (b. 1915 ) 
September 16  – Sheb Wooley , American actor, singer, and songwriter (b. 1921 ) 
September 20  – Stanley Farfara , American actor (b. 1949 ) 
September 22  – Gordon Jump , American actor (b. 1932 ) 
September 25 
 
September 26  – Shawn Lane , American musician (b. 1963 ) 
September 27  – Donald O'Connor , American actor, singer, and dancer (b. 1925 ) 
September 28 
 
September 30  – Robert Kardashian , American attorney and businessman (b. 1944 ) 
October 
Janice Rule  
Elliott Smith  
October 3 
 
October 5 
Neil Postman , American writer, media theorist, and cultural critic (b. 1931 ) 
Timothy Treadwell , American enthusiast, environmentalist, amateur naturalist, and documentary film maker (b. 1957 ) 
October 10  – Eugene Istomin , American pianist (b. 1925 ) 
October 12  – Bill Shoemaker , American jockey (b. 1931 ) 
October 17  – Janice Rule , American actress (b. 1931 ) 
October 19 
 
October 20  – Jack Elam , American actor (b. 1920 ) 
October 21 
 
October 22  – Tony Renna , American race car driver (b. 1976 ) 
October 25  – Robert Strassburg , American conductor, composer, musicologist, and music educator (b. 1915 ) 
October 27  – Rod Roddy , American television announcer (b. 1937 ) 
October 29  – Hal Clement , American writer (b. 1922 ) 
October 30  – Walter Trohan , American journalist (b. 1903 ) 
October 31  – Richard Neustadt , American political scientist (b. 1919 ) 
November 
Art Carney  
Jonathan Brandis  
Penny Singleton  
December 
Otto Graham  
Hope Lange  
December 3  – Ellen Drew , American actress (b. 1915 ) 
December 4  – Iggy Katona , American race car driver (b. 1916 ) 
December 7 
 
December 9  – Paul Simon , American politician (b. 1928 ) 
December 13  – William Roth , American politician (b. 1921 ) 
December 14  – Jeanne Crain , American actress (b. 1925 ) 
December 15  – George Fisher , American political cartoonist (b. 1923 ) 
December 16 
 
December 17  – Otto Graham , American football player and coach (b. 1921 ) 
December 19  – Hope Lange , American actress (b. 1933 ) 
December 22  – Dave Dudley , American singer (b. 1928 ) 
December 27 
 
December 28  – Helen Kleeb , American actress (b. 1907 ) 
December 29  – Earl Hindman , American actor (b. 1942 ) 
December 30  – John Gregory Dunne , American writer, screenwriter, literary critic, and journalist (b. 1932 ) 
See also 
References 
^   "William Rehnquist Biography" . biography.com . A&E Television Networks. Retrieved 28 February  2016 . 
 
^ a   b   c   d   e   f   g   h   i   j   k   l   Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History  . Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 653–656 . ISBN  0-304-35730-8 .  
 
^   "AP Story: Packers Lose to Falcons, 7-27" . 
 
^   "Washington State's First AMBER Alert Case Still Missing After 18 Years" . missingkids.org . National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Retrieved 20 February  2021 . 
 
^   "PixelBlocks" . www.superhappybunny.com . Retrieved 28 February  2024 . 
 
^   "U.S.: $1 billion taken by Saddam" . CNN . May 6, 2003. Archived  from the original on 17 March 2010. Retrieved April 21,  2010 . 
 
^   El Nasser, Haya.30 million make Hispanics largest minority group , June 19, 2003, USA Today 
 
^   "Timeline:Flight BA 223" . BBC News  . February 12, 2004. Retrieved 25 September  2010 . 
 
^   Zenko, Micah (3 August 2010). Between Threats and War: U.S. Discrete Military Operations in the Post-Cold War World  . Stanford University Press. p. 29. ISBN  978-0-8047-7190-0 .  
 
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External links 
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