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{{Yearbox US|1927}}
{{Yearbox US|1927}}
{{Year in U.S. states and territories|1927}}
{{More citations needed|date=August 2021}}
Events from the year '''1927 in the United States'''.


== Incumbents ==
Events from the year '''1927 in the [[United States]]'''.
=== [[Federal government of the United States|Federal government]] ===

* [[President of the United States|President]]: [[Calvin Coolidge]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|R]]-[[Massachusetts]])
==Incumbents==
* [[President of the United States|President]]: [[Calvin Coolidge]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]]: [[Charles G. Dawes]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|R]]-[[Illinois]])
* [[Vice President of the United States|Vice President]]: [[Charles G. Dawes]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Chief Justice of the United States|Chief Justice]]: [[William Howard Taft]] ([[Ohio]])
* [[Chief Justice of the United States|Chief Justice]]: [[William Howard Taft]]
* [[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives|Speaker of the House of Representatives]]: [[Nicholas Longworth]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|R]]-[[Ohio]])
* [[Speaker of the United States House of Representatives|Speaker of the House of Representatives]]: [[Nicholas Longworth]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|R]]-Ohio)
* [[Senate Majority Leader]]: [[Charles Curtis]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|R]]-[[Kansas]])
* [[Senate Majority Leader]]: [[Charles Curtis]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|R]]-Kansas)
* [[United States Congress|Congress]]: [[69th United States Congress|69th]] (until March 4), [[70th United States Congress|70th]] (starting March 4)
* [[United States Congress|Congress]]: [[69th United States Congress|69th]] (until March 4), [[70th United States Congress|70th]] (starting March 4)

{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed"
! [[Governor (United States)|Governor]]s and [[Lieutenant governor (United States)|lieutenant governor]]s
|-
|
=== Governors ===
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|
* [[Governor of Alabama]]: [[William W. Brandon]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 17), [[Bibb Graves]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 17)
* [[Governor of Arizona]]: [[George W. P. Hunt]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Arkansas]]: [[Tom Jefferson Terral]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 11), [[John Ellis Martineau]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 11)
* [[Governor of California]]: [[Friend Richardson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 4), [[Clement C. Young]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 4)
* [[Governor of Colorado]]: [[Clarence Morley]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 11), [[Billy Adams (politician)|Billy Adams]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 11)
* [[Governor of Connecticut]]: [[John H. Trumbull]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Delaware]]: [[Robert P. Robinson (Delaware politician)|Robert P. Robinson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Florida]]: [[John W. Martin]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Georgia]]: [[Clifford Walker]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until June 25), [[Lamartine G. Hardman]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting June 25)
* [[Governor of Idaho]]: [[Charles C. Moore]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 3), [[H. C. Baldridge]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 3)
* [[Governor of Illinois]]: [[Len Small]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Indiana]]: [[Edward L. Jackson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Iowa]]: [[John Hammill]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Kansas]]: [[Ben S. Paulen]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Kentucky]]: [[William J. Fields]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until December 13), [[Flem D. Sampson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting December 13)
* [[Governor of Louisiana]]: [[Oramel Hinckley Simpson|Oramel H. Simpson]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Maine]]: [[Owen Brewster]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Maryland]]: [[Albert C. Ritchie]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Massachusetts]]: [[Alvan T. Fuller]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Michigan]]: [[Alex Groesbeck]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 1), [[Fred W. Green]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 1)
* [[Governor of Minnesota]]: [[Theodore Christianson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Mississippi]]: [[Henry L. Whitfield]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until March 18), [[Dennis Murphree]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting March 18)
* [[Governor of Missouri]]: [[Samuel Aaron Baker]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Montana]]: [[John E. Erickson (Montana politician)|John E. Erickson]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Nebraska]]: [[Adam McMullen]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Nevada]]: [[James G. Scrugham]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 3), [[Fred B. Balzar]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 3)
* [[Governor of New Hampshire]]: [[John Gilbert Winant]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 6), [[Huntley N. Spaulding]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 6)
* [[Governor of New Jersey]]: [[A. Harry Moore]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of New Mexico]]: [[Arthur T. Hannett]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 1), [[Richard C. Dillon]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 1)
* [[Governor of New York]]: [[Al Smith]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of North Carolina]]: [[Angus Wilton McLean]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of North Dakota]]: [[Arthur G. Sorlie]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Ohio]]: [[A. Victor Donahey]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Oklahoma]]: [[Martin E. Trapp]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 10), [[Henry S. Johnston]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 10)
* [[Governor of Oregon]]: [[Walter M. Pierce]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 10), [[I. L. Patterson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 10)
* [[Governor of Pennsylvania]]: [[Gifford Pinchot]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 18), [[John Stuchell Fisher]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 18)
* [[Governor of Rhode Island]]: [[Aram J. Pothier]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of South Carolina]]: [[Thomas Gordon McLeod]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 18), [[John Gardiner Richards, Jr.]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 18)
* [[Governor of South Dakota]]: [[Carl Gunderson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 4), [[William J. Bulow]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 4)
* [[Governor of Tennessee]]: [[Austin Peay]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until October 3), [[Henry Hollis Horton]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting October 3)
* [[Governor of Texas]]: [[Miriam A. Ferguson]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 17), [[Dan Moody]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 17)
* [[Governor of Utah]]: [[George Dern]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Vermont]]: [[Franklin S. Billings]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 6), [[John E. Weeks]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 6)
* [[Governor of Virginia]]: [[Harry F. Byrd]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Governor of Washington]]: [[Roland H. Hartley]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of West Virginia]]: [[Howard M. Gore]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Governor of Wisconsin]]: [[John J. Blaine]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 3), [[Fred R. Zimmerman]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 3)
* [[Governor of Wyoming]]: [[Nellie Tayloe Ross]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 3), [[Frank C. Emerson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 3)
}}

=== Lieutenant governors ===
{{columns-list|colwidth=30em|
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Alabama]]: [[Charles S. McDowell]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 17), [[William C. Davis (American politician)|William C. Davis]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 17)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas]]: [[Harvey Parnell]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting month and day unknown)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of California]]: [[Clement Calhoun Young]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 6), [[Buron Fitts]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 6)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Colorado]]: [[Sterling Byrd Lacy]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 11), [[George Milton Corlett]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 11)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut]]: [[J. Edwin Brainard]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Delaware]]: [[James H. Anderson (politician)|James H. Anderson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Idaho]]: [[H. C. Baldridge]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 3), [[O. E. Hailey]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 3)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Illinois]]: [[Fred E. Sterling]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Indiana]]: [[F. Harold Van Orman]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Iowa]]: [[Clem F. Kimball]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Kansas]]: [[De Lanson Alson Newton Chase]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky]]: [[Henry Denhardt]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until December 13), [[James Breathitt, Jr.]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting December 13)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana]]: [[Philip H. Gilbert]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts]]: [[Frank G. Allen]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Michigan]]: [[George W. Welsh]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 1), [[Luren D. Dickinson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 1)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota]]: [[William I. Nolan]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi]]: [[Dennis Murphree]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until March 18), vacant (starting March 18)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Missouri]]: [[Philip Allen Bennett]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Montana]]: [[W. S. McCormack]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska]]: [[George A. Williams (Nebraska politician)|George A. Williams]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Nevada]]: [[Maurice J. Sullivan]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 3), [[Morley Griswold]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 3)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico]]: Edward G. Sargent ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of New York]]: [[Edwin Corning]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 1)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina]]: [[Jacob E. Long]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota]]: [[Walter Maddock]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Ohio]]: [[Charles H. Lewis]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 10), [[Earl D. Bloom]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 10)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma]]: vacant (until January 10), [[William J. Holloway]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 10)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania]]: [[David J. Davis]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 18), [[Arthur H. James]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 18)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island]]: Nathaniel W. Smith ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until month and day unknown), [[Norman S. Case]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting month and day unknown)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina]]: [[E. B. Jackson]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (until January 18), [[Thomas Bothwell Butler]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]) (starting January 18)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota]]: [[Alva Clark Forney]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (until January 4), [[Hyatt E. Covey]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]) (starting January 4)
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee]]:
** until month and day unknown: Lucius D. Hill ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
** month and day unknown: [[Henry Hollis Horton]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
** starting month and day unknown: vacant
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Texas]]: [[Barry Miller (politician)|Barry Miller]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Vermont]]:
** until month and day unknown: [[Walter K. Farnsworth]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
** month and day unknown: [[Hollister Jackson]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
** starting month and day unknown: vacant
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Virginia]]: [[Junius Edgar West]] ([[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Washington]]: [[W. Lon Johnson]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
* [[Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin]]: [[Henry A. Huber]] ([[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]])
}}
|}


==Events==
==Events==
===January–March===
===January–March===
* January 7 – The first transatlantic [[telephone]] call is made from [[New York City]] to [[London]].
* January 7 The first transatlantic [[telephone]] call is made from [[New York City]] to [[London]].
* January 17 &ndash; [[Bibb Graves]] is sworn in as the 38th [[governor of Alabama]] replacing [[William W. Brandon]].<ref>{{Cite news |date=1927-01-18 |title=Thousands Hear New Governor Declare for Law Enforcement After Oath Is Administered |page=1 |work=The Montgomery Advertiser |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-montgomery-advertiser-graves-sworn-i/129080176/ |access-date=2023-07-29}}</ref>
* February 23 &ndash; The U.S. [[Federal Radio Commission]] (later renamed the [[Federal Communications Commission]]) begins to regulate the use of [[radio]] frequencies.
* February 23 – The U.S. [[Federal Radio Commission]] (later renamed the [[Federal Communications Commission]]) begins to regulate the use of [[radio]] frequencies.
* March 11 – In [[New York City]], the ''[[Roxy Theatre (New York City)|Roxy Theater]]'' is opened by [[Samuel Roxy Rothafel]].
* March 11
* March 11 – The [[first armoured car robbery]] is committed by the Flatheads Gang near [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]].
**In [[New York City]], the ''[[Roxy Theatre (New York City)|Roxy Theater]]'' is opened by [[Samuel Roxy Rothafel]].
**The [[first armoured car robbery]] is committed by the Flatheads Gang near [[Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania]].


===April–June===
===April–June===
[[File:LindberghStLouis.jpg|thumb|right|May 20–21: [[Charles Lindbergh]] flies from [[New York]] to [[Paris]].]]
[[File:Charles Lindbergh and the Spirit of Saint Louis (Crisco restoration, with wings).jpg|thumb|right|May 20–21: [[Charles Lindbergh]] flies from [[New York City|New York]] to [[Paris]].]]
* April 19 – Actress-playwright [[Mae West]] is sentenced to ten days incarceration for "corrupting the morals of youth" for her comedy-drama ''[[Sex (play)|Sex]]'' after 375 performances on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]].
* April 22 &ndash; May 5 &ndash; The [[Great Mississippi Flood of 1927]] affects 700,000 people in the greatest national disaster in U.S. history at that time.
* April 22–May 5 – The [[Great Mississippi Flood of 1927]] affects 700,000 people in the greatest national disaster in U.S. history at this time.
* May 11 &ndash; The [[Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences]], the "Academy" in "[[Academy Awards]]," is founded.
* April 30 – The [[Federal Prison Camp, Alderson|Federal Industrial Institute for Women]] opens near [[Alderson, West Virginia]], as the first federal prison for women in the U.S.
* May 14 – In the U.S., the [[University of Chicago]]'s local collegiate organization, Phi Sigma, becomes incorporated under the laws of the State of Illinois as [[Eta Sigma Phi]], the National Honorary Classical Fraternity.
* May 2 – ''[[Buck v. Bell]]'' decided in the [[Supreme Court of the United States]], permitting [[compulsory sterilization]] of people with [[intellectual disability]].
* May 17 &ndash; Army aviation pioneer Major [[Harold Geiger]] dies in the crash of his [[Airco DH.4]] [[de Havilland]] plane, at Olmsted Field, Pennsylvania.
* May 11 – The [[Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences]], the "Academy" in "[[Academy Awards]]," is founded.
* May 18 &ndash; [[Bath School disaster]]: Bombings result in 45 deaths, mostly children, in [[Bath Township, Michigan|Bath Township]], [[Michigan]].
* May 14 – The [[University of Chicago]]'s local collegiate organization, Phi Sigma, becomes incorporated under the laws of the State of Illinois as [[Eta Sigma Phi]], the National Honorary Classical Fraternity.
* May 20–21 &ndash; [[Charles Lindbergh]] makes the first solo non-stop trans-Atlantic flight, from [[New York]] to [[Paris]] in the single-seat, single-engine [[monoplane]] ''[[Spirit of St. Louis]]''.
* May 17 – Army aviation pioneer Major [[Harold Geiger]] dies in the crash of his [[Airco DH.4]] [[de Havilland]] plane, at Olmsted Field, Pennsylvania.
* May 23 &ndash; Nearly 600 members of the [[American Institute of Electrical Engineers]] and the [[Institute of Radio Engineers]] view the first live demonstration of television at the Bell Telephone Building in New York.
* May 18 – [[Bath School disaster]]: Bombings by a disaffected local official result in 45 deaths, mostly children, in [[Bath Township, Michigan]].
* June 13 – A [[ticker-tape parade]] is held for aviator [[Charles Lindbergh]] down 5th Avenue in [[New York City]].
* May 20–21 – Aviator [[Charles Lindbergh]] makes the first solo non-stop trans-Atlantic flight, from [[New York City|New York]] to [[Paris]] in the single-seat, single-engine [[monoplane]] ''[[Spirit of St. Louis]]''.
* May 23 – Nearly 600 members of the [[American Institute of Electrical Engineers]] and the [[Institute of Radio Engineers]] view the first live demonstration of television at the Bell Telephone Building in New York.
* May 26 – The final [[Model T]] rolls off the assembly line at the [[Ford Motor Company]] factory in [[Highland Park Ford Plant|Highland Park, Michigan]], ending a run of 19 years and 15 million cars.
* June 13 – A [[ticker-tape parade]] is held for aviator [[Charles Lindbergh]] down Fifth Avenue in [[New York City]].


===July–September===
===July–September===
* August 2 &ndash; U.S. President [[Calvin Coolidge]] announces, "I do not choose to run for President in 1928."
* August 2 U.S. President [[Calvin Coolidge]] announces, "I do not choose to run for president in 1928."
* August 7 &ndash; The [[Peace Bridge]] opens between [[Fort Erie, Ontario]] and [[Buffalo, New York]].
* August 7 The [[Peace Bridge]] opens between [[Fort Erie, Ontario]], and [[Buffalo, New York]].
* August 23 – After six years of appeals, as protests rage in capital cities around the world, [[Nicola Sacco]] and [[Bartolomeo Vanzetti]] are electrocuted at midnight in Charlestown, Massachusetts.
* August 26 &ndash; Paul R. Redfern leaves Brunswick, Georgia, flying his Stinson Detroiter "Port of Brunswick" to attempt a solo non-stop flight to Rio de Janeiro, [[Brazil]]. He later crashes in the Venezuela jungle (the crash site is never located).
* August 26 – [[Paul Redfern]] leaves Brunswick, Georgia, flying his [[Stinson Detroiter]] ''Port of Brunswick'' to attempt a solo non-stop flight to Rio de Janeiro, [[Brazil]]. He later crashes in the Venezuela jungle (the crash site is never located).
* September 18 &ndash; The Columbia Phonographic Broadcasting System (later known as [[CBS]]) is formed and goes on the air with 47 [[radio station]]s.
* September 18 – The Columbia Phonographic Broadcasting System (later known as [[CBS]]) is formed and goes on the air with 47 [[radio station]]s.
* September 27 &ndash; 79 are killed and 550 are injured in the East St. Louis Tornado, the 2nd costliest and at least 24th deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
* September 29 – 79 are killed and 550 are injured when [[1927 St. Louis–East St. Louis tornado|a tornado]] strikes the St. Louis, Missouri area; it is the second-costliest and at least 24th-deadliest tornado in U.S. history.


===October–December===
===October–December===
[[File:The Jazz Singer.gif|thumb|right|October 6: ''[[The Jazz Singer (1927 film)|The Jazz Singer]]''.]]
[[File:The Jazz Singer.gif|thumb|right|October 6: ''[[The Jazz Singer]]''.]]
* October 6 &ndash; ''[[The Jazz Singer (1927 film)|The Jazz Singer]]'' movie opens in the United States and becomes a huge success, marking the end of the [[silent film]] era.
* October 6 ''[[The Jazz Singer]]'' opens in the United States and becomes a huge success, leading to the end of the [[silent film]] era.
* October 8 &ndash; [[Murderer's Row]]: The [[New York Yankees]] complete a 4-game sweep of the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]] in the World Series.
* October 8 [[Murderer's Row]]: The [[New York Yankees]] complete a 4-game sweep of the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]] in the World Series.
* October 28 &ndash; [[Pan American Airways]]' first flight takes off from [[Key West]], bound for [[Havana]].
* October 28 [[Pan American Airways]]' first flight takes off from [[Key West]], bound for [[Havana]].
* November 3&ndash;4 &ndash; Floods devastating [[Vermont]] incur the "worst natural disaster in the state's history".<ref>[http://www.erh.noaa.gov/btv/events/27flood.shtml]</ref>
* November 3–4 Floods devastating [[Vermont]] incur the "worst natural disaster in the state's history".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.erh.noaa.gov/btv/events/27flood.shtml |title=National Weather Service - Burlington, VT - The Flood of 1927 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140211060450/http://www.erh.noaa.gov/btv/events/27flood.shtml |archive-date=2014-02-11 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
* November 4
* November 4 &ndash; Frank Heath and his horse ''Gypsy Queen'' return to [[Washington, D.C.]], having completed a 2-year journey of 11,356 miles to all 48 states.
** Frank Heath and his horse ''Gypsy Queen'' return to [[Washington, D.C.]], having completed a 2-year journey of 11,356 miles to all 48 states.
* November 10 &ndash; Unexplained explosions occur in [[Canton, Ohio]].
** The 7.3 {{M|w}} [[List of earthquakes in California|Lompoc earthquake]] affected the central coast of California with a maximum [[Mercalli intensity scale|Mercalli intensity]] of VIII (''Severe''), causing a tsunami and moderate damage.
* November 12 – The [[Holland Tunnel]] opens to traffic as the first [[Hudson River]] vehicular [[tunnel]] linking [[New Jersey]] to [[New York City]].
* November 10 – Unexplained explosions occur in [[Canton, Ohio]].
* November 14 &ndash; The [[Pittsburgh Gasometer Explosion]]: Three Equitable Gas storage tanks in the [[Northside (Pittsburgh)|North Side]] of [[Pittsburgh]], [[Pennsylvania]] explode, killing 26 people and causing damage estimated between contemporary totals of $4 million and $5 million.
* November 13 – The [[Holland Tunnel]] opens to traffic as the first [[Hudson River]] vehicular [[tunnel]] linking [[New Jersey]] to [[New York City]].
* December 2 &ndash; Following 19 years of [[Ford Model T]] production, the [[Ford Motor Company]] unveils the [[Ford Model A (1927)|Ford Model A]] as its new automobile.
* November 14 – The [[Pittsburgh Gasometer Explosion]]: Three Equitable Gas storage tanks in the [[Northside (Pittsburgh)|North Side]] of [[Pittsburgh]], [[Pennsylvania]], exploded, killing 26 people and causing damage estimated between contemporary totals of $4 million and $5 million.
* December 15 &ndash; [[Marion Parker]], 12, is kidnapped in Los Angeles. Her dismembered body is found on December 19, prompting the largest manhunt to date on the West Coast for her killer, [[Edward Hickman|William Edward Hickman]], who is arrested on December 22 in [[Oregon]].
* December 2 – Following 19 years of [[Ford Model T]] production, the [[Ford Motor Company]] unveils the [[Ford Model A (1927)|Ford Model A]] as its new automobile.
* December 17 &ndash; The [[USS S-4 (SS-109)|U.S. submarine ''S-4'']] is accidentally rammed and sunk by the [[United States Coast Guard]] destroyer ''John Paulding'' off [[Provincetown, Massachusetts]], killing everyone aboard after several unsuccessful attempts to raise the sub.
* December 15 – [[Marion Parker]], 12, is kidnapped in Los Angeles. Her dismembered body is found on December 19, prompting the largest manhunt to date on the West Coast for her killer, [[Edward Hickman|William Edward Hickman]], who is arrested on December 22 in [[Oregon]].
* December 27 &ndash; Kern and Hammerstein's musical play ''[[Show Boat]]'', based on [[Edna Ferber]]'s novel, opens on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] and goes on to become the first great classic of the American musical theatre.
* December 17 – The [[USS S-4 (SS-109)|U.S. submarine ''S-4'']] is accidentally rammed and sunk by the [[United States Coast Guard]] destroyer ''John Paulding'' off [[Provincetown, Massachusetts]], killing everyone aboard after several unsuccessful attempts to raise the sub.
* December 27 – Kern and Hammerstein's musical play ''[[Show Boat]]'', based on [[Edna Ferber]]'s novel, opens on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] and goes on to become the first great classic of the American musical theatre.


===Undated===
===Undated===
* The [[Voluntary Committee of Lawyers]] is founded to bring about the [[repeal of Prohibition]] of alcohol in United States.
* The [[Voluntary Committee of Lawyers]] is founded in New York to bring about the [[repeal of Prohibition]] of alcohol in United States.


===Ongoing===
===Ongoing===
* [[Lochner era]] (c. 1897–c. 1937)
* [[Lochner era]] ({{circa|1897}} {{circa|1937}})
* [[United States occupation of Haiti|U.S. occupation of Haiti]] (1915–1934)
* [[United States occupation of Haiti|U.S. occupation of Haiti]] (1915–1934)<ref>{{cite news |title=The long legacy of the U.S. occupation of Haiti |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/08/06/haiti-us-occupation-1915/ |newspaper=Washington Post |access-date=19 August 2022}}</ref>
* [[Prohibition in the United States|Prohibition]] (1920–1933)<ref>{{cite web |title=Volstead Act {{!}} History, Definition, & Significance {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Volstead-Act |website=www.britannica.com |access-date=15 August 2022 |language=en}}</ref>
* [[Prohibition in the United States|Prohibition]] (1919–1933)
* [[Roaring Twenties]] (1920–1929)
* [[Roaring Twenties]] (1920–1929)


== Births ==
== Births ==
===January===
[[File:Barbara Rush.jpg|110px|thumb|[[Barbara Rush]]]]
[[File:Johnnie Ray Allan Warren.jpg|110px|thumb|[[Johnnie Ray]]]]
[[File:Eartha Kitt 2007.jpg|110px|thumb|[[Eartha Kitt]]]]
* [[January 1]]
** [[Vernon L. Smith]], American economist, [[Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences|Nobel Prize]] laureate
** [[Doak Walker]], American football player (d. [[1998 in the United States|1998]])
* [[January 2]] – [[Gino Marchetti]], American football player (d. [[2019]])
* [[January 4]]
** [[Lauro Cavazos]], American politician and educator
**[[Barbara Rush]], American actress
* [[January 5]] – [[Sivaya Subramuniyaswami]], American guru and author (d. [[2001 in the United States|2001]])
* [[January 8]] – [[Virginia Norwood]], American physicist (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])<ref>[https://www.npr.org/2023/03/31/1167375710/virginia-norwood-satellite-land-imaging-nasa-died Virginia Norwood, a pioneer in satellite land imaging, dies at age 96]</ref>
* [[January 10]]
** [[Arthur Kramer]], American lawyer (d. [[2008]])
** [[Johnnie Ray]], American singer, pianist and songwriter (d. [[1990 in the United States|1990]])
* [[January 13]]
** [[Brock Adams]], American politician (d. [[2004 in the United States|2004]])
** [[Liz Anderson]], American country music singer, songwriter (d. [[2011 in the United States|2011]])
* [[January 15]] – [[Phyllis Coates]], American actress
* [[January 17]]
** [[Thomas Anthony Dooley III]], American physician, humanitarian (d. [[1961]])
** [[Eartha Kitt]], African-American singer, actress, activist, and author (d. [[2008]])<ref>{{cite web |last1=Jack |first1=Adrian |title=Obituary: Eartha Kitt |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2008/dec/26/eartha-kitt-obituary |website=the Guardian |access-date=10 December 2020 |language=en |date=26 December 2008}}</ref>
** [[Harlan Mathews]], American politician (d. [[2014 in the United States|2014]])
* [[January 22]]
** [[Lou Creekmur]], American football player (d. [[2009 in the United States|2009]])
** [[Joe Perry (American football)|Joe Perry]], African-American football player (d. [[2011]])
* [[January 23]]
** [[Robert L. Butler]], American politician (d. [[2019]])
** [[Ernest Hawkins (coach)|Ernest Hawkins]], American football coach (d. [[2018]])
* [[January 24]]
** [[Paula Hawkins (politician)|Paula Hawkins]], American politician (d. [[2009 in the United States|2009]])
** [[Marvin Kaplan]], American actor (d. [[2016]])
* [[January 25]]
** [[Marian and Vivian Brown#Marian Brown|Marian Brown]], American celebrity icon (d. [[2013]])
** [[Marian and Vivian Brown#Vivian Brown|Vivian Brown]], American celebrity icon (d. [[2014]])
* [[January 27]]
** [[Bob DeMoss]], American football player (d. [[2017]])
** [[Richard Fulton]], American politician (d. [[2018]])
* [[January 28]] – [[Vera Williams]], American author and illustrator (d. [[2015 in the United States|2015]])
* [[January 31]] – [[Jean Speegle Howard]], American actress (d. [[2000]])


===February===
{{Expand section|date=November 2011}}
[[File:Senator John Warner portrait.JPG|thumb|110px|[[John Warner]]]]
* June 8 &ndash; [[Jerry Stiller]], actor, wife of [[Anne Meara]] and son of actor [[Ben Stiller|Ben]] and of actress [[Amy Stiller]]
[[File:Sidney Poitier 1968.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Sidney Poitier]]]]
* August 7 &ndash; [[Carl Switzer]], American actor (died [[1959 in the United States|1959]])
* December 20 &ndash; [[Charlie Callas]], comedian and actor (died [[2011 in the United States|2011]])
* [[February 1]] [[Galway Kinnell]], American poet (d. [[2014 in the United States|2014]])
* [[February 2]]
** [[Stan Getz]], American jazz saxophonist (d. [[1991 in the United States|1991]])
** [[Doris Sams]], American professional baseball player (d. [[2012 in the United States|2012]])
* [[February 3]] – [[Kenneth Anger]], American actor, director and screenwriter
* [[February 6]]
** [[William Gardner Smith]], American novelist and journalist (d. [[1974]])
** [[Art Stewart]], American baseball executive and scout (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])<ref>[https://www.kansascity.com/sports/mlb/kansas-city-royals/article255734411.html Art Stewart, who drafted Bo Jackson, Mike Sweeney and others for Royals, dies at 94]</ref>
* [[February 8]] – [[George Taliaferro]], American football player (d. [[2018]])
* [[February 10]] – [[Leontyne Price]], African-American soprano
* [[February 11]] – [[Nalda Bird]], American professional baseball player (d. [[2004]])
* [[February 12]]
** [[Ann Gillis]], American actress (d. [[2018]])
** [[Rita Meyer (baseball)|Rita Meyer]], American professional baseball player (d. [[1992]])
** [[H. M. Wynant]], American actor
* [[February 13]] – [[Buck Hill (musician)|Buck Hill]], American jazz tenor, soprano saxophonist (d. [[2017]])
* [[February 15]] – [[Harvey Korman]], American actor and Comedian (d. [[2008]])
* [[February 17]] – [[John Selfridge]], American mathematician (d. [[2010]])
* [[February 18]] – [[John Warner]], American politician
* [[February 20]]
** [[Roy Cohn]], American lawyer, anti-Communist (d. [[1986 in the United States|1986]])
** [[Sidney Poitier]], Bahamian-American actor, film director (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[February 21]]
** [[Patricia Benoit]], American actress (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])
** [[Erma Bombeck]], American humorist (d. [[1996 in the United States|1996]])
* [[February 22]]
** [[Donald May]], American actor
** [[Guy Mitchell]], American singer and actor (d. [[1999]])
* [[February 23]] – [[Paul W. Schroeder]], historian (d. [[2020]])
* [[February 24]] – [[Mark Lane (author)|Mark Lane]], American conspiracy theorist (d. [[2016]])
* [[February 25]]
** [[Dick Jones (actor)|Dick Jones]], actor, singer (d. [[2014 in the United States|2014]])
** [[Ralph Stanley]], American [[Bluegrass music|bluegrass]] banjo player and vocalist (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[February 26]] – [[Tom Kennedy (television presenter)|Tom Kennedy]], American game show host

===March===
[[File:Belafonte-cropped.png|thumb|110px|[[Harry Belafonte]]]]
[[File:Jack Cassidy circa 1960s.JPG|thumb|110px|[[Jack Cassidy]]]]
[[File:Cesar chavez crop2.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Cesar Chavez]]]]
[[File:William Daniels 1976.JPG|thumb|110px|[[William Daniels]]]]
* [[March 1]]
** [[George O. Abell]], American astronomer, professor at UCLA, science popularizer, and skeptic (d. [[1983 in the United States|1983]])
** [[Harry Belafonte]], Jamaican-American musician, actor, and civil rights activist (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
** [[Robert Bork]], American conservative law professor (d. [[2012 in the United States|2012]])
* [[March 3]] – [[Harry Whittington]], American lawyer, real estate investor and political figure (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
* [[March 4]]
** [[Phil Batt]], American politician (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
** [[Thayer David]], American actor (d. [[1978 in the United States|1978]])
** [[Robert Orben]], American comedy writer (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
** [[Dick Savitt]], American tennis player
* [[March 5]] – [[Jack Cassidy]], American actor and singer (d. [[1976]])
* [[March 6]]
** [[William J. Bell]], American soap creator (d. [[2005]])
** [[Gordon Cooper]], American astronaut (d. [[2004]])
** [[Mel Groomes]], American football player (d. [[1997]])
* [[March 7]] – [[James Broderick]], American actor (d. [[1982 in the United States|1982]])
* [[March 8]] – [[Dick Hyman]], American composer, pianist
* [[March 9]] – [[Jackie Jensen]], American baseball player (d. [[1982]])
* [[March 10]] – [[Bill Fischer (American football)|Bill Fischer]], American football offensive lineman (d. [[2017]])
* [[March 11]] – [[Gloria Blackwell]], African-American civil rights activist and educator (d. [[2010]])
* [[March 13]] – [[Robert Denning]], American interior designer (d. [[2005 in the United States|2005]])
* [[March 15]]
** [[Annastasia Batikis]], Greek-American female professional baseball player (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
**[[Aaron Rosand]], American violinist (d. [[2019]])
**[[Carl Smith (musician)|Carl Smith]], American country music singer (d. [[2010]])
* [[March 16]] – [[Daniel Patrick Moynihan]], American author, politician, and statesman (d. [[2003 in the United States|2003]])
* [[March 18]] – [[George Plimpton]], American writer and actor (d. [[2003 in the United States|2003]])
* [[March 20]] – [[Earlene Risinger]], American professional baseball player (d. [[2008 in the United States|2008]])
* [[March 21]] – [[Jerome Chazen]], American businessman (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[March 27]] – [[Lorry I. Lokey]], American businessman and philanthropist (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[March 29]]
** [[Donn Kushner]], American Canadian scientist and writer (d. [[2001 in the United States|2001]])
** [[John McLaughlin (host)|John Mclaughlin]], American television and radio host (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[March 31]]
** [[César Chávez]], American labor activist, United Farm Workers founder (d. [[1993 in the United States|1993]])
** [[William Daniels]], American actor

===April===
[[File:Coretta Scott King.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Coretta Scott King]]]]
* [[April 1]] – [[Amos Milburn]], American R&B singer-songwriter and pianist (d. [[1980 in the United States|1980]])
* [[April 2]]
** [[Rita Gam]], American actress (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
** [[Ken Sansom]], actor, singer, and voice actor (d. [[2012]])
** [[Rembert Weakland]], American monk
* [[April 6]] – [[Gerry Mulligan]], American musician (d. [[1996]])
* [[April 10]] – [[Marshall Warren Nirenberg]], American biochemist and geneticist (d. [[2010 in the United States|2010]])
* [[April 12]] – [[Alvin Sargent]], American screenwriter (d. [[2019]])
* [[April 15]] – [[Robert Mills (physicist)|Robert Mills]], American physicist (d. [[1999]])
* [[April 16]]
** [[John Chamberlain (sculptor)|John Chamberlain]], American sculptor (d. [[2011 in the United States|2011]])
** [[Doris McLemore]], linguist (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])<ref>[http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/DN-wichita_20met.ART0.State.Edition2.383793f.html "Last fluent speaker of Wichita tribal language preserves what's left."] ''Dallas Morning News.''</ref> Her mother was Wichita and her father was European-American.<ref name=tulsa>Ruckman, S. E. [http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/article.aspx?articleID=071126_1_A1_ahref16518 "Tribal language fading away."] ''Tulsa World.'' 26 Nov 2007 (retrieved 3 Oct 2009)</ref>
** [[Peter Mark Richman]], American actor (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
* [[April 17]] – [[Junior Collins]], American-French horn player (d. [[1976 in the United States|1976]])
* [[April 18]] – [[Samuel P. Huntington]], American political scientist (d. [[2008 in the United States|2008]])
* [[April 20]] – [[Phil Hill]], American race car driver (d. [[2008 in the United States|2008]])
** [[Anita Darian]], American singer, actress (d. [[2015 in the United States|2015]])
** [[Harry Gallatin]], American basketballer, coach (d. [[2015 in the United States|2015]])
** [[Jackie Robinson (basketball, born 1927)|Jackie Robinson]], American Olympic basketball player
* [[April 26]] – [[Harry Gallatin]], American basketball player and coach (d. [[2015 in the United States|2015]])
* [[April 27]] – [[Coretta Scott King]], African-American civil rights activist (d. [[2006 in the United States|2006]])
* [[April 28]] – [[William Lewis Moore]], American postal worker (d. [[1963 in the United States|1963]])
* [[April 29]] – [[Big Jay McNeely]], R&B saxophonist (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])

===May===
[[File:Michael Constantine Room 222 1969.JPG|thumb|110px|[[Michael Constantine]]]]
<!--[[File:Clint Walker Cheyenne 1960.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Clint Walker]]]]-->
* [[May 4]] – [[Hal Hudson]], American baseball player (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[May 5]] – [[Pat Carroll (actress)|Pat Carroll]], American actress (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[May 10]] – [[Mike Souchak]], American golfer (d. [[2008 in the United States|2008]])
* [[May 13]]
** [[Fred Hellerman]], American folk singer (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
** [[Herbert Ross]], American film director (d. [[2001 in the United States|2001]])
* [[May 19]] – [[John Thompson (American football executive)|John Thompson]], American football executive (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[May 20]]
** [[Bud Grant]], American football player and coach (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
** [[David Hedison]], American actor (d. [[2019 in the United States|2019]])<ref>{{cite book|author=Chris Strodder|title=The Encyclopedia of Sixties Cool: A Celebration of the Grooviest People, Events, and Artifacts of the 1960s|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ecqPBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA109|date=March 1, 2007|publisher=Santa Monica Press|isbn=978-1-59580-986-5|pages=109}}</ref>
* [[May 21]] – [[Chuck Stewart]], American photographer (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[May 22]]
** [[Michael Constantine]], American actor (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
** [[George D. Gould]], American financier (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[May 24]] – [[William Ennis Thomson]], American music educator (d. [[2019 in the United States|2019]])
* [[May 25]] – [[Robert Ludlum]], American novelist (d. [[2001 in the United States|2001]])
* [[May 27]]
** [[Ralph Carmichael]], American composer and arranger (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
** [[Robert E. Finnigan]], American scientist (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[May 28]] – [[William A. Hilliard]], American journalist (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[May 30]] – [[Clint Walker]], American actor (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])

===June===
[[File:JerryStillerNYC05 (cropped2).jpg|thumb|110px|[[Jerry Stiller]]]]
[[File:Martin Perl - tau.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Martin Lewis Perl]]]]
[[File:F. Sherwood Rowland.jpg|thumb|110px|[[F. Sherwood Rowland]]]]
* [[June 1]] – [[Joseph Z. Nederlander]], American theater owner and operator (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
* [[June 3]] – [[Boots Randolph]], American saxophone player (d. [[2007]])
* [[June 8]] – [[Jerry Stiller]], American actor (d. [[2020]])
* [[June 9]] – [[George Nigh]], American politician
* [[June 10]] – [[Eugene Parker]], American astrophysicist (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[June 11]] – [[John W. O'Malley]], American Catholic historian, author and Jesuit priest (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[June 17]]
** [[Austin Murphy]], American politician (d. [[2024 in the United States|2024]])
** [[Wally Wood]], American cartoonist (d. [[1981]])
* [[June 18]] – [[Bud Brown (politician)|Bud Brown]], American politician (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[June 19]] – [[John Glenn Beall, Jr.]], American politician (d. [[2006 in the United States|2006]])
* [[June 21]] – [[Carl Stokes]], American politician (d. [[1996]])
* [[June 23]] – [[Bob Fosse]], American choreographer (d. [[1987 in the United States|1987]])
* [[June 24]] &ndash; [[Martin Lewis Perl]], American physicist, [[Nobel Prize in Physics|Nobel Prize]] laureate (d. [[2014]])<ref>{{cite book|author=John Gribbin|title=Q is for Quantum: An Encyclopedia of Particle Physics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zBsDkgI1uQsC&pg=PA277|date=22 February 2000|publisher=Simon and Schuster|isbn=978-0-684-86315-3|pages=277}}</ref>
* [[June 25]]
** [[Gerald Freedman]], American theatre director, librettist, lyricist and college dean (d. [[2020]])
** [[Chuck Smith (pastor)|Chuck Smith]], American pastor (d. [[2013 in the United States|2013]])
* [[June 27]]
** [[John Barber (basketball)|John Barber]], American professional basketball player
** [[Bobby Myers (racing driver)|Bobby Myers]], American [[NASCAR]] driver (d. [[1957 in the United States|1957]])
** [[William Post (businessman)|William Post]], American businessman and inventor (d. [[2024 in the United States|2024]])<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/14/business/william-post-dead-pop-tarts.html William Post, Who Helped Create Pop-Tarts, Dies at 96]</ref>
* [[June 28]]
** [[Dick Lane (baseball)|Dick Lane]], American professional baseball player (d. [[2018]])
** [[Frank Sherwood Rowland]], American chemist, [[Nobel Prize in Chemistry|Nobel Prize]] laureate (d. [[2012]])
* [[June 29]]
** [[Roy Radner]], American economist
** [[Bert Hubbard]], American synchronized swimmer, choreographer and coach
** [[Kenneth Snelson]], American contemporary sculptor, photographer (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[June 30]]
** [[Shirley Fry Irvin]], American tennis player
** [[Frank McCabe (basketball)|Frank McCabe]], American basketball player

===July===
[[File:Neil Simon - 1974.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Neil Simon]]]]
[[File:Janet Leigh 1960 portrait.png|thumb|110px|[[Janet Leigh]]]]
[[File:David dinkins.jpg|thumb|110px|[[David Dinkins]]]]
* [[July 1]]
** [[Winfield Dunn]], American politician
** [[Joseph Martin Sartoris]], American Catholic prelate
* [[July 3]] – [[Tim O'Connor (actor)|Tim O'Connor]], American actor (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])
* [[July 4]] – [[Neil Simon]], American playwright (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])<ref>{{cite web |title=Neil Simon obituary |url=https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2018/aug/26/neil-simon-obituary |website=the Guardian |access-date=10 March 2022 |language=en |date=26 August 2018}}</ref>
* [[July 5]]
** [[Robert E. Jones (judge)|Robert E. Jones]], American politician and judge
** [[Thomas Fleming (historian)|Thomas Fleming]], American military historian, historical novelist (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[July 6]]
** [[Janet Leigh]], American actress, singer, dancer, and author (d. [[2004]])
** [[Pat Paulsen]], American comedian and actor (d. [[1997 in the United States|1997]])
* [[July 7]]
** [[Alan J. Dixon|Alan Dixon]], American politician (d. [[2014 in the United States|2014]])
** [[George C. Lodge]], American politician
** [[Charlie Louvin]], American country singer and songwriter (d. [[2011 in the United States|2011]])
** [[Doc Severinsen]], American jazz trumpeter
* [[July 9]]
** [[Ed Ames]], American singer and actor ([[Ames Brothers]])
** [[Alma Carlisle]], African-American architect and architectural historian
* [[July 10]]
** [[David Dinkins]], African-American politician (d. [[2020]])
** [[Jack Kelley (ice hockey)|Jack Kelley]], American ice hockey coach (d. [[2020]])
* [[July 14]] – [[Mike Esposito (comics)|Mike Esposito]], American comic book artist (d. [[2010 in the United States|2010]])
* [[July 15]] – [[Joe Turkel]], actor (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])<ref>[https://www.film-news.co.uk/news/UK/94711/Joe-Turkel-dead-at-94 Joe Turkel dead at 94]</ref>
* [[July 16]]
** [[Mindy Carson]], American singer
** [[Jules Witcover]], American journalist, author, and columnist
* [[July 18]] – [[Don Bagley]], American bassist Midge Decter
* [[July 19]]
** [[Tom Blake (American football)|Tom Blake]], American football player (d. [[2020]])
** [[Billy Gardner]], American professional baseball player, coach and manager
* [[July 20]] – [[Robert Wahl]], American football player
* [[July 21]]
** [[William Liller]], American astronomer (d. [[2021]])
** [[Dick Smith (third baseman)|Dick Smith]], American baseball player (d. [[2021]])
* [[July 24]] – [[Alex Katz]], American painter
* [[July 25]] – [[Midge Decter]], American journalist and author (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/09/books/midge-decter-dead.html Midge Decter, an Architect of Neoconservatism, Dies at 94]</ref>
* [[July 27]]
** [[Guy Carawan]], American folk musician and musicologist (d. [[2015 in the United States|2015]])
** [[Will Jordan]], American character actor (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])
* [[July 28]] – [[John Ashbery]], American poet (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])

===August===
[[File:Porter wagoner 1999.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Porter Wagoner]]]]
[[File:Rose Carter, official color photo, 1977-cropped.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Rosalynn Carter]]]]
<!--[[File:Thomassmonson.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Thomas S. Monson]]]]-->
[[File:Althea Gibson NYWTS.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Althea Gibson]]]]
[[File:Bill Daily 1969.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Bill Daily]]]]
* [[August 1]] – [[Warren Wolf (American football)|Warren Wolf]], American football player (d. [[2019 in the United States|2019]])
* [[August 4]]
** [[Eddie Kamae]], American ukuleleist (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
** [[Johnny Maddox]], American pianist (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])
** [[Del Shankel]], American microbiologist, academic administrator (d. [[2018]])
** [[Jess Thomas]], American tenor (d. [[1993]])
* [[August 5]] – [[James Timlin]], American Roman Catholic prelate (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
* [[August 6]] – [[William D. Ford]], American politician (d. [[2004]])
* [[August 7]]
** [[Rocky Bridges]], American middle infielder, third baseman (d. [[2015]])
** [[Edwin W. Edwards]], American politician (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
** [[Art Houtteman]], American baseball player (d. [[2003]])
** [[Carl Switzer]], American actor (d. [[1959 in the United States|1959]])
* [[August 8]]
** [[Johnny Temple]], American baseball player (d. [[1994]])
** [[Jim Weaver (Oregon politician)|Jim Weaver]], American politician (d. [[2020]])
* [[August 9]] – [[Marvin Minsky]], American computer scientist (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[August 10]] – [[W. Sterling Cary]], African-American Christian minister (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/rev-w-sterling-cary-dead.html Rev. W. Sterling Cary, Pioneering Black Churchman, Dies at 94]</ref>
* [[August 11]] – [[Stuart Rosenberg]], American director (d. [[2007]])
* [[August 12]]
** [[Elgen Long]], American aviator, world record holder, author (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
** [[Porter Wagoner]], American country singer (d. [[2007]])
* [[August 15]] – [[Carmela Marie Cristiano]], American Roman Catholic nun (d. [[2011]])
* [[August 17]] – [[F. Ray Keyser Jr.]], American lawyer, politician (d. [[2015]])
* [[August 18]] – [[Rosalynn Carter]], 39th [[First Lady of the United States]] (d. [[2023 in the United States|2023]])
* [[August 19]]
** [[Jim Broyhill]], American politician
** [[L. Q. Jones]], American actor
* [[August 21]] – [[Thomas S. Monson]], American religious leader, 16th president of [[the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (d. [[2018]])
* [[August 23]] – [[Allan Kaprow]], American painter and performance artist (d. [[2006 in the United States|2006]])
* [[August 24]] – [[Harry Markowitz]], American economist
* [[August 25]] – [[Althea Gibson]], African-American tennis player (d. [[2003 in the United States|2003]])
* [[August 26]] – [[Sam Massell]], American businessman (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[August 29]]
** [[A. Ross Eckler Jr.]], American logologist, statistician and author (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
** [[Jimmy C. Newman]], American country singer-songwriter (d. [[2014 in the United States|2014]])
* [[August 30]]
** [[William G. Curlin]], American Roman Catholic prelate (d. [[2017]])
** [[Bill Daily]], American actor and comedian (d. [[2018]])
** [[Buford A. Johnson]], African-American World War II pilot (d. [[2017]])

===September===
[[File:Columbo Peter Falk 1973.JPG|thumb|110px|[[Peter Falk]]]]
[[File:Jack Kelly 1957.JPG|thumb|110px|[[Jack Kelly (actor)|Jack Kelly]]]]
[[File:Secretary of the Air Force Harold Brown.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Harold Brown (Secretary of Defense)|Harold Brown]]]]
[[File:W. S. Merwin.jpg|thumb|110px|[[W. S. Merwin]]]]
* [[September 1]] – [[Bob DiPietro]], baseball player (d. [[2012 in the United States|2012]])
* [[September 2]] – [[Gene Rhodes]], basketball player and coach (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])
* [[September 3]]
** [[Robert J. Birnbaum]], finance executive, [[List of presidents of the New York Stock Exchange|president of the New York Stock Exchange]] (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
** [[John Hamman]], [[close-up magic]]ian, inventor, [[Marianist]] brother (d. [[2000]])
** [[Wayne Peterson]], composer (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
* [[September 4]] – [[John McCarthy (computer scientist)|John McCarthy]], computer and cognitive scientist (d. [[2011 in the United States|2011]])
* [[September 5]] – [[Paul Volcker]], economist and academic (d. [[2019 in the United States|2019]])
* [[September 8]]
** [[Marguerite Frank]], American-French mathematician
** [[Harlan Howard]], country singer and songwriter
* [[September 9]] – [[Elvin Jones]], African-American jazz drummer (d. [[2004]])
* [[September 11]]
** [[Christine King Farris]], African-American civil rights activist
** [[G. David Schine]], businessman (d. [[1996]])
* [[September 15]]
** [[Norm Crosby]], comedian
** [[John M. Jacobus Jr.]], art historian (d. [[2017]])
** [[Margaret Keane]], artist (d. [[2022 in the United States|2022]])
* [[September 16]]
** [[Peter Falk]], actor (d. [[2011]])
** [[Jack Kelly (actor)|Jack Kelly]], actor (d. [[1992]])
* [[September 17]] – [[George Blanda]], American football quarterback, placekicker (d. [[2010]])
* [[September 19]]
** [[Harold Brown (Secretary of Defense)|Harold Brown]], nuclear physicist, 14th [[United States Secretary of Defense]] (d. [[2019]])
** [[William Hickey (actor)|William Hickey]], actor (d. [[1997]])
** [[Nick Massi]], bassist for 'The Four Seasons' (d. [[2000]])
* [[September 21]]
** [[Owen Aspinall]], attorney and politician (d. [[1997]])
** [[Joan Hotchkis]], actress, writer and performance artist
* [[September 22]]
** [[Kika de la Garza]], politician (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
** [[Tommy Lasorda]], baseball manager (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
* [[September 23]] – [[Thomas Vose Daily]], Roman Catholic prelate (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]]
** [[Carl Braun (basketball)|Carl Braun]], basketball player and coach (d. [[2010 in the United States|2010]])<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.usatoday.com/sports/basketball/nba/2010-02-10-2537756957_x.htm |title=Former Knicks star Carl Braun dies at 82 |publisher=USATODAY.com |access-date=February 10, 2010 | date=February 10, 2010}}</ref>
* [[September 28]]
** [[Paul L. Brady]], civil rights advocate, author and federal judge<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.familysearch.org/search/record/results?count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3A%22Paul%20Lawrence%22~%20%2Bsurname%3ABrady~%20%2Bbirth_year%3A1927-1927~|title=Birth details for Paul Lawrence Brady|work=FamilySearch.org|access-date=September 21, 2017}}</ref>
** [[James Lyons (admiral)|James Lyons]], admiral (d. [[2018]])
** [[James W. Symington]], politician
* [[September 29]] – [[Pete McCloskey]], politician (d. [[2024 in the United States|2024]])
* [[September 30]] – [[W. S. Merwin]], poet (d. [[2019 in the United States|2019]])

===October===
[[File:Al Martino.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Al Martino]]]]
[[File:George C. Scott - publicity.JPG|thumb|110px|[[George C. Scott]]]]
* [[October 1]] – [[Tom Bosley]], American actor (d. [[2010]])
* [[October 5]]
** [[John W. Downey]], American composer, conductor, pianist and educator (d. [[2004]])
** [[Al Hansen]], American artist (d. [[1995]])
* [[October 6]] – [[Alice Bauer]], American golfer (d. [[2002]])
* [[October 7]]
** [[James Bishop (artist)|James Bishop]], American artist (d. [[2021]])
** [[Al Martino]], American singer and actor (d. [[2009]])
* [[October 10]] – [[Dana Elcar]], American actor, director (d. [[2005]])
* [[October 11]] – [[William J. Perry]], American mathematician, engineer and businessman
* [[October 13]]
** [[Anita Kerr]], American singer and arranger (d. [[2022]])
** [[Lee Konitz]], American jazz composer, alto saxophonist (d. [[2020]])
* [[October 18]] – [[George C. Scott]], American actor (d. [[1999]])
* [[October 19]] – [[Red McCombs]], American billionaire
* [[October 20]] – [[Joyce Brothers]], American [[psychologist]] (d. [[2013 in the United States|2013]])
* [[October 21]] – [[Fran Landesman]], American lyricist and poet (d. [[2011 in the United States|2011]])
* [[October 23]] – [[Barron Hilton]], American socialite and businessman
* [[October 24]]
** [[Cal Hogue]], American baseball player (d. [[2005]])
** [[Paul Roach]], American football player (d. [[2023]])
* [[October 25]]
** [[William Acker]], American judge (d. [[2018]])
** [[Barbara Cook]], American soprano musical singer (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[October 27]] – [[Dominick Argento]], American composer and educator (d. [[2019]])
* [[October 29]] – [[William Cousins (judge)|William Cousins]], American judge (d. [[2018]])

===November===
[[File:Patti Page.JPG|thumb|110px|[[Patti Page]]]]
[[File:McLean Stevenson Henry Blake MASH 1972.JPG|thumb|110px|[[McLean Stevenson]]]]
[[File:Robert Guillaume (1980).jpg|thumb|110px|[[Robert Guillaume]]]]
* [[November 2]] – [[Steve Ditko]], American comic book artist (d. [[2018 in the United States|2018]])
* [[November 3]] – [[Peggy McCay]], American actress (d. [[2018]])
* [[November 4]] – [[Bobby Breen]], Canadian-born American actor and singer (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[November 5]] – [[Howard Terpning]], American painter and illustrator
* [[November 8]] – [[Patti Page]], American singer (d. [[2013]])
* [[November 11]] – [[Mose Allison]], American jazz and blues pianist and singer-songwriter (d. [[2016 in the United States|2016]])
* [[November 12]] – [[Jack Butler (American football)|Jack Butler]], American football player (d. [[2013 in the United States|2013]])
* [[November 13]] – [[John Pont]], American football player and coach (d. [[2008 in the United States|2008]])
* [[November 14]]
** [[Betty Brewer]], American actress
** [[McLean Stevenson]], American actor (''[[M*A*S*H (TV series)|M*A*S*H]]'') (d. [[1996]])
* [[November 16]] – [[Barbara Payton]], American actress (d. [[1967]])
* [[November 17]]
** [[Betty Halbreich]], American personal shopper (d. [[2024 in the United States|2024]])
** [[Lynn Stalmaster]], American casting director (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
* [[November 18]]
** [[Hank Ballard]], American musician (d. [[2003]])
** [[Lawrence Moss]], American composer
* [[November 19]] – [[John Hulett]], African American civil rights activist (d. [[2006 in the United States|2006]])
* [[November 20]] – [[Estelle Parsons]], American actress
* [[November 21]]
** [[Georgia Frontiere]], American co-owner of the [[Los Angeles Rams|Los Angeles/St. Louis Rams]] (d. [[2008 in the United States|2008]])
** [[Gordon Christian]], American ice hockey player (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[November 23]] – [[Guy Davenport]], American writer and graphic artist (d. [[2005 in the United States|2005]])
* [[November 26]]
** [[John Carter (actor)|John Carter]], American actor (d. [[2015 in the United States|2015]])
** [[Ernie Coombs]], American-Canadian entertainer (d. [[2001 in the United States|2001]])
* [[November 27]]
** [[William E. Simon]], American businessman, 63rd [[United States Secretary of the Treasury|Secretary of the Treasury]] (d. [[2000 in the United States|2000]])
** [[José de Jesús Madera Uribe]], American Roman Catholic bishop (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[November 29]]
** [[Rupert Crosse]], African-American actor (d. [[1973]])
** [[Vin Scully]], American sportscaster (d. [[2022]])
* [[November 30]] – [[Robert Guillaume]], African-American actor and singer (d. [[2017]])

===December===
[[File:Andy Williams 1967 cropped.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Andy Williams]]]]
[[File:Ramsey Clark at the White House, 28 Feb 1968.jpg|thumb|110px|[[Ramsey Clark]]]]
* [[December 3]] – [[Andy Williams]], American singer (d. [[2012 in the United States|2012]])
* [[December 8]] – [[Ferdie Pacheco]], American physician and author (d. [[2017 in the United States|2017]])
* [[December 10]] – [[Bob Farrell (motivational speaker)|Bob Farrell]], American motivational speaker, author, and founder of Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour and Restaurant (d. [[2015]])
* [[December 12]] – [[Robert Noyce]], American co-founder of ''Intel'' (d. [[1990]])
* [[December 13]] – [[James Wright (poet)|James Wright]], American poet (d. [[1980 in the United States|1980]])
* [[December 14]] – [[Hershel McGriff]], American [[stock car racing]] driver
* [[December 18]] – [[Ramsey Clark]], American politician, lawyer (d. [[2021 in the United States|2021]])
* [[December 20]] – [[Charlie Callas]], American comedian, singer (d. [[2011]])
* [[December 23]] – [[Edith Irby Jones]], African-American physician (d. [[2019 in the United States|2019]])
* [[December 24]] – [[Mary Higgins Clark]], American novelist (d. [[2020]])
* [[December 25]]
** [[Nellie Fox]], American baseball player (d. [[1975]])
** [[Leo Kubiak]], American basketball player
* [[December 26]] – [[Alan King]], American actor, comedian (d. [[2004]])
* [[December 27]] – [[Audrey Wagner|Genevieve Audrey Wagner]], American professional baseball player, physician (d. [[1984]])
* [[December 29]] – [[Andy Stanfield]], American athlete (d. [[1985]])


== Deaths ==
== Deaths ==
* January 26 – [[Lyman J. Gage]], financier and presidential Cabinet officer (b. [[1836 in the United States|1836]])
* February 7 – [[Walter Guion]], U.S. Senator from Louisiana in 1918 (b. [[1849 in the United States|1849]])
* February 13
** [[Brooks Adams]], historian (b. [[1848 in the United States|1848]])
** [[Vive Lindaman]], professional baseball player (b. [[1877 in the United States|1877]])
* February 20 – [[George McClellan (New York politician)|George McClellan]], [[U.S. House of Representatives|U.S. Representative]] from [[New York (state)|New York]] (b. [[1856 in the United States|1856]])
* February 25 – [[David Baird Sr.]], U.S. Senator from New Jersey from 1918 to 1919 (b. [[1839 in Ireland]])
* March 4 – [[Ira Remsen]], chemist (b. [[1846 in the United States|1846]])
* March 6 – [[Annie Keeler]], early woman physician (b. [[1855 in the United States|1846]])
* March 11 – [[August Paulsen]], Danish-American businessman and philanthropist (b. [[1871 in Denmark|1871]])
* April 25 – [[Earle Williams]], actor (b. [[1880 in the United States|1880]])
* May 2 – [[Katherine Corri Harris]], socialite and actress, first wife of [[John Barrymore]] (b. [[1890 in the United States|1890]])
* May 6 – [[Hudson Maxim]], inventor and chemist (b. [[1853 in the United States|1853]])
* May 17 – [[Harold Geiger]], aviation pioneer (b. [[1884 in the United States|1884]])
* May 23 – [[Henry E. Huntington]], railroad magnate (b. [[1850 in the United States|1850]])
* June 9 – [[Victoria Woodhull]], American leader of the woman's suffrage movement (b. [[1838 in the United States|1838]])
* June 15 – [[William Joseph Deboe]], U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1897 to 1903 (b. [[1849 in the United States|1849]])
* July 17 – [[Florence Roberts (stage actress)|Florence Roberts]], actress (b. [[1871 in the United States|1871]])
* August 15 – [[B. B. Comer]], 33rd Governor of Alabama from 1907 to 1911 and U.S. Senator from Alabama in 1920 (b. [[1848 in the United States|1848]])
* September 6 – [[Lloyd W. Bertaud]], aviator (b. [[1895 in the United States|1895]])
* September 7 – [[Mary Canfield Ballard]], poet and hymn-writer (b. [[1852 in the United States|1852]])
* September 14 – [[Isadora Duncan]] American-born dancer and choreographer (b. [[1878 in the United States|1878]])
* September 20 – [[George Nichols (actor and director)|George Nichols]], American actor and director (b. [[1864]])
* September 27 – [[Leopold Wharton]], film director (b. [[1870]])
* September 30 – [[Charles Kilpatrick (cyclist)|Charles Kilpatrick]], one-legged trick cyclist (b. [[1869 in the United States|1869]])
* October 21 – [[William Bromwell Melish]], business president and Freemason leader.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.freemason.com/html/pgm_detail.php?yearServed=1895 |title=William Bromwell Melish |accessdate=2009-07-24 |publisher=[[Grand Lodge Free & Accepted Masons of Ohio]] |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090106141356/http://www.freemason.com/html/pgm_detail.php?yearServed=1895 |archivedate=January 6, 2009 }}</ref>
* December 3 – [[Orrin Dubbs Bleakley]], [[U.S. House of Representatives]] from [[Pennsylvania]] (b. [[1854 in the United States|1854]])
* December 18 – [[Nicholas Fessenden]], politician (b. [[1847 in the United States|1847]])


==See also==
{{Empty section|date=August 2011}}
* [[1927 in American television]]
* [[List of American films of 1927]]
* [[Timeline of United States history (1900–1929)]]


==References==
==References==
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{{US year nav}}
{{US year nav}}
{{Timeline of United States history}}
{{Year in North America|1927}}


[[Category:1927 in the United States| ]]
[[Category:1927 in the United States| ]]
[[Category:1920s in the United States]]

[[fr:1927 aux États-Unis]]
[[Category:1927 by country|United States]]
[[Category:1927 in North America|United States]]
[[he:1927 בארצות הברית]]
[[Category:Years of the 20th century in the United States]]

Latest revision as of 23:49, 24 October 2024

1927
in
the United States

Decades:
See also:

Events from the year 1927 in the United States.

Incumbents

[edit]

Events

[edit]

January–March

[edit]

April–June

[edit]
May 20–21: Charles Lindbergh flies from New York to Paris.

July–September

[edit]
  • August 2 – U.S. President Calvin Coolidge announces, "I do not choose to run for president in 1928."
  • August 7 – The Peace Bridge opens between Fort Erie, Ontario, and Buffalo, New York.
  • August 23 – After six years of appeals, as protests rage in capital cities around the world, Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti are electrocuted at midnight in Charlestown, Massachusetts.
  • August 26 – Paul Redfern leaves Brunswick, Georgia, flying his Stinson Detroiter Port of Brunswick to attempt a solo non-stop flight to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He later crashes in the Venezuela jungle (the crash site is never located).
  • September 18 – The Columbia Phonographic Broadcasting System (later known as CBS) is formed and goes on the air with 47 radio stations.
  • September 29 – 79 are killed and 550 are injured when a tornado strikes the St. Louis, Missouri area; it is the second-costliest and at least 24th-deadliest tornado in U.S. history.

October–December

[edit]
October 6: The Jazz Singer.

Undated

[edit]

Ongoing

[edit]

Births

[edit]

January

[edit]
Barbara Rush
Johnnie Ray
Eartha Kitt

February

[edit]
John Warner
Sidney Poitier

March

[edit]
Harry Belafonte
Jack Cassidy
Cesar Chavez
William Daniels

April

[edit]
Coretta Scott King

May

[edit]
Michael Constantine

June

[edit]
Jerry Stiller
Martin Lewis Perl
F. Sherwood Rowland

July

[edit]
Neil Simon
Janet Leigh
David Dinkins

August

[edit]
Porter Wagoner
Rosalynn Carter
Althea Gibson
Bill Daily

September

[edit]
Peter Falk
Jack Kelly
Harold Brown
W. S. Merwin

October

[edit]
Al Martino
George C. Scott

November

[edit]
Patti Page
McLean Stevenson
Robert Guillaume

December

[edit]
Andy Williams
Ramsey Clark

Deaths

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Thousands Hear New Governor Declare for Law Enforcement After Oath Is Administered". The Montgomery Advertiser. 1927-01-18. p. 1. Retrieved 2023-07-29.
  2. ^ "National Weather Service - Burlington, VT - The Flood of 1927". Archived from the original on 2014-02-11.
  3. ^ "The long legacy of the U.S. occupation of Haiti". Washington Post. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  4. ^ "Volstead Act | History, Definition, & Significance | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  5. ^ Virginia Norwood, a pioneer in satellite land imaging, dies at age 96
  6. ^ Jack, Adrian (26 December 2008). "Obituary: Eartha Kitt". the Guardian. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  7. ^ Art Stewart, who drafted Bo Jackson, Mike Sweeney and others for Royals, dies at 94
  8. ^ "Last fluent speaker of Wichita tribal language preserves what's left." Dallas Morning News.
  9. ^ Ruckman, S. E. "Tribal language fading away." Tulsa World. 26 Nov 2007 (retrieved 3 Oct 2009)
  10. ^ Chris Strodder (March 1, 2007). The Encyclopedia of Sixties Cool: A Celebration of the Grooviest People, Events, and Artifacts of the 1960s. Santa Monica Press. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-59580-986-5.
  11. ^ John Gribbin (22 February 2000). Q is for Quantum: An Encyclopedia of Particle Physics. Simon and Schuster. p. 277. ISBN 978-0-684-86315-3.
  12. ^ William Post, Who Helped Create Pop-Tarts, Dies at 96
  13. ^ "Neil Simon obituary". the Guardian. 26 August 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
  14. ^ Joe Turkel dead at 94
  15. ^ Midge Decter, an Architect of Neoconservatism, Dies at 94
  16. ^ Rev. W. Sterling Cary, Pioneering Black Churchman, Dies at 94
  17. ^ "Former Knicks star Carl Braun dies at 82". USATODAY.com. February 10, 2010. Retrieved February 10, 2010.
  18. ^ "Birth details for Paul Lawrence Brady". FamilySearch.org. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
  19. ^ "William Bromwell Melish". Grand Lodge Free & Accepted Masons of Ohio. Archived from the original on January 6, 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-24.
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