Events from the year 1967 in the United States .
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governor of Alabama : George Wallace (Democratic ) (until January 16), Lurleen Wallace (Democratic ) (starting January 16)
Governor of Alaska : Wally Hickel (Republican )
Governor of Arizona : Samuel Pearson Goddard Jr. (Democratic ) (until January 2), Jack Richard Williams (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Governor of Arkansas : Orval Faubus (Democratic ) (until January 10), Winthrop Rockefeller (Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of California : Pat Brown (Democratic ) (until January 2), Ronald Reagan (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Governor of Colorado : John Arthur Love (Republican )
Governor of Connecticut : John N. Dempsey (Democratic )
Governor of Delaware : Charles L. Terry Jr. (Democratic )
Governor of Florida : W. Haydon Burns (Democratic ) (until January 3), Claude R. Kirk Jr. (Republican ) (starting January 3)
Governor of Georgia : Carl E. Sanders (Democratic ) (until January 11), Lester Maddox (Democratic ) (starting January 11)
Governor of Hawaii : John A. Burns (Democratic )
Governor of Idaho : Robert E. Smylie (Republican ) (until January 2), Don Samuelson (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Governor of Illinois : Otto Kerner Jr. (Democratic )
Governor of Indiana : Roger D. Branigin (Democratic )
Governor of Iowa : Harold E. Hughes (Democratic )
Governor of Kansas : William H. Avery (Republican ) (until January 9), Robert Docking (Democratic ) (starting January 9)
Governor of Kentucky : Edward T. Breathitt (Democratic ) (until December 12), Louie B. Nunn (Republican ) (starting December 12)
Governor of Louisiana : John J. McKeithen (Democratic )
Governor of Maine : John H. Reed (Republican ) (until January 5), Kenneth M. Curtis (Democratic ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Maryland : J. Millard Tawes (Democratic ) (until January 25), Spiro Agnew (Republican ) (starting January 25)
Governor of Massachusetts : John A. Volpe (Republican )
Governor of Michigan : George W. Romney (Republican )
Governor of Minnesota : Karl F. Rolvaag (Democratic ) (until January 2), Harold LeVander (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Governor of Mississippi : Paul B. Johnson Jr. (Democratic )
Governor of Missouri : Warren E. Hearnes (Democratic )
Governor of Montana : Tim M. Babcock (Republican )
Governor of Nebraska : Frank B. Morrison (Democratic ) (until January 5), Norbert T. Tiemann (Republican ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Nevada : Grant Sawyer (Democratic ) (until January 2), Paul Laxalt (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Governor of New Hampshire : John W. King (Democratic )
Governor of New Jersey : Richard J. Hughes (Democratic )
Governor of New Mexico : Jack M. Campbell (Democratic ) (until January 1), David F. Cargo (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Governor of New York : Nelson Rockefeller (Republican )
Governor of North Carolina : Dan K. Moore (Democratic )
Governor of North Dakota : William L. Guy (Democratic )
Governor of Ohio : Jim Rhodes (Republican )
Governor of Oklahoma : Henry Bellmon (Republican ) (until January 9), Dewey F. Bartlett (Republican ) (starting January 9)
Governor of Oregon : Mark Hatfield (Republican ) (until January 9), Tom McCall (Republican ) (starting January 9)
Governor of Pennsylvania : William Scranton (Republican ) (until January 17), Raymond P. Shafer (Republican ) (starting January 17)
Governor of Rhode Island : John Chafee (Republican )
Governor of South Carolina : Robert Evander McNair (Democratic )
Governor of South Dakota : Nils Boe (Republican )
Governor of Tennessee : Frank G. Clement (Democratic ) (until January 16), Buford Ellington (Democratic ) (starting January 16)
Governor of Texas : John Connally (Democratic )
Governor of Utah : Cal Rampton (Democratic )
Governor of Vermont : Philip H. Hoff (Democratic )
Governor of Virginia : Mills E. Godwin Jr. (Democratic )
Governor of Washington : Daniel J. Evans (Republican )
Governor of West Virginia : Hulett C. Smith (Democratic )
Governor of Wisconsin : Warren P. Knowles (Republican )
Governor of Wyoming : Clifford P. Hansen (Republican ) (until January 2), Stanley K. Hathaway (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant governors
edit
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama : James B. Allen (Democratic ) (until January 16), Albert Brewer (Democratic ) (starting January 16)
Lieutenant Governor of Alaska : Keith Harvey Miller (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas : Nathan Green Gordon (Democratic ) (until January 10), Maurice Britt (Republican ) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of California : Glenn Malcolm Anderson (Democratic ) (until January 2), Robert Hutchinson Finch (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado : Robert Lee Knous (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), Mark Anthony Hogan (Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut : Fred J. Doocy (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), Attilio R. Frassinelli (Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : Sherman W. Tribbitt (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Georgia : Peter Zack Geer (Democratic ) (until January 11), George T. Smith (Democratic ) (starting January 11)
Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii : Thomas Gill (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho : W. E. Drevlow (Democratic ) (until January 2), Jack M. Murphy (Democratic ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois : Samuel H. Shapiro (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana : Robert L. Rock (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa : Robert D. Fulton (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas : John Crutcher (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky : Harry Lee Waterfield (Democratic ) (until December 12), Wendell H. Ford (Democratic ) (starting December 12)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana : C. C. Aycock (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts : Elliot Richardson (Republican ) (until January 2), Francis W. Sargent (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan : William G. Milliken (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota : Alexander M. Keith (Democratic ) (until January 2), James B. Goetz (Republican ) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi : vacant
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri : Thomas Eagleton (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Montana : Ted James (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska : Philip C. Sorensen (Democratic ) (until January 7), John E. Everroad (Republican ) (starting January 7)
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada : Paul Laxalt (Republican ) (until January 2), Edward Fike (political party unknown) (starting January 2)
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico : Mack Easley (Democratic ) (until January 1), Elias Lee Francis II (Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of New York : Malcolm Wilson (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina : Robert W. Scott (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota : Charles Tighe (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio : John William Brown (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma : Leo Winters (Democratic ) (until January 9), George Nigh (Democratic ) (starting January 9)
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania : Raymond P. Shafer (Republican ) (until January 17), Raymond J. Broderick (Republican ) (starting January 17)
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island : Giovanni Folcarelli (Democratic ) (until month and day unknown), Joseph O'Donnell Jr. (Republican ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : vacant (until January 17), John C. West (Democratic ) (starting January 17)
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota : Lem Overpeck (Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee : Jared Maddux (Democratic ) (until January 16), Frank Gorrell (Democratic ) (starting January 16)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : Preston Smith (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont : John J. Daley (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia : Fred G. Pollard (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Washington : John Cherberg (Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin : Patrick J. Lucey (Democratic ) (until January 2), Jack B. Olson (Republican ) (starting January 2)
January 27: Apollo 1 fire
April 1 – The Department of Transportation begins operation. The Federal Aviation Administration is folded into the DOT.
April 4 – Martin Luther King Jr. denounces the Vietnam War during a religious service in New York City.
April 9 – The first Boeing 737 (a 100 series) takes its maiden flight.
April 10 – The AFTRA strike is settled just in time for the 39th Academy Awards ceremony to be held, hosted by Bob Hope at Santa Monica Civic Auditorium . Fred Zinnemann 's A Man for All Seasons wins the most awards with six, including Best Picture and Zinnemann's second Best Director award (his first since 1953). Mike Nichols ' Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? receives 13 nominations.
April 12 – The Ahmanson Theatre opens in Los Angeles.
April 14 – In San Francisco , 10,000 march against the Vietnam War .
April 15 – Large demonstrations are held against the Vietnam War in New York City and San Francisco.
April 20 – The Surveyor 3 probe lands on the Moon.
April 21 – An outbreak of tornadoes strikes the upper Midwest section of the United States (in particular the Chicago area, including the suburbs of Belvidere and Oak Lawn, Illinois , where 33 people are killed and 500 injured).
April 22 – The Big Mac is introduced, in Uniontown, Pennsylvania .
April 24 – The Outsiders is published.
April 28
In Houston , boxer Muhammad Ali refuses military service.
Expo 67 opens to the public, with over 310,000 people attending. Al Carter from Chicago is the first visitor, as noted by Expo officials.
June 2 – Luis Monge is executed in Colorado 's gas chamber , in the last pre-Furman execution in the United States.
June 5 – Murderer Richard Speck is sentenced to death in the electric chair for killing eight student nurses in Chicago .
June 7 – Two Moby Grape members are arrested for contributing to the delinquency of minors.
June 8 – Six-Day War – USS Liberty incident : Israeli fighter jets and Israeli warships fire at the USS Liberty off Gaza, killing 34 and wounding 171.
June 11 – A race riot occurs in Tampa, Florida after the shooting death of Martin Chambers by police while allegedly robbing a camera store. The unrest lasts until June 15.[ 3]
June 12 – Loving v. Virginia : The United States Supreme Court declares all U.S. state laws prohibiting interracial marriage to be unconstitutional.[ 4]
June 13 – Solicitor General Thurgood Marshall is nominated as the first African American justice of the United States Supreme Court.
June 14 – Mariner program : Mariner 5 is launched toward Venus .
June 14–15 – Glenn Gould records Prokofiev 's Seventh Piano Sonata, Op. 83, in New York City (his only recording of a Prokofiev composition).
June 16 – The Monterey Pop Festival begins and is held for 3 days.
June 23 – Cold War : U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson meets with Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in Glassboro, New Jersey , for the 3-day Glassboro Summit Conference . Johnson travels to Los Angeles for a dinner at the Century Plaza Hotel where earlier in the day thousands of war protesters clashed with L.A. police.[ 5]
June 26 – The Buffalo Race Riot begins, lasting until July 1; leads to 200 arrests.
June 29 – Actress Jayne Mansfield and two others die in an automobile crash near Slidell, Louisiana . Mansfield's daughter, Mariska Hargitay , is asleep in the back seat at the time of the crash and survives.
July 1 – American Samoa 's first constitution becomes effective.
July 2 – Walt Disney's Carousel of Progress opens at Disneyland .
July 5 – Freedom of Information Act becomes effective.
July 12 – After the arrest of an African-American cab driver for allegedly illegally driving around a police car and gunning it down the road, rioting breaks out in Newark, New Jersey , and continues for five days.
July 14 – Near Newark, New Jersey, the Plainfield riots also occur.
July 16 – A prison riot in Jay, Florida leaves 37 dead.
July 18 – The United Kingdom announces the closing of its military bases in Malaysia and Singapore . Australia and the U.S. disapprove.
July 19 – A race riot breaks out in the North Side of Minneapolis on Plymouth Street during the Minneapolis Aquatennial Parade. Businesses are vandalized and fires break out in the area, although the disturbance is quelled within hours. However, the next day, a shooting sets off another incident in the same area that leads to 18 fires, 36 arrests, 3 shootings, 2 dozen people injured, and damages totaling $4.2 million. There will be two more such incidents in the following two weeks.
July 21 – The town of Winneconne, Wisconsin , announces secession from the United States because it is not included in the official maps and declares war. Secession is repealed the next day.
July 23
July 29 – An explosion and fire aboard the U.S. Navy aircraft carrier Forrestal in the Gulf of Tonkin leaves 134 dead.
July 30
Joni Eareckson breaks her neck in a diving accident, becoming a quadriplegic . This leads to her starting 'Joni and Friends', a ministry for disabled people.
The 1967 Milwaukee race riots begin, lasting through August 2 and leading to a ten-day shutdown of the city from August 1.
August 30: Thurgood Marshall is confirmed as the first African American Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
October 1 – The Boston Red Sox clinch the American League pennant in one of the most memorable pennant races of all time with Boston (92–70) beating out the Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers by one game; Carl Yastrzemski wins the baseball's Triple Crown .
October 2 – Thurgood Marshall is sworn in as the first black justice of the U.S. Supreme Court .
October 3 – An X-15 research aircraft with test pilot William J. Knight establishes an unofficial world fixed-wing speed record of Mach 6.7.
October 12
October 16 – Thirty-nine people, including singer-activist Joan Baez , are arrested in Oakland, California, for blocking the entrance of that city's military induction center.
October 17 – The musical Hair opens off-Broadway. It moves to Broadway the following April.
October 18 – Walt Disney 's 19th full-length animated feature The Jungle Book , the last animated film personally supervised by Disney, is released and becomes an enormous box-office and critical success. On a double bill with the film is the (now) much less well-known true-life adventure, Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar .
October 19 – The Mariner 5 probe flies by Venus .
October 20 – The Patterson–Gimlin film is shot in Bluff Creek, California supposedly capturing a Bigfoot on tape.
October 21 – Tens of thousands of Vietnam War protesters march in Washington, D.C. Allen Ginsberg symbolically chants to 'levitate' The Pentagon .[ 2]
October 26 – U.S. Navy pilot John McCain is shot down over North Vietnam and made a POW . His capture is announced in The New York Times and The Washington Post two days later.
October 27 – March on the Pentagon : several thousand people advance to the Pentagon to protest against the Vietnam War .
November 2 – Vietnam War : U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson holds a secret meeting with a group of the nation's most prestigious leaders ("the Wise Men") and asks them to suggest ways to unite the American people behind the war effort. They conclude that the American people should be given more optimistic reports on the progress of the war.
November 3 – Vietnam War – Battle of Dak To : Around Đắk Tô (located about 280 miles north of Saigon near the Cambodian border), heavy casualties are suffered on both sides (the Americans narrowly win the battle on November 22).
November 4 – Tampa Stadium in Tampa, Florida opens.
November 7
November 9
November 11 – Vietnam War: In a propaganda ceremony in Phnom Penh , Cambodia , 3 United States prisoners of war are released by the Viet Cong and turned over to "New Left" antiwar activist Tom Hayden .
November 17 – Vietnam War: Acting on optimistic reports he was given on November 13, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson tells his nation that, while much remained to be done, "We are inflicting greater losses than we're taking...We are making progress."
November 21 – Vietnam War: United States General William Westmoreland tells news reporters: "I am absolutely certain that whereas in 1965 the enemy was winning, today he is certainly losing."
November 29 – Vietnam War: U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara announces his resignation to become president of the World Bank . This action is due to U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson 's outright rejection of McNamara's early November recommendations to freeze troop levels, stop bombing North Vietnam and hand over ground fighting to South Vietnam .
November 30 – U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy announces his candidacy for the Democratic Party presidential nomination, challenging incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson over the Vietnam War.
December 15: The Silver Bridge collapses, killing 46
December 4 – Vietnam War : U.S. and South Vietnamese forces engage Viet Cong troops in the Mekong Delta (235 of the 300-strong Viet Cong battalion are killed).
December 5 – In New York City, Benjamin Spock and Allen Ginsberg are arrested for protesting against the Vietnam War .
December 7 – The U.S. Public Health Service studies potential ray leakage from color TVs.
December 8 – Magical Mystery Tour is released by The Beatles as an eleven-song album in the U.S. The songs added to the original six songs on the double EP include "All You Need Is Love ", "Penny Lane ", "Strawberry Fields Forever ", "Baby, You're a Rich Man " and "Hello, Goodbye ".
December 10 – Soul singer Otis Redding , 26, is killed when the airplane he is on crashes into Lake Monona . The crash also claims the lives of all of his five-member band; the only survivor is fellow musician Ben Cauley .[ 7]
December 15 – The Silver Bridge over the Ohio River in Point Pleasant, West Virginia , collapses, killing 46.
December 19 – Professor John Archibald Wheeler uses the term black hole for the first time.
December 28 – Businesswoman Muriel Siebert becomes the first woman to own a seat on the New York Stock Exchange .
January 1 – Derrick Thomas , American football player (d. 2000)
January 4 – David Berman , singer-songwriter (d. 2019)
January 7
January 8 – R. Kelly , R&B singer-songwriter and basketball player
January 9 – Steve Harwell , singer (d. 2023)[ 8]
January 24
January 28 – Marvin Sapp , singer
February 5 – Chris Parnell , actor and comedian
February 10 – Laura Dern , American actress
February 13 – Carolyn Lawrence , television, film and voice actress
February 18 – John Valentin , baseball player and coach
February 20 – Kurt Cobain , singer and artist, lead singer of Nirvana (died 1994 )
March 6 – Glenn Greenwald , journalist, author, and attorney[ 10]
March 11 – Patrick Lucas , member of the West Virginia House of Delegates [ 11]
March 25 – Ben Mankiewicz , political commentator
April 2
April 18 – Maria Bello , actress and singer
April 19
April 20 – Lara Jill Miller , actress
April 22 – Sherri Shepherd , actor and TV personality
April 23 – Rhéal Cormier , baseball player (d. 2021)
April 26 – Kane , politician and pro wrestler
April 27 – Jason Whitlock , sports journalist
May 1 – Tim McGraw , country singer
May 14 – Tony Siragusa , American football player (d. 2022)
May 18 – Alonso Duralde , media personality
May 21 – Blake Schwarzenbach , singer and guitarist
June 3 – Anderson Cooper , television personality
June 5
June 20 – Nicole Kidman , Australian-born actress.
June 21 – Jim Breuer , former Saturday Night Live cast member and stand-up comedian
June 22
June 29
July 1 – Kim Komando , talk radio program host
July 3 – Brian Cashman , businessman
July 11
July 16 – Will Ferrell , comedian, impressionist, actor and writer
July 18 – Vin Diesel , actor, writer, director and producer
July 20 – Danelle Barrett , rear admiral (died 2024 )[ 13]
July 21 – Mick Mulvaney , politician
July 23 – Philip Seymour Hoffman , actor and director (died 2014 )
July 24 – Stacey Castor , poisoner who murders two of her husbands (died 2016 )[ 14]
August 11 – Joe Rogan , podcaster, comedian and martial artist
September 6 – Macy Gray , singer
September 11 – Harry Connick Jr. , musician, actor, and TV host
September 13 – Michael Johnson , sprinter
October 9 – Eddie Guerrero , pro wrestler (died 2005)
October 11
October 14 – Stephen A. Smith , sports TV personality
October 23 – LaVar Ball , businessman
October 28 – Julia Roberts , American actress
October 31 – Vanilla Ice , rapper
November 2 – Scott Walker , 45th Governor of Wisconsin
November 13 – Kristen Gilbert , serial killer nurse who murdered four patients
November 15
November 21 – Ken Block , rally driver (died 2022 )[ 15]
November 22 – Mark Ruffalo , actor and producer
November 24 – Jon Hein , radio personality
November 26 – Will Jimeno , Colombia-born Port Authority Police officer, survivor of September 11 attacks
November 27 – KC Johnson , Professor of History at Brooklyn College and the City University of New York , known for his work exposing the facts about the Duke Lacrosse Case [ 16] [ 17]
December 13 – Jamie Foxx , actor, singer and comedian
December 21 – Ervin Johnson , basketball player
Date unknown
January 1 – Moon Mullican , country singer (b. 1909 )
January 3
January 16 – Robert J. Van de Graaff , physicist (b. 1901 )
January 17
January 18
January 21 – Ann Sheridan , actress (b. 1915 )
January 22 – Jobyna Ralston , actress (b. 1899 )
January 27
January 30 – Eddie Tolan , sprinter (b. 1908 )
February 15 – J. Frank Duryea , engineer and inventor (b. 1869 )
February 16 – Smiley Burnette , country music performer and actor (b. 1911 )
February 18 – J. Robert Oppenheimer , physicist (b. 1904 )
February 21 – Charles Beaumont , author (b. 1929 )
February 24 – Franz Waxman , German-born composer and conductor (b. 1906 )
February 28 – Henry Luce , magazine publisher (b. 1898 )
March 6 – Nelson Eddy , actor and singer (b. 1901 )
March 7 – Alice B. Toklas , memoirist and autobiographer, dies in Paris (b. 1893 )
March 11 – Geraldine Farrar , operatic soprano and actress (b. 1882 )
March 30
April 3 – Alvin M. Owsley , diplomat (born 1888 )
April 17 – Abbie Rowe , White House photographer (b. 1905 )
April 24 – Frank Overton , actor (b. 1918 )
May 10
May 13 – Frank McGrath , actor and stunt performer (b. 1903 )
May 15 – Edward Hopper , painter (b. 1882 )
May 18 – Andy Clyde , Scottish-born American actor (b. 1892 )
May 22 – Langston Hughes , poet, novelist, playwright, social activist, and columnist (b. 1901 )
May 27 – Tilly Edinger , paleoneurologist (b. 1897 in Germany )
May 30 – Claude Rains , actor (b. 1889 )
June 7 – Dorothy Parker , humorist, writer and critic (b. 1893 )
June 10 – Spencer Tracy , film actor (b. 1900 )
June 14 – Eddie Eagan , only athlete to win a gold medal at both the Summer and Winter Olympic Games in different sports (b. 1897 )
June 17 – Vernon Huber , rear admiral and 36th Governor of American Samoa (b. 1899 )
June 29 – Jayne Mansfield , film actress (b. 1933 )
July 17
July 19 – John T. McNaughton , United States Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs (b. 1921 )
July 21
July 22 – Carl Sandburg , writer and editor (b. 1878 )
August 12 – Esther Forbes , writer (born 1891 )
August 13 – Jane Darwell , actress (born 1879 )
August 22 – Gregory Goodwin Pincus , biologist, co-inventor of the combined oral contraceptive pill (b. 1903 )
August 25
August 30 – Ad Reinhardt , painter (b. 1913 )
September 1 – James Dunn , film actor (b. 1901 )
September 3 – Francis Ouimet , golfer (b. 1893 )
September 16 – Ethel May Halls , actress (b. 1882 )
September 29 – Carson McCullers , fiction writer (b. 1917 )
October 3
October 4 – Claude C. Bloch , admiral (b. 1878 )
October 9 – Joseph Pilates , physical trainer, writer, and inventor (b. 1883 )
October 12 – Nat Pendleton , Olympic wrestler, actor, and stage performer (b. 1895 )
October 25 – Margaret Ayer Barnes , playwright, novelist and short-story writer (b. 1886 )
November 5 – Joseph Kesselring , playwright (b. 1902 )
November 7 – John Nance Garner , 32nd vice president of the United States from 1933 to 1941 (b. 1868 )
November 9
November 15 – Alice Lake , film actress (b. 1895 )
December 3 – Peter Bocage , jazz musician (b. 1887 )
December 4 – Bert Lahr , actor, played the Cowardly Lion in The Wizard of Oz (b. 1895 )
December 8 – Robert Henry Lawrence Jr. , astronaut (b. 1935 )
December 10
December 18 – Barry Byrne , "Prairie School " architect (b. 1883 )
December 28 – Katharine McCormick , suffragist and philanthropist (b. 1875 )
December 29 – Paul Whiteman , bandleader, composer, orchestral director, and violinist (b. 1890 )
December 30 – Bert Berns , songwriter and record producer (b. 1929 )
^ The Controversial Replica of Leonardo da Vinci's Adding Machine Archived 2011-05-29 at the Wayback Machine
^ a b Ronald B. Frankum Jr. (2011). "Chronology" . Historical Dictionary of the War in Vietnam . Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-7956-0 .
^ Momodu, Samuel (2020-12-25). "Tampa Bay Race Riot (1967) •" . Retrieved 2021-03-28 .
^ "Loving v. Virginia" . Archived from the original on 2009-04-22. Retrieved 16 July 2016 .
^ "President's Daily Diary, June 23, 1967" . Archived from the original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved 16 July 2016 .
^ "Race Troubles: 109 U.S. Cities Faced Violence in 1967" . U.S. News & World Report . July 12, 2017. Archived from the original on 2017-07-14. Retrieved March 26, 2021 .
^ "Sole Survivor in Famous Crash That Killed Otis Redding Returns to Madison - Madison News Story - WISC Madison" . Archived from the original on 2011-02-22. Retrieved 2011-07-14 .
^ "Steve Harwell Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More" . AllMusic . Retrieved 2023-09-04 .
^ "Phil LaMarr's Resume" . Archived from the original on June 24, 2013.
^ Dixon, Pam (February 12, 2016). Surveillance in America: An Encyclopedia of History, Politics, and the Law [2 volumes]: An Encyclopedia of History, Politics, and the Law . ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781440840555 – via Google Books.
^ "Patrick Lucas (R - Cabell, 024)" . www.wvlegislature.gov . Retrieved 2023-08-25 .
^ Joe DeLoach at World Athletics
^ Danelle Barrett
^ "NYS Department of Corrections and Community Supervision" . nysdoccslookup.doccs.ny.gov .
^ "Ken Block: Rally driver and YouTuber killed in snowmobile accident" . BBC News . 3 January 2023.
^ Jarvey, Paul. "Duke players say thanks" . Telegram & Gazette . Archived from the original on 2018-09-24. Retrieved 2018-09-24 .
^ Congress, The Library of. "LC Linked Data Service: Authorities and Vocabularies (Library of Congress)" . id.loc.gov .
^ "Krauthamer, Barbara, 1967-" . National Library of the Czech Republic . Retrieved 2023-05-30 .