1852

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Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 18th century
  • 19th century
  • 20th century
Decades:
Years:
  • 1849
  • 1850
  • 1851
  • 1852
  • 1853
  • 1854
  • 1855
1852 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1852
MDCCCLII
Ab urbe condita2605
Armenian calendar1301
ԹՎ ՌՅԱ
Assyrian calendar6602
Bahá'í calendar8–9
Balinese saka calendar1773–1774
Bengali calendar1259
Berber calendar2802
British Regnal year15 Vict. 1 – 16 Vict. 1
Buddhist calendar2396
Burmese calendar1214
Byzantine calendar7360–7361
Chinese calendar辛亥(Metal Pig)
4548 or 4488
    — to —
壬子年 (Water Rat)
4549 or 4489
Coptic calendar1568–1569
Discordian calendar3018
Ethiopian calendar1844–1845
Hebrew calendar5612–5613
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1908–1909
 - Shaka Samvat1773–1774
 - Kali Yuga4952–4953
Holocene calendar11852
Igbo calendar852–853
Iranian calendar1230–1231
Islamic calendar1268–1269
Japanese calendarKaei 5
(嘉永5年)
Javanese calendar1780–1781
Julian calendarGregorian minus 12 days
Korean calendar4185
Minguo calendar60 before ROC
民前60年
Nanakshahi calendar384
Thai solar calendar2394–2395
Tibetan calendar阴金猪年
(female Iron-Pig)
1978 or 1597 or 825
    — to —
阳水鼠年
(male Water-Rat)
1979 or 1598 or 826

1852 (MDCCCLII) was a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar and a leap year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar, the 1852nd year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 852nd year of the 2nd millennium, the 52nd year of the 19th century, and the 3rd year of the 1850s decade. As of the start of 1852, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Events[]

The world in 1852

January–March[]

  • January 14 – President Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte proclaims a new constitution for the French Second Republic.
  • January 15 – Nine men representing various Jewish charitable organizations come together, to form what will become Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City.
  • January 17 – The United Kingdom recognizes the independence of the Transvaal.
  • February 3Battle of Caseros, Argentina: The Argentine provinces of Entre Rios and Corrientes, allied with Brazil and members of Colorado Party of Uruguay, defeat Buenos Aires troops under Juan Manuel de Rosas.
  • February 11 – The first British public toilet for women opens in Bedford Street, London.
  • February 14 – The Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children, London, admits its first patient.
  • February 16 – The Studebaker Brothers Wagon Company, precursor of the automobile manufacturer, is established in South Bend, Indiana.
  • February 19Phi Kappa Psi fraternity was founded in Canonsburg, PA at Jefferson College.
  • February 25HMS Birkenhead sinks near Cape Town, British Cape Colony. Only 193 of the 643 on board survive, after troops stand firm on the deck, so as not to overwhelm the lifeboats containing women and children.
  • March 1Archibald Montgomerie, 13th Earl of Eglinton is appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.
  • March 2 – The first American experimental steam fire engine is tested.[1]
  • March 4Phi Mu sorority is founded in Macon, Georgia.
  • March 17Annibale De Gasparis discovers in Naples the asteroid Psyche from the north dome of the Astronomical Observatory of Capodimonte.[2]
  • March 18Henry Wells and William Fargo created Wells Fargo & Company.
  • March 20Uncle Tom's Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe, is published in book form in Boston.

April–June[]

  • April 1 – The Second Anglo-Burmese War begins.
  • April 18Taiping Rebellion: Taiping forces begin the siege of Guilin.[3]
  • May 19Taiping Rebellion: The siege of Guilin is lifted.
  • June 12Taiping Rebellion: Taiping forces enter Hunan.

July–September[]

October–December[]

  • October 7 – After learning that U.S. President Fillmore has sent Commodore Matthew C. Perry, to open trade with Japan, Nicholas I of Russia sends Rear Admiral Yevfimy Putyatin to lead the Pallada on a similar mission (Putyatin arrives on August 21, 1853, one month after Perry).[4]
  • October 16 – After nearly five years' imprisonment in France, former Algerian Emir Abdelkader El Djezairi is released by orders of then-president Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte.[5]
  • October 23 – The conjecture of the four color theorem is first proposed, as student Francis Guthrie of University College London presents the question of proving, mathematically, that no more than four colors are needed to give separate colors to bordering shapes on a map (the theorem is not proven for almost 123 years, until 1976).[6]
  • October 31 – General Joaquin Solares of Guatemala leads an invasion of neighboring Honduras, beginning a war that lasts until February 13, 1856.[7]
  • NovemberLeo Tolstoy's debut novel Childhood is published under the initials L. N., in this month's issue of the Saint Petersburg literary journal Sovremennik (and later in book form).
  • November 21852 U.S. presidential election: Democrat Franklin Pierce of New Hampshire defeats Whig Winfield Scott of Virginia.
  • November 4Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour becomes the Piedmontese prime minister.
  • November 11 – The new Palace of Westminster opens in London.
  • November 2122 – The New French Empire is confirmed by plebiscite: 7,824,000 for, 253,000 against.
  • November 23 – The first roadside pillar boxes in the British Isles are brought into public use in Saint Helier, on Jersey in the Channel Islands, at the suggestion of English novelist Anthony Trollope, at this time an official of the British General Post Office.[8]
  • November 26 – A magnitude 7.5 to 8.8 earthquake strike near the Banda Islands, Dutch East Indes, triggering a deadly tsunami.[9]
  • December – The Western Railroad is chartered to build a railroad from Fayetteville, North Carolina to the coal fields of Egypt, North Carolina.[10]
  • December 2Napoleon III becomes Emperor of the French.
  • December 4 – The French capture Laghouat.
  • December 23Taiping Rebellion: The Taiping army takes Hanyang and begins the siege of Wuchang.
  • December 29Taiping Rebellion: The Taiping army takes Hankou.

Date unknown[]

  • The grooved rail is developed by Alphonse Loubat.[11]
  • The Devil's Island penal colony opens in the colony of French Guiana.
  • The semaphore line in France is superseded by the telegraph.
  • Smith & Wesson is founded as a firearms manufacturer in the United States.
  • In Hawaii, sugar planters bring over the first Chinese laborers on 3 or 5 year contracts, giving them 3 dollars per month plus room and board for working a 12-hour day, 6 days a week.
  • Germans are encouraged to immigrate to Chile.
  • The British Inman Line is the first to offer United States-bound migrants steerage passage in a steamer, SS City of Glasgow.
  • Loyola College is chartered in Baltimore, Maryland.
  • Antioch College is founded in Yellow Springs, Ohio (its first president is Horace Mann).
  • Mills College is founded as the Young Ladies Seminary in Benicia, California.
  • The French Catholic De La Salle Brothers arrive from Europe in Singapore, aboard La Julie, and sail up to Penang in the Straits Settlements, to found the first Lasallian educational institutions in Asia.
  • Justin Perkins, an American Presbyterian missionary, produces the first translation of the Bible in Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, which is published with the parallel text of the Syriac Peshitta, by the American Bible Society.

Births[]

January–June[]

John Harvey Kellogg
Friedrich Loeffler
Antoni Gaudi
Alice Liddell

April–June[]

  • April 1Edwin Austin Abbey, American painter (d. 1911)
  • April 13Frank Winfield Woolworth, American merchant, businessman (d. 1919)
  • April 22William IV, Grand Duke of Luxembourg (d. 1912)
  • May 1Santiago Ramón y Cajal, Spanish histologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1934)
  • May 2Max von Gallwitz, German general (d. 1937)
  • May 4Alice Pleasance Liddell, inspiration for the English children's classic Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (d. 1934)[12]
  • May 11Charles W. Fairbanks, 26th Vice President of the United States (d. 1918)
  • May 13Dashi-Dorzho Itigilov, Buryat Buddhist leader (d. 1927)
  • May 14
    • Émile Fayolle, French general (d. 1928)
    • Alton B. Parker, American judge, Democratic political candidate (d. 1926)
  • May 22Moritz von Auffenberg, Austro-Hungarian general and politician (d. 1928)
  • May 31
    • Aleksei Aleksandrovich Bobrinsky, Soviet historian and politician (d. 1927)
    • Julius Richard Petri, German bacteriologist (d. 1921)
  • June 13Anna Whitlock, Swedish women's rights activist (d. 1930)
  • June 24Victor Adler, Austrian politician (d. 1918)
  • June 25
    • Antoni Gaudí, Spanish modernist architect (d. 1926)
    • Friedrich Loeffler, German bacteriologist (d. 1915)
  • June 30Karl Petrovich Jessen, Russian admiral (d. 1918)

July–September[]

Hermann Emil Fischer
Henri Becquerel
  • July 9Grigore C. Crăiniceanu, Romanian general and politician (d. 1935)
  • July 12Hipólito Yrigoyen, 18th President of Argentina (d. 1933)
  • July 15Josef Josephi, Polish-born singer and actor (d. 1920)
  • July 20
    • Theo Heemskerk, Prime Minister of the Netherlands (d. 1932)
    • Maria Brace Kimball, American elocutionist (d. 1933)
  • July 31Charles Lanrezac, French general (d. 1925)
  • August 4
    • Catharine van Tussenbroek, Dutch physician (d. 1925)
    • Charles Coborn, British singer (d. 1945)
  • August 23Clímaco Calderón, 15th President of Colombia (d. 1913)
  • August 30Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff, Dutch chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1911)
  • September 6Schalk Willem Burger, Boer military leader, lawyer, politician, and statesman, acting President of the South African Republic (1900-1902) (d. 1918)
  • September 8Gojong, 26th king of the Korean Joseon dynasty, first emperor of Korea (d. 1919)
  • September 10Hans Niels Andersen, Danish businessman, founder of the East Asiatic Company (d. 1937)
  • September 12H. H. Asquith, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (d. 1928)
  • September 28
    • John French, 1st Earl of Ypres, British field marshal, commander of the British Expeditionary Force in World War I (d. 1925)
    • Henri Moissan, French chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1907)
  • September 29Ijuin Gorō, Japanese admiral (d. 1921)
  • September 30Charles Villiers Stanford, Irish composer, resident in England (d. 1924)

October–December[]

Date unknown[]

  • Emma Eliza Bower, American physician, club-woman, and newspaperwoman (d. 1937)
  • Liu Buchan, Chinese admiral (d. 1895)
  • Gef, supposed Indian-born Manx talking mongoose (presumed hoax of 1930s)

Deaths[]

January–June[]

Paavo Ruotsalainen
Sara Coleridge
  • January 1John George Children, British chemist, mineralogist and zoologist (b. 1777)
  • January 6Louis Braille, French teacher of the blind, inventor of braille (b. 1809)
  • January 27Paavo Ruotsalainen, Finnish farmer and lay preacher (b. 1777)[13]
  • February 10Samuel Prout, English watercolour painter (b. 1783)[14]
  • March 4Nikolai Gogol, Russian writer (b. 1809)
  • April 17Étienne Maurice Gérard, French general, statesman and marshal, 11th Prime Minister of France (b. 1773)
  • May 3Sara Coleridge, British author and translator (b. 1802)[15]
  • May 15Louisa Adams, First Lady of the United States (b. 1775)
  • June 7José Joaquín Estudillo, second Mexican alcalde of Yerba Buena (b. 1800)
  • June 21Friedrich Fröbel, German pedagogue (b. 1782)
  • June 29Henry Clay, American statesman (b. 1777)

July–December[]

Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
Friedrich Ludwig Jahn
Georg August Wallin
Ada Lovelace
  • July 20José Antonio Estudillo, early California settler (b. 1805)
  • July 22Auguste de Marmont, French marshal (b. 1774)
  • AugustTáhirih, Iranian Baha'i theologian, poet and feminist (b. 1814)
  • August 14Margaret Taylor, First Lady of the United States (b. 1788)
  • August 24Sarah Guppy, English inventor (b. 1770)
  • September 4William MacGillivray, Scottish naturalist and ornithologist (b. 1796)
  • September 8Anna Maria Walker, Scottish botanist (b. 1778)
  • September 14
    • Augustus Pugin, English architect (b. 1812)
    • Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, British general and political figure, twice Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1769)
  • September 20Philander Chase, American founder of Kenyon College (b. 1775)
  • October 7Sir Edward Troubridge, 2nd Baronet, British admiral (b. ca. 1787)
  • October 13John Lloyd Stephens, American traveler, diplomat and Mayanist archaeologist (b. 1805)
  • October 15Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, German gymnastics educator (b. 1778)
  • October 23Georg August Wallin, Finnish orientalist, explorer and professor (b. 1811)[16]
  • October 24Daniel Webster, American statesman (b. 1782)
  • October 25John C. Clark, American politician (b. 1793)
  • October 26Vincenzo Gioberti, Italian philosopher (b. 1801)[17]
  • November 2Pyotr Kotlyarevsky, Russian military hero (b. 1782)
  • November 10Gideon Mantell, English geologist, palaeontologist (b. 1790)
  • November 17Adam Karl August von Eschenmayer, German philosopher (b. 1768)
  • November 18John Andrew Shulze, American politician (b. 1775)
  • November 27Augusta Ada King (née Byron), Countess of Lovelace, early English computer pioneer (b. 1815)
  • November 29Nicolae Bălcescu, Wallachian revolutionary (b. 1819)
  • November 30Junius Brutus Booth, English-born stage actor, father of Edwin Booth and John Wilkes Booth (b. 1796)
  • December 16Andries Hendrik Potgieter, Voortrekker leader (b. 1792)
  • date unknownJoanna Żubr, Polish soldier (b. 1770)

References[]

  1. ^ King, William T. (1896). History of the American Steam Fire-Engine. Pinkham Press.
  2. ^ Lick Observatory (1935). Publications of the Lick Observatory of the University of California. The University. p. 23.
  3. ^ Sergeĭ Leonidovich Tikhvinskiĭ (1983). Modern History of China. Progress Publishers. p. 166.
  4. ^ Kimura, Hiroshi (2008). The Kurillian Knot: A History of Japanese-Russian Border Negotiations. California: Stanford University Press. p. 23.
  5. ^ Chateaux of the Loire. Casa Editrice Bonechi. 2007. p. 10.
  6. ^ MacKenzie, Donald (2004). Mechanizing Proof: Computing, Risk, and Trust. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. p. 103.
  7. ^ Scheina, Robert L. (2003). Latin America's Wars. I. Potomac Books, Inc. p. 1849.
  8. ^ Farrugia, Jean Young (1969). The Letter Box: A History of Post Office Pillar and Wall boxes. Fontwell: Centaur Press. p. 27. ISBN 0-90000014-7.
  9. ^ H. Ringer, J. P. Whitehead, J. Krometis, R. A. Harris, N. Glatt-Holtz, S. Giddens, C. Ashcraft, G. Carver, A. Robertson, M. Harward, J. Fullwood, K. Lightheart, R. Hilton, A. Avery, C. Kesler, M. Morrise, M. H. Klein (2021). "Methodological Reconstruction of Historical Seismic Events From Anecdotal Accounts of Destructive Tsunamis: A Case Study for the Great 1852 Banda Arc Mega-Thrust Earthquake and Tsunami" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 126 (4). arXiv:2009.14272. doi:10.1029/2020JB021107. Retrieved June 19, 2021.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ CommunicationSolutions/ISI, "Railroad — Western Railroad Company", North Carolina Business History, 2006, accessed 1 Feb 2010.
  11. ^ James E. Vance (1990). Capturing the Horizon: The Historical Geography of Transportation Since the Sixteenth Century. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 359. ISBN 978-0-8018-4012-8.
  12. ^ Anne Clark Amor (1982). The Real Alice: Lewis Carroll's Dream Child. Stein and Day. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-8128-2870-2.
  13. ^ Paavo Ruotsalainen – Aholansaari (in Finnish)
  14. ^ "Samuel Prout (1783-1852)". artuk.org. Retrieved January 3, 2017.
  15. ^ Paula R. Feldman (January 19, 2001). British Women Poets of the Romantic Era: An Anthology. JHU Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-0-8018-6640-1.
  16. ^ WALLIN, Georg August (1811–1852) – Biografiskt lexikon för Finland (in Swedish)
  17. ^ Samuel J. Rogal (1991). Calendar of Literary Facts: A Daily and Yearly Guide to Noteworthy Events in World Literature from 1450 to the Present. Gale Research. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-8103-2943-0.

Further reading[]

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