1864 in the United Kingdom

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United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 1864 in the United Kingdom United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
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Events from the year 1864 in the United Kingdom.

Incumbents[]

  • MonarchVictoria
  • Prime MinisterHenry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (Liberal)
  • Parliament

Events[]

  • 11 January – Charing Cross railway station in London opens.[1]
  • 11 March – Great Sheffield Flood: the Dale Dike Dam bursts devastating Sheffield.
  • 29 March – Treaty of London: Britain voluntarily cedes control of the United States of the Ionian Islands to the Kingdom of Greece with effect from 2 May.[2]
  • 1 April – Barrow Hematite Iron and Steel Company registered to take over and expand the works at Barrow-in-Furness,[3] which will become the world's largest steel mill.
  • April – Giuseppe Garibaldi visits England.
  • 7 May – City of Adelaide is launched at Sunderland by William Pile, Hay and Co. for the Australia trade; by 2014 she will be the world's oldest surviving clipper.
  • c. May–June – Ending of Second Anglo-Ashanti war.
  • June – overarm bowling legalised in cricket.
  • 20 August – John Alexander Reina Newlands produces the first periodic table of the chemical elements.[4]
  • 5–6 September – Bombardment of Shimonoseki: An American, British, Dutch and French alliance engages the powerful feudal Japanese warlord or daimyō Lord Mōri Takachika of the Chōshū clan based in Shimonoseki, Japan.
  • 28 September – International Workingmen's Association founded in London.[1]
  • 10 October – Quebec Conference to discuss plans for the creation of a Dominion of Canada, begins.[2]
  • 18 October – abolition of squadron colours in the Royal Navy, reserving the White Ensign to the Navy, the Red Ensign to the Merchant Navy and the Blue Ensign to military vessels.[5]
  • 2 November – HMS Victoria (1859), the Royal Navy’s last, largest and fastest wooden first-rate three-decker ship of the line to see sea service, enters active service.
  • 10 November – first match played on the newly laid out Royal North Devon Golf Club course, the oldest surviving in England.[6]
  • 8 December
    • The Clifton Suspension Bridge across the Bristol Avon, designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel and completed as a memorial to him, opens to traffic.[1]
    • James Clerk Maxwell presents his paper A Dynamical Theory of the Electromagnetic Field to the Royal Society, concluding that light is an electromagnetic wave.[7]
  • Undated – Oriel Chambers, Liverpool, the world's first metal-framed glass curtain walled building, designed by Peter Ellis (architect), is built.[8]

Publications[]

Births[]

  • 8 January – Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence (died 1892)
  • 21 January – Israel Zangwill, novelist and playwright (died 1926)
  • 20 February – Henry Rawlinson, 1st Baron Rawlinson, general (died 1925)
  • 12 March – W. H. R. Rivers, psychiatrist (died 1922)
  • 6 April – William Bate Hardy, biologist and food scientist (died 1934)
  • 9 April – Sebastian Ziani de Ferranti, electrical engineer and inventor (died 1930 in Switzerland)
  • 22 April – Phil May, caricaturist (died 1903)
  • 4 May – Marie Booth, third daughter of William and Catherine Booth (died 1937)
  • 10 June – Ninian Comper, architect (died 1960)
  • 18 July – Philip Snowden politician, Chancellor of the Exchequer (died 1937)
  • 14 September – Robert Cecil, 1st Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, politician and diplomat, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (died 1958)
  • 31 October – Cosmo Lang, Archbishop of Canterbury (died 1945)
  • 26 November – Edward Higgins, 3rd General of The Salvation Army (died 1947)

Deaths[]

  • 29 January
    • Lucy Aikin, writer (born 1781)
    • Julia Maitland, writer on India and for children (born 1808)
  • 2 February – Adelaide Anne Procter, poet (born 1825)
  • 10 February – William Henry Hunt, watercolour painter (born 1790)
  • 14 February – William Dyce, painter (born 1806)
  • 11 March – Richard Roberts, mechanical engineer (born 1789)
  • 16 March – Robert Smith Surtees, novelist and sporting writer (born 1805)
  • 21 March – Luke Howard, meteorologist and manufacturing chemist (born 1772)
  • 5 April – Alaric Alexander Watts, poet and journalist (born 1797)
  • 16 April – George Webster, architect (born 1797)
  • 26 April – John Shuttleworth, industrialist and political campaigner (born 1786)
  • 5 May – Elizabeth Andrew Warren, Cornish botanist, marine algolologist (born 1786)
  • 20 May – John Clare, Northamptonshire peasant poet (born 1793)
  • 17 June – William Cureton, Orientalist (born 1808)
  • 6 August – Catherine Sinclair, Scottish novelist and children's writer (born 1800)
  • 15 September – John Hanning Speke, explorer (born 1827)
  • 17 September – Walter Savage Landor, writer and poet (born 1775)
  • 1 October – Ignatius Spencer, priest (born 1799)
  • 25 November – David Roberts, painter (born 1796)
  • 4 December – John Fowler, agricultural engineer (born 1826)
  • 8 December – George Boole, mathematician and philosopher (born 1815)
  • 23 December – James Bronterre O'Brien, Chartist leader, reformer and journalist (born 1804)
  • 24 December – Princess Caraboo, impostor (born 1791)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
  2. ^ a b Palmer, Alan; Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 284–285. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
  3. ^ Previously Schneider, Hannay & Co.
  4. ^ Newlands, John A. R. (20 August 1864). "On Relations Among the Equivalents". Chemical News. 10: 94–95. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
  5. ^ By Order in Council 9 July. "The Birth of Todays Royal Navy's Ensign". Historical Flags of Our Ancestors. NAVA. Retrieved 10 August 2013.
  6. ^ "North Devon and West of England Golf Club". Exeter & Plymouth Gazette. 18 November 1864. p. 7.
  7. ^ Maxwell, J. Clerk (1865). "A dynamical theory of the electromagnetic field" (PDF). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 155: 459–512. doi:10.1098/rstl.1865.0008. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
  8. ^ "History". Oriel Chambers. Retrieved 27 July 2009.
  9. ^ Leavis, Q. D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (2nd ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.
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