1869 in Wales
This article includes a list of general references, but it remains largely unverified because it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (September 2020) |
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This article is about the particular significance of the year 1869 to Wales and its people.
Incumbent[]
- Monarch - Victoria
Events[]
- January
- Henry Austin Bruce becomes MP for Renfrewshire.
- Timothy Richards Lewis goes to India to study cholera.
- 1 May – The Western Mail is published for the first time.[1]
- 19 May – Two days after John Young, the English manager of the Leeswood Green colliery, announces a pay cut, he is attacked by some of his workers.
- 2 June – Seven men are tried at Mold for attacking John Young. A riot breaks out as those convicted are being transported to the railway station; soldiers fire on the crowd, killing four people.[2]
- 10 June
- 53 men and boys are killed in the second underground explosion within two years at Ferndale Colliery in the Rhondda.
- Three people are killed in a train derailment at Maesycwmmer in Glamorgan.
- August – Anti-Irish riots at Pontlottyn in the Rhymney Valley result in one death.
- 1 September – The Dyserth branch line is opened for goods traffic.
- 30 October – The first edition of the Welsh-language periodical Y Goleuad is published.
- 24 December – In the Whoniverse, Charles Dickens gives a free performance at the Taliesin Lodge theatre in Cardiff.
- Landore steelworks at Swansea established by Carl Wilhelm Siemens.[3]
- John Hughes of Merthyr Tydfil buys land near the Sea of Azov, where he develops an ironworks and founds the city of Yuzovka (later Donetsk).
- Joseph Leycester Lyne (Father Ignatius of Jesus) acquires land at Capel-y-ffin and begins construction of an Anglican Benedictine community, Llanthony Abbey
- Construction of the fort at St Catherine's Island, off Tenby.
- Prehistoric burial remains are discovered at Parc le Breos on the Gower Peninsula.
- is evicted from his farm for voting Tory.
Arts and literature[]
Awards[]
- The first official National Eisteddfod of Wales takes place at Holywell.
New books[]
- – History of Monmouthshire
- – Pryddest Goffa i Thomas Aubrey
- Jane Hughes – Galargan am y diweddar Barch. Henry Rees, Liverpool
- David Watkin Jones (Dafydd Morgannwg) – Yr Ysgol Farddol
- Nathaniel Jones (Cynhafal) – Elias y Thesbiad
- John Petherick – Travels in Central Africa and Explorations of the Western Nile Tributaries
- William Rowlands – Llyfryddiaeth y Cymry (Bibliography of the Welsh) (posthumous; ed. Daniel Silvan Evans)
- Jane Williams (Ysgafell) – A History of Wales derived from Authentic Sources
- Robert Williams (Trebor Mai) – Y Geninen
Music[]
- – Hymnau Hen a Diweddar (collection of hymns)
Sport[]
- Football – Ruabon footballers set up a club at Plas Madoc.
- Mountaineering – Emmeline Lewis Lloyd attempts an ascent of the Matterhorn.
Births[]
- 11 January – Ralph Sweet-Escott, English born, Wales rugby international (died 1907)
- 9 April – John Hugh Edwards, politician (died 1945)
- 19 May – John Henry Williams, Welsh politician (died 1936)
- 20 May – Robert Griffith Berry, minister and writer (died 1945)
- 30 May – , theologian (died 1926)
- 12 August – Fred Parfitt, Wales international rugby player (died 1953)
- 6 September – Walford Davies, composer (died 1944)
- 24 September – Maud Cunnington, archaeologist (died 1951)
- 29 October – Bill Morris, Wales international rugby player (died 1946)
- 9 November – , dialectologist (died 1941)
- 12 November – , geologist and archaeologist (died 1957)
- 15 November – Percy Bennett, Wales international rugby player (died 1936)
- 20 November – Herbert Tudor Buckland, architect working in Birmingham (died 1951)
- 26 November – Princess Maud of Wales, queen consort of Norway (died 1938)
Deaths[]
- 18 February – , Calvinistic Methodist minister, 71
- 23 March – William Williams (Caledfryn), poet, 68
- 31 March – David Rees (Y Cynhyrfwr), Nonconformist leader and author, 67
- 16 April – James Davies (Iago ap Dewi), poet, 68
- 12 May – (Cuhelyn), journalist and poet, 39
- 1 July – David Jones, banker and politician, 58
- 14 July – Lloyd Kenyon, 3rd Baron Kenyon, 64
- October – John Jones (Talhaiarn), poet, 59
- 9 November – Harriet Windsor-Clive, 13th Baroness Windsor, philanthropist,[4]
- 15 December – David Williams, politician, 70
- 17 December – Sarah Jacob, "the fasting girl", 12
References[]
- ^ Wales Online, "First ever Western Mail edition: May 1, 1869". Accessed 12 December 2013
- ^ "The Riot in Wales". The Times (26455). London. 4 June 1869. p. 12.
- ^ The Welsh Academy Encyclopedia of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. 2008.
- ^ "Death of the Baroness Windsor", The Cardiff and Merthyr Guardian, 13 November 1869, p.5
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