Mitchell Families Online

GENEALOGY OF MY MITCHELL FAMILIES - AND A LOT MORE BESIDES!

Isaac Burbridge

Isaac Burbridge

Male 1798 - 1881  (83 years)Deceased

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Timeline



 
 



 




   Date  Event(s)
1783 
1797 
  • 4 Mar 1797—3 Mar 1801: John Adams, 2nd President of the United States
    John Adams
    John Adams
1798 
  • 1798: First planned human experiment with vaccination, to test theories of Edward Jenner
  • 9 Jan 1798: Franco-American War
  • Feb 1798: The Irish Rebellion; 100,000 peasants revolt; approximately 25,000 die
  • 1 Aug 1798: Battle of the Nile (won by Nelson)
1799 
  • 1799: Foundation of Royal Military College Sandhurst by the Duke of York
  • 1799: Foundation of the Royal Institution of Great Britain
  • 9 Jan 1799: Pitt brings in 10% income tax, as a wartime financial measure
  • 12 Jul 1799: 'Combination Laws' in Britain against political associations and combinations
  • 15 Jul 1799: "Rosetta Stone" discovered in Egypt, made possible the deciphering (in 1822) of Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics
1800 
  • 1800: Electric light first produced by Sir Humphrey Davy
  • 1800: Use of high pressure steam pioneered by Richard Trevithick (1771-1833)
  • 1800: Royal College of Surgeons founded
  • 1800: Herschel discovers infra-red light
  • 1800: Volta makes first electrical battery
  • 2 Jul 1800: Parliamentary union of Great Britain and Ireland
1801 
  • 1801: Grand Union Canal opens in England
  • 1801: Elgin Marbles brought from Athens to London
  • 1 Jan 1801: Union Jack becomes the official British flag
  • 4 Mar 1801—3 Mar 1809: Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States
    Thomas Jefferson
    Thomas Jefferson
  • 10 Mar 1801: First census puts the population of England and Wales at 9,168,000. Population of Britain nearly 11 million (75% rural)
  • 17 Mar 1801—10 May 1804: Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    Viscount Sidmouth
    Viscount Sidmouth
  • 1 Apr 1801: First Barbary War
  • 24 Dec 1801: Richard Trevithick built the first self-propelled passenger carrying road loco
1802 
  • 25 Mar 1802: Treaty of Amiens signed by Britain, France, Spain, and the Netherlands
1803 
  • 1803: Poaching made a Capital offence in England if capture resisted
  • 1803: Richard Trevithick built another steam carriage and ran it in London as the first self-propelled vehicle in the capital and the first London bus
  • 1803: Semaphore signalling perfected by Admiral Popham
  • 30 Apr 1803: Louisiana Purchase: Napoleon sells French possessions in America to United States
  • 12 May 1803: Peace of Amiens ends
  • 23 Jul 1803: First public railway opens (Surrey Iron Railway, 9 miles from Wandsworth to Croydon, horse-drawn)
1804 
  • 1804: Matthew Flinders recommends that the newly discovered country, New Holland, be renamed "Australia"
  • 21 Feb 1804: Richard Trevithick runs his railway engine on the Penydarren Railway (9.5 miles from Pen-y-Darren to Abercynon in South Wales)
  • 3 Mar 1804: John Wedgwood (eldest son of the potter Josiah Wedgwood) founds The Royal Horticultural Society
  • 10 May 1804—23 Jan 1806: William Pitt 'The Younger', UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    William Pitt the Younger
    William Pitt the Younger
  • 2 Dec 1804: Napoleon declares himself Emperor of the French
  • 12 Dec 1804: Spain declares war on Britain
10 1805 
  • 1805: London docks opened
  • 21 Oct 1805: Admiral Nelson's victory at Trafalgar
  • 2 Dec 1805: Battle of Austerlitz; Napoleon defeats Austrians and Russians
11 1806 
  • 1806: Dartmoor Prison opened (built by French prisoners)
  • 9 Jan 1806: Nelson buried in St Paul's cathedral, London
  • 11 Feb 1806—31 Mar 1807: William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville
    William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville
12 1807 
  • 25 Mar 1807: Parliament passes Act prohibiting slavery and the importation of slaves from 1808
  • 31 Mar 1807—4 Oct 1809: William Bentinck, Duke of Portland, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    William Bentinck, Duke of Portland
    William Bentinck, Duke of Portland
13 1808 
  • 1808: Gas lighting in London streets
  • 13 Jul 1808: 'Hot Wednesday'
  • 20 Dec 1808: Beethoven premieres his Fifth Symphony, Sixth Symphony, Fourth Piano Concerto and Choral Fantasy together in Vienna
14 1809 
  • 12 Feb 1809: Birth of Charles Darwin
  • 4 Mar 1809—3 Mar 1817: James Madison, 4th President of the United States
    James Madison
    James Madison
  • 18 Sep 1809: Royal Opera House opens in London
  • 4 Oct 1809—11 May 1812: Spencer Perceval, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    Spencer Perceval
    Spencer Perceval
15 1810 
  • 1810: John McAdam begins road construction in England, giving his name to the process of road metalling
16 1811 
  • 5 Feb 1811: Prince of Wales (future George IV) made Regent after George III deemed insane
17 1812 
  • 11 May 1812: Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval, assassinated
  • 8 Jun 1812—9 Apr 1827: Robert Banks Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    Robert Banks Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool
    Robert Banks Jenkinson, Earl of Liverpool
  • 12 Jun 1812: War of 1812
  • 18 Jun 1812: Start of American "War of 1812" (to 1814) against England and Canada
  • Oct 1812: Napoleon retreats from Moscow with catastrophic losses
18 1813 
  • 1813: Ireland: First recorded "12th of July" sectarian riots in Belfast
  • 1813: Jane Austen wrote "Pride and Prejudice"
19 1814 
  • 1 Jan 1814: Invasion of France by Allies
  • 6 Apr 1814: Napoleon abdicates and is exiled to Elba
  • 13 Aug 1814: Convention of London signed, a treaty between the UK and the Dutch
  • 24 Aug 1814: The British burn the White House
  • 29 Nov 1814: "The Times" first printed by a 'mechanical apparatus' (at 1,100 sheets per hour)
  • 24 Dec 1814: Treaty of Ghent signed ending the 1812 war between Britain and the US
20 1815 
  • 1815: Trial by Jury established in Scotland
  • 1815: Davy develops the safety lamp for miners
  • 3 Mar 1815: Second Barbary War
  • 18 Jun 1815: The Battle of Waterloo: Napoleon defeated and exiled to St. Helena
21 1816 
  • 1816: Income tax abolished
  • 1816: For the first time British silver coins were produced with an intrinsic value substantially below their face value
  • 1816: Climate: the 'year without a summer'
  • 1816: Large scale emigration to North America
  • 1816: Trans-Atlantic packet service begins
22 1817 
  • 1817: March of the Manchester Blanketeers; Habeas Corpus suspended
  • 1817: Constable painted "Flatford Mill"
  • 4 Mar 1817—3 Mar 1825: James Monroe, 5th President of the United States
    James Monroe
    James Monroe
23 1818 
  • 1818: Manchester cotton spinners' strike
  • 20 Oct 1818: 'Convention of 1818' signed between the United States and the United Kingdom which, among other things, settled the US-Canada border on the 49th parallel for most of its length
24 1819 
  • 1819: Primitive bicycle, the Dandy Horse, becomes popular
  • 1819: Britain returns to gold standard
  • 1819: Singapore founded by Sir Stamford Raffles
  • May 1819: SS "Savannah" first steamship to cross Atlantic, reaching Liverpool 20 June 1819 (26 days, mostly under sail)
  • 16 Aug 1819: Peterloo Massacre at Manchester
25 1820 
  • 1820: Cato Street Conspiracy
  • 1820: Abolition of the Spanish Inquisition
  • 29 Jan 1820: Accession of George IV, previously Prince Regent
  • 1 Aug 1820: Regent's Canal in London opens
  • 17 Aug 1820: Trial of Queen Caroline to prove her infidelities so George IV can divorce her
26 1821 
  • 1821: Faraday publishes "Principles of electro-magnetic rotation"
  • 1821: Constable paints "The Hay Wain"
  • 5 May 1821: Napoleon Bonaparte dies on St Helena
27 1822 
  • 14 Jun 1822: Charles Babbage proposes a difference engine in a paper to the Royal Astronomical Society
28 1823 
  • 1823: New laws concerning marriage by licence
  • 1823: Peel begins penal reforms
  • 1823: Rugby Football 'invented' at Rugby School
  • 1823: Rubberised waterproof material produced by MacIntosh
  • 2 Dec 1823: US President James Monroe delivers a speech establishing American neutrality in future European conflicts (the 'Monroe Doctrine')
29 1824 
  • 1824: RSPCA established
  • 1824: Portland cement patented
  • 4 Mar 1824: Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) founded (called the "National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck" until 1854)
  • 10 May 1824: National Gallery in London opens to the public
30 1825 
  • 1825: Census Quebec
    Census is taken over Lower Canada (Quebec)
  • 4 Mar 1825—3 Mar 1829: John Quincy Adams, 6th President of the United States
    John Quincy Adams
    John Quincy Adams
  • 27 Sep 1825: Stockton to Darlington Railway opens
  • 3 Dec 1825: Van Diemen's Land
    Van Diemen's Land colony is formed
31 1826 
  • 1826: Netherlands
    Malaria is among the 193 333 component Friesian population more than 4,000 fatalities
32 1827 
  • 1827: Ohm's Law published
  • 15 Mar 1827: Canada Education
    University of Toronto is chartered
  • 10 Apr 1827—8 Aug 1827: George Canning, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    George Canning
    George Canning
  • 31 Aug 1827—21 Jan 1828: Frederick Robinson, Viscount Goderich, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    Frederick Robinson, Viscount Goderich
    Frederick Robinson, Viscount Goderich
33 1828 
  • 1828: Census Australia
    The first Australian Census is taken
  • 22 Jan 1828—16 Nov 1830: Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
    Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
  • 25 Oct 1828: St Katharine Docks in London opened (designed by Thomas Telford)
34 1829 
  • 1829: London Metropolitan Police Force formed, nicknamed "Bobbies" after Sir Robert Peel
  • 1829: Louis Braille invents his sytem of finger-reading for the blind
  • 1829: Australia British
    The continent of Australia is claimed as a British territory
  • 4 Mar 1829—3 Mar 1837: Andrew Jackson, 7th President of the United States
    Andrew Jackson
    Andrew Jackson
  • 2 May 1829: Australia
    Swan River colony is formed
  • 10 Jun 1829: First Oxford/Cambridge Boat Race
  • 6 Oct 1829: George Stephenson's Rocket wins the Rainhill trials (it was the only one to complete the trial!)
35 1830 
  • 1830: Uprisings and agitation across Europe: the Netherlands are split into Holland and Belgium
  • 1830: Origional Australians
    An attempt to force Aborigional people onto the Tasmanian peninsula is made
  • Jul 1830: Revolution in France, fall of Charles X and the Bourbons
  • 15 Sep 1830: George Stephenson's Liverpool & Manchester Railway opened by the Duke of Wellington
  • 22 Nov 1830—9 Nov 1834: Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey
    Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey
36 1831 
  • 1831: A list of all parish registers dating prior to 1813 compiled
  • 1 Jun 1831: James Clark Ross discovers the North Magnetic Pole
  • 1 Aug 1831: 'New' London Bridge opens (replaced 1973)
37 1832 
  • 1832: Electoral Registers introduced
  • 1832: Electric telegraph invented by Morse
  • 6 Feb 1832: Australia Swan River
    Swan River colony is renamed Western Australia
  • 14 May 1832: Black Hawk War
  • 7 Jun 1832: Reform Bill passed
38 1833 
  • Jan 1833: Britain invades the Falkland Islands
  • 29 Aug 1833: Factory Act forbids employment of children below age of 9
39 1834 
  • 1834: Babbage invents forerunner of the computer
  • 18 Mar 1834: 'Tolpuddle Martyrs' transported (to Australia) for Trades Union activities
  • 1 May 1834: Slavery abolished in British possessions
  • 16 Jul 1834—14 Nov 1834: William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne
    William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne
  • 14 Nov 1834—10 Dec 1834: Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
    Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
  • 10 Dec 1834—8 Apr 1835: Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, UK Prime Minister (Conservative)
    Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet
    Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet
40 1835 
  • 1835: Christmas becomes a national holiday
  • 1835: First railway boom period starts in Britain
  • 1835: Origional Australians
    It is declared by the governor of New South Wales that the Aborigines do not own their own land
  • 18 Apr 1835—30 Aug 1841: William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne
    William Lamb, 2nd Viscount Melbourne
  • 2 Oct 1835: Texas War of Independence
41 1836 
  • 1836: First Potato famine in Ireland
  • 30 Jan 1836: Telford's Menai Straits Bridge opened
  • 25 Feb 1836: Samuel Colt patented the 'revolver'
  • 6 Mar 1836: The Alamo falls to Mexican troops
  • 11 May 1836: Mexican-American War
  • Jul 1836: Inauguration of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris
  • 28 Dec 1836: South Australia
    South Australia colony is founded with its western border set at 132° E
42 1837 
  • 1837: Pitman introduces his shorthand system
  • 1837: P&O Founded
  • 4 Mar 1837—3 Mar 1841: Martin Van Buren, 8th President of the United States
    Martin Van Buren
    Martin Van Buren
  • 20 Jun 1837: William IV dies
  • 1 Jul 1837: Compulsory registration of Births, Marriages & Deaths in England & Wales
  • 13 Jul 1837: Queen Victoria moves into the first Buckingham Palace
  • 20 Jul 1837: Euston Railway station opens
43 1838 
  • 1838: Australia Prussian Settlers
    Prussian settlers arrive in South Australia, first time a large group of non-British settlers arrive
  • 28 Jun 1838: Coronation of Queen Victoria at Westminster Abbey
44 1839 
  • 1839: First Opium War between Britain and China (to 1842)
  • 1839: Scottish blacksmith Kirkpatrick MacMillan refines the primitive bicycle, adding a mechanical crank drive to the rear wheel, thus creating the first true "bicycle" in the modern sense
  • 1839: Charles Goodyear invented vulcanized rubber
  • 1839: Australia Scottish
    First Settlers from Scotland arrive in Port Phillip
  • 1839: Netherlands recognizes the independence of Belgium
45 1840 
  • 1840: Population Act relating to taking of censuses in Britain
  • 1840: Last convicts landed in NSW (some say 1842 or 1849, but these probably landed elsewhere)
  • 1840: William I renounce the government. Willem II becomes King of the Netherlands
  • 10 Jan 1840: Uniform Penny Postage introduced nationally
  • 21 May 1840: New Zealand
    New Zealand becomes part of New South Wales
  • 16 Nov 1840: New Zealand
    New Zealand colony is founded
46 1841 
  • 1841: Thomas Cook starts package tours
  • 1841: New Zealand
    New Zealand is a separate colony and no longer part of New South Wales
  • 10 Feb 1841: Penny Red replaces Penny Black postage stamp
  • 4 Mar 1841—4 Apr 1841: William Henry Harrison, 9th President of the United States
    William Henry Harrison
    William Henry Harrison
  • 4 Apr 1841—3 Mar 1845: John Tyler, 10th President of the United States
    John Tyler
    John Tyler
  • 6 Jun 1841: June 6: First full census in Britain in which all names were recorded (Population 18.5M)
  • 30 Aug 1841—29 Jun 1846: Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet, UK Prime Minister (Conservative)
    Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet
    Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet
47 1842 
  • 1842: Income Tax reintroduced in Britain
  • 30 Mar 1842: Ether used as an anaesthetic for the first time (by Dr Crawford Long in America)
  • 29 Aug 1842: Treaty of Nanking
48 1843 
  • 1843: First Christmas card in England
  • 27 May 1843: The Great Hall of Euston station opened in London
  • 19 Jul 1843: Brunel's 'Great Britain' launched
49 1844 
  • 1844: Netherlands
    very severe winter and the two following years, the potato crop failed . 's Population goes hungry.
  • 6 Jun 1844: YMCA founded in London by Sir George Williams
50 1845 
  • 1845: Tarmac laid for first time (in Nottingham)
  • 4 Mar 1845—3 Mar 1849: James Knox Polk, 11th President of the United States
    James K. Polk
    jJames K. Polk
  • 17 Mar 1845: The rubber band patented by Stephen Perry
51 1846 
  • 17 Feb 1846: North Australia
    North Australia colony is founded covering all of New South Wales north of 26° S
  • 30 Jun 1846—21 Feb 1852: Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell
    Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell
  • 10 Sep 1846: The sewing machine is patented by Elias Howe
52 1847 
  • 1847: US Mormons make Salt Lake City their centre
  • Jan 1847: An anaesthetic used for the first time in England (James Simpson used ether to numb the pain of labour)
  • 15 Apr 1847: North Australia
    North Australia is reincorporated into New South Wales
53 1848 
  • 1848: First commercial production of chewing gum
  • 24 Jan 1848: Gold found at Sutter's Mill, California
  • 11 Jul 1848: Waterloo railway station in London opens
54 1849 
  • 1849: Florin (2 shilling coin) introduced as the first step to decimalisation
  • 1849: Netherlands
    King William II dies of a heart attack . On May 12 , King William III inaugurated
  • 4 Mar 1849—9 Jul 1850: Zachary Taylor, 12th President of the United States
    Zachary Taylor
    Zachary Taylor
55 1850 
  • 9 Jul 1850—3 Mar 1853: Millard Fillmore, 13th President of the United States
    Millard Fillmore
    Millard Fillmore
56 1851 
  • 1851: Gold discovered in Australia
  • 1851: Australia Gold Rush
    Gold is discovered at Summerhill Creek and Ballarat
  • 1 May 1851: Great exhibition of the works of industry of all nations ("Crystal Palace" exhibition) opened in Hyde Park
  • 1 Jul 1851: Australia Victoria
    Victoria colony is founded
57 1852 
58 1853 
  • 1853: Vaccination against smallpox made compulsory in Britain
  • 4 Mar 1853—3 Mar 1857: Franklin Pierce, 14th President of the United States
    Franklin Pierce
    Franklin Pierce
59 1854 
  • 1854: Cigarettes introduced into Britain
  • 27 Mar 1854: Britain declares war on Russia (Crimean War)
  • 25 Oct 1854: Battle of Balaklava in Crimea (charge of the Light Brigade)
60 1855 
  • 1855: Australia Chinese
    Chinese Immigration Act
  • 1855: Australia Vote
    Men over the age of 21 in South Australia gain the right to vote
  • 6 Feb 1855—19 Feb 1858: Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, UK Prime Minister (Tory and Whig)
    Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
    Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
61 1856 
  • 1856: End of Crimean War
  • 29 Jan 1856: Victoria Cross created by Royal Warrant, backdated to 1854 to recognise acts during the Crimean War (first award ceremony 26 June 1857)
62 1857 
  • 1857: Work starts on the laying of the Transatlantic cable
  • 4 Mar 1857—3 Mar 1861: James Buchanan, 15th President of the United States
    James Buchanan
    James Buchanan
63 1858 
  • 1858: 'The great stink'
  • 1858: Royal Opera House opens in Covent Garden, London
  • 20 Feb 1858—11 Jun 1859: Edward Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby, UK Prime Minister (Tory and Whig)
    Edward Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby
    Edward Smith Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby
64 1859 
  • 1859: Peaceful picketing legalised in Britain
  • 25 Apr 1859: Work started on building the Suez canal (opened 17 Nov 1869)
  • 4 May 1859: Brunel's Royal Albert Bridge opened at Saltash giving rail link between Devon and Cornwall
  • 12 Jun 1859—18 Oct 1865: Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
    Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston
  • 24 Nov 1859: Charles Darwin publishes "The Origin of Species"
65 1860 
  • 1860: Slavery
    official abolition of slavery in the Dutch East Indies
  • 29 Aug 1860: First tram service in Europe starts in Birkenhead
66 1861 
  • 4 Mar 1861—15 Apr 1865: Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States
    Abraham Lincoln
    Abraham Lincoln
  • 12 Apr 1861: American Civil War
  • 25 May 1861—14 Apr 1864: American Civil War
67 1862 
  • 1862: Lincoln issues first legal US paper money (Greenbacks)
  • 20 Apr 1862: First pasteurisation test completed by Louis Pasteur and Claude Bernard
68 1863 
  • 1863: Football Association founded (UK)
  • 1863: Opening of state institution for criminally insane at Broadmoor, England
  • 10 Jan 1863: First section of the London Underground Railway opens
69 1864 
  • 1864: A man-powered submarine, "Hunley", sank a Federal steam ship, USS Housatonic, at the entrance to Charleston harbour in 1864
  • 11 Mar 1864: The Great Sheffield Flood
  • 20 Aug 1864: Red Cross established
  • 8 Dec 1864: Clifton Suspension Bridge over the River Avon officially opened
70 1865 
  • 1865: Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836-1917) becomes first woman doctor in England [she later became the first woman mayor in England, in Aldeburgh 1908]
  • 1865: First concrete roads built in Britain
  • 14 Apr 1865: Abraham Lincoln assassinated in Ford's Theatre by John Wilkes Booth
  • 15 Apr 1865—3 Mar 1869: Andrew Johnson, 17th President of the United States
    Andrew Johnson
    Andrew Johnson
  • 5 Jul 1865: William Booth (1829-1912) founds Salvation Army, in London
  • 29 Oct 1865—26 Jun 1866: Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell
    Lord John Russell, 1st Earl Russell
71 1866 
72 1867 
  • 1 Jul 1867: The British North America Act takes effect, creating the Canadian Confederation
73 1868 
74 1869 
  • 1869: Ball bearings, celluloid, margarine, and washing machines, all invented
  • 4 Mar 1869—3 Mar 1877: Ulysses S. Grant, 18th President of the United States
    Ulysses S. Grant
    Ulysses S. Grant
  • 23 Nov 1869: Cutty Sark launched in Dumbarton
75 1870 
  • 1870: GPO takes over the privately-owned Telegraph Companies (nationalised)
  • 1870: Dr Thomas Barnardo opens his first home for destitute children
  • 1870: Water closets come into wide use
  • 1870: Diamonds discovered in Kimberley, South Africa
  • 1870: Smallpox epidemic in the Netherlands. In 1871 the number of deaths rises to 15,787
  • 1870: Netherlands abolished the death penalty
  • 1 Oct 1870: First British postcard
76 1871 
  • 27 Mar 1871: First Rugby Football international, England v Scotland, played in Edinburgh
  • 29 Mar 1871: Opening of Royal Albert Hall, London
  • 29 Jun 1871: Trades Unions legalised in Britain, but picketing made illegal
77 1872 
  • 1872: Licensing hours introduced
  • 1872: Penalties introduced for failing to register births, marriages & deaths (Eng & Wales)
  • 4 Dec 1872: American ship "Mary Celeste" is found abandoned by the British brig "Dei Gratia" in the Atlantic Ocean
78 1873 
  • 1873: Netherlands
    Aceh war . On 8 April, the Dutch colonial army lands on the coast of Sumatra
79 1874 
  • 1874: Factory Act introduces 56-hour week
  • 1874: Netherlands
    Children Act Samuel van Houten. Labour by children under 12 is prohibited.
  • 20 Feb 1874—21 Apr 1880: Benjamin Disraeli, the Earl of Beaconsfield, UK Prime Minister (Conservative)
    Benjamin Disraeli, the Earl of Beaconsfield
    Benjamin Disraeli, the Earl of Beaconsfield
  • 5 Apr 1874: Birkenhead Park opened, said to be the first civic public park in the world
80 1875 
  • 1875: London's main sewage system completed
  • 1875—1882: US Epidemic
    North American smallpox epidemic
  • 1 Jan 1875: Midland Railway abolishes Second Class passenger facilities, leaving First Class and Third Class. Other British railway companies followed during the rest of the year. (Third Class was renamed Second Class in 1956)
81 1876 
  • 1876: Netherlands
    Mata Hari was born in Leeuwarden on August 7, Margaret Gertrude Zelle
  • 14 Feb 1876: Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray each file a patent for the telephone
82 1877 
  • 1877: Edison invents microphone and phonograph
  • 4 Mar 1877—3 Mar 1881: Rutherford Birchard Hayes, 19th President of the United States
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes
83 1878 
  • 1878: Edison & Swan invent electric lamp
  • 1878: Red Flag Act in Britain limits mechanical road vehicles to 4mph
  • 1878: CID established at New Scotland Yard
84 1879 
  • 1879: Netherlands
    Establishment of the 1st political party : the Anti- Revolutionary Party , led by Abraham Kuyper
  • 18 Sep 1879: Blackpool illuminations switched on for first time
85 1880 
  • 1880: Education Act: schooling compulsory for 5-10 year olds
  • 1880: Mosquito found to be the carrier of malaria
  • 23 Apr 1880—9 Jun 1885: William Ewart Gladstone, UK Prime Minister (Liberal)
    William Ewart Gladstone, UK Prime Minister
    William Ewart Gladstone
  • 2 Aug 1880: Greenwich Mean Time adopted throughout UK
86 1881 
  • 1881: Postal Orders introduced
  • 1881: Flogging abolished in Army and Royal Navy
  • 4 Mar 1881—19 Sep 1881: James Abram Garfield, 20th President of the United States
    James Abram Garfield
    James Abram Garfield
  • Sep 1881: Godalming in Surrey became the first town in England to have a public electricity supply installed (but in 1884 it reverted to gas lighting until 1904)
  • 19 Sep 1881—3 Mar 1885: Chester Alan Arthur, 21st President of the United States
    Chester A. Arthur
    Chester Alan Arthur
  • 26 Oct 1881: Gunfight at OK Corral