All Events

A journalist in the Terre Haute Express gives a piece of advice, 'Go west, young man', that chimes perfectly with the US pioneer spirit

The president of France, Louis Napoleon, stages a coup d'état, rounding up his political opponents during a long December night

Queen Victoria and Prince Albert are entered in the ten-yearly census, and were staying on the night in question in Buckingham Palace

After the establishment of the Royal Botanical Gardens, a library and herbarium is opened at Hunter’s House on north-west side of Kew Green.

Pugin does not attend the opening of the completed Houses of Parliament, and there is hardly a mention of him

Pugin dies, at home in Ramsgate, and is buried in the chantry of the church he is building next door, St Augustine's

Lord John Russell's Whig administration collapses, and Lord Derby follows him as a Conservative prime minister at the head of a coalition government

The first Metropolis Water Act is passed which forbids the taking of water by the water companies from the tidal Thames and this leads to the establishment of what was to become Hampton Waterworks

France demands that Turkey should end Russia's exclusive control of the Christian Holy Places in the Ottoman empire

Harriet Beecher Stowe publishes a massively successful antislavery novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, that sells 300,000 copies in its first year

The church of St Mary Magdalen in Mortlake, designed in Gothic style by Gilbert Blount, is completed

US entrepreneur Cornelius Vanderbilt conveys passengers across the American continent through Nicaragua by steamship and horse and carriage

The Mortlake brewery, after passing through several hands, is acquired by the Phillips family

Democratic candidate Franklin Pierce wins the US presidential election, defeating his Whig opponent Winfield Scott

Louis Napoleon, asking the French people to approve his elevation to emperor as Napoleon III, receives a resounding yes in the plebiscite

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