1854 in the United Kingdom
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Events from the year 1854 in the United Kingdom.
Contents |
[edit] Events
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- 21 January - Loss of the RMS Tayleur - 380 drowned, later dubbed "the first Titanic".
- 17 February - The British recognise the independence of the Orange Free State.
- 27 February - Britain sends Russia an ultimatum to withdraw from two Ottoman provinces it had conquered, Moldavia and Wallachia.
- 11 March - Royal Navy fleet sails from Britain under Vice Admiral Sir Charles Napier.
- 27 March - United Kingdom declares war on Russia — Crimean War begins.
- 1 April - Hard Times begins serialisation in Charles Dickens magazine, Household Words.
- 21 June - In the battle at Bomarsund in Åland, Royal Navy mate Charles D. Lucas throws a live Russian artillery shell overboard by hand before it explodes — the incident is the first that will be retroactively awarded the Victoria Cross in 1857.
- 22 July - Discovery of the asteroid 30 Urania by John Russell Hind.
- 16 August - Russian troops in the island of Bomarsund in Åland surrender to French-British troops.
- 20 September - Crimean War: At the Alma, the French-British alliance wins the first battle of the war.
- 6 October - The great fire of Newcastle and Gateshead is ignited by a spectacular explosion.
- 21 October - Florence Nightingale leaves for Crimea with 38 other nurses.
- 25 October - Crimean War: The Battle of Balaclava occurs, overall a victory for the allies, but it included the disastrous cavalry Charge of the Light Brigade, from which only 200 of 700 men survive.
- 5 November - Crimean War: Russians defeated at the Battle of Inkerman.
[edit] Unknown dates
- An epidemic of cholera in London kills 10,000. Dr John Snow traces the source of one outbreak (that killed 500) to a single water pump, validating his theory that cholera is water-borne, and forming the starting point for epidemiology.
- George Boole publishes his influential work on logic, The Laws of Thought.
- George Airy calculates the mean density of the Earth by measuring the gravity in a coal mine in South Shields.
[edit] Births
- 4 March - Napier Shaw, meteorologist (d. 1945)
- 13 June - Charles Algernon Parsons, inventor (d. 1931)
- 16 October - Oscar Wilde, writer (d. 1900)
- 24 December - Thomas Stevens, cyclist (d. 1935)
[edit] Deaths
- 8 January - William Carr Beresford, 1st Viscount Beresford, general and politician (b. 1768)
- 17 February - John Martin, painter (b. 1789)
- 6 March - Charles William Vane, 3rd Marquess of Londonderry, soldier, politician and nobleman (b. 1778)
- 13 March - Thomas Noon Talfourd, jurist (b. 1795)
- 3 April - John Wilson, writer (b. 1785)
- 15 April - Arthur Aikin, chemist and mineralogist (b. 1773)
- 29 April - Henry Paget, 1st Marquess of Anglesey, general (b. 1768)
- William Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst, Governor-General of India (b. 1773)