1841 in the United Kingdom explained
Events from the year 1841 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
Events
- 4 January – City of Dublin Steam Packet Company is wrecked on the Western Rocks, Isles of Scilly, with the loss of 61 of the 65 on board;[1] at least 20 other ships run aground round the British Isles today.
- 20 January – Convention of Chuenpi agreed between Charles Elliot and Qishan of the Qing dynasty.
- 26 January – the United Kingdom formally occupies Hong Kong.
- 27 January – the active volcano Mount Erebus in Antarctica is discovered and named by James Clark Ross.[2]
- 28 January – Ross discovers the "Victoria Barrier", later known as the Ross Ice Shelf.
- February – H. Fox Talbot obtains a patent for the calotype process in photography.[3]
- 10 February – Penny Red postage stamp replaces the Penny Black.[4]
- 20 February – the Governor Fenner, carrying emigrants to America, sinks off Holyhead with the loss of 123 lives.
- 1 March – opening throughout of the Manchester and Leeds Railway, the first to cross the Pennines.[5]
- 4 March – first performance of Dion Boucicault's comedy London Assurance, presented by Charles Mathews at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden.
- March – Richard Beard opens England's first commercial photographic studio in London, producing daguerreotype portraits.[6]
- by April – Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew first opens to the public and William Hooker appointed director.
- 3 May
- 6 June (Sunday)
- 7 June – Lord Melbourne loses a vote of no confidence against his government.
- 21 June – St. Chad's Cathedral, Birmingham, dedicated as a Roman Catholic church.[9]
- 29 June–22 July – general election – Sir Robert Peel's Conservatives take control of the House of Commons.
- 30 June – Great Western Railway completed throughout between London and Bristol.[10]
- 5 July – Thomas Cook arranges his first excursion, taking 570 temperance campaigners on the Midland Counties Railway from Leicester to a rally in Loughborough.[7] [11]
- 17 July – first edition of the humorous magazine Punch published.[12]
- 26 July – the proprietors of The Skerries Lighthouse off Anglesey, the last privately owned light in the British Isles, are awarded £444,984 in compensation for its sale to Trinity House.[13]
- 28 August – Melbourne resigns as Prime Minister; replaced by Robert Peel.[14]
- 2 September – reconsecration of Leeds Parish Church after reconstruction.[15]
- 21 September – the London and Brighton Railway is opened throughout.[16]
- 24 September – United Kingdom annexes Sarawak from Brunei; James Brooke is appointed rajah.
- 10 October – First Opium War: Battle of Chinhai – British capture a Chinese garrison.
- 13 October – First Opium War: British occupy Ningbo.
- 27 October – Anglican clergyman Richard Sibthorp becomes the first Tractarian to be received into the Roman Catholic Church, by Nicholas Wiseman at St Mary's College, Oscott (he reconverts two years later).
- 30 October – a fire at the Tower of London destroys its Grand Armoury and causes a quarter of a million pounds worth of damage.[17]
- 13 November – surgeon James Braid attends his first demonstration of animal magnetism, which leads to his study of the subject he eventually calls hypnotism.
- 23 December – First Anglo-Afghan War: at a meeting with the Afghan general Akbar Khan, the diplomat Sir William Hay Macnaghten is shot dead at close quarters.
Undated
Ongoing events
Publications
Births
Deaths
- 2 February – Olinthus Gregory, mathematician (born 1774)
- 12 February – Astley Cooper, surgeon and anatomist (born 1768)
- 17 February – Joseph Chitty, lawyer and legal writer (born 1775)
- 22 April – Edward Draper, army officer and colonial administrator (born 1776)
- 20 May – Joseph Blanco White, theologian (born 1775)
- 1 June – Sir David Wilkie, Scottish painter (born 1785)
- 3 July – Rosemond Mountain, actress and singer (born 1780s?)
- 24 August – Theodore Hook, author (born 1788)
- 1 December – George Birkbeck, doctor, academic and philanthropist (born 1776)
- 23 December – Sir William Hay Macnaghten, Anglo-Indian diplomat (born 1793)
Notes and References
- Book: Larn, Richard. Richard Larn
. Richard Larn. Bridget. Wreck & Rescue round the Cornish coast. Tor Mark Press. Redruth. 978-0-85025-406-8. 48.
- Ross, Voyage to the Southern Seas, 1, pp. 216–8.
- Book: The Hutchinson Factfinder. Helicon. 1999. 1-85986-000-1.
- Book: Blake, Richard. The Book of Postal Dates, 1635–1985. Caterham. Marden. 10.
- Book: Marshall, John. John Marshall (railway historian). The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway, vol. 1. 1969. David & Charles. Newton Abbot. 0-7153-4352-1.
- Heathcote, B. V.. Heathcote, P. F.. amp. Richard Beard: an ingenious and enterprising patentee. History of Photography. 3. 1979. 313–329. 4. 10.1080/03087298.1979.10441125.
- Book: Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 0-14-102715-0. 2006.
- Web site: Valerie. Bonham. Hughes, Marian Rebecca (1817–1912). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 2004. 2010-11-26.
- Book: Stanton, Phoebe. Pugin. 557–66.
- Book: Body, Geoffrey. Western Handbook – a digest of GWR and WR data. 1985. British Rail (Western). Weston-super-Mare. 0-905466-70-5.
- Book: Derby Railway History Research Group. The Midland Counties Railway. 1989. Railway and Canal Historical Society. Gwernymynydd. 0-901461-11-3.
- Book: Spielmann, Marion Harry. The History of "Punch". 1895. 27.
- Web site: Trefor . Thorpe . Between a rock and a wet place . . 2011-02-23 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050302103925/http://www.cadw.wales.gov.uk/upload/resourcepool/Skerries6067.htm . 2 March 2005 .
- Book: Palmer, Alan. Palmer . Veronica. 1992. The Chronology of British History. Century Ltd. London. 264–266. 0-7126-5616-2.
- Web site: History . Leeds Parish Church . 2011-05-04 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110430075125/https://www.leedsparishchurch.org.uk/About-Us/History/ . 30 April 2011 .
- Book: Turner, J. T. Howard. The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway: 1, Origins and Formation. 1977. Batsford. London. 0-7134-0275-X.
- Book: Weinreb, Ben. The London Encyclopaedia. Hibbert, Christopher. Macmillan. 1995. 0-333-57688-8. 287.
- Book: Delany, Ruth. A celebration of 250 years of Ireland's Inland Waterways. Belfast. Appletree Press. 1986. 0-86281-200-3.
- Book: Leavis, Q. D.. Fiction and the Reading Public. 2nd. London. Chatto & Windus. 1965.
- Web site: The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo-Jewry, 1841–1991. Cambridge University Press.
- Web site: Edward VII . Westminster Abbey . 7 October 2022 . en.