1882 in the United Kingdom explained
Events from the year 1882 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
Events
- 12 January – Holborn Viaduct power station in the City of London, the world's first coal-fired public electricity generating station, begins operation, supplying street lighting and some premises.[1]
- 25 January – London Chamber of Commerce founded.[2]
- 16 February – Trimdon Grange colliery disaster: an underground explosion in the Durham Coalfield kills 69.[3]
- 2 March – Roderick Maclean fails in an attempt to assassinate Queen Victoria outside Windsor railway station,[4] the last attempt on her life.
- 24 March – Jumbo the elephant departs from Britain having been sold by London Zoo to the American showman P. T. Barnum for $10,000.
- 25 March – Old Etonians F.C. beat Blackburn Rovers 1–0 in the FA Cup Final at The Oval, the last time an amateur team will win.[5]
- May – Burnley F.C. changes codes from Rugby union to Association football.
- 2 May – 'Kilmainham Treaty', an agreement between the British government and the gaoled Irish nationalist leader Charles Stewart Parnell extending the terms of the Land Law (Ireland) Act 1881 to abate tenant rent arrears, is announced.[6]
- 6 May – Phoenix Park Murders in Ireland: Lord Frederick Cavendish, the newly appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, and Thomas Henry Burke, his Permanent Undersecretary, are fatally stabbed in Phoenix Park, Dublin, by members of the "Irish National Invincibles" (militant Irish republicans).[4]
- 18 May – the fourth Eddystone Lighthouse is illuminated for the first time; its designer, James Douglass, is knighted the following month.[7]
- 3 July – Interments (felo de se) Act 1882 permits the normal burial of a felo de se suicide.
- 11 - 13 July – Anglo-Egyptian War: The British Mediterranean Fleet carries out the Bombardment of Alexandria, its forces capturing the city of Alexandria in Egypt and securing the Suez Canal.[8]
- 15 August – Married Women's Property Act enables wives to buy, own and sell property and to keep their own earnings, with effect from 1883.
- 29 August – the England cricket team is beaten for the first time in a home Test cricket match by Australia at The Oval (by 7 runs). The 2 September issue of The Sporting Times first refers to "The Ashes".
- 5 September – Tottenham Hotspur F.C. founded as Hotspur F.C. by London schoolboys.[9]
- 13 September – Anglo-Egyptian War: British troops occupy Cairo and Egypt becomes British protectorate.[8]
- 25 September – Young Men's Christian Institute, the former Royal Polytechnic Institute (Britain's first polytechnic) and a predecessor of the University of Westminster, opens in new premises in Regent Street, London, provided by Quintin Hogg.[2]
- 28 October – six Benedictine monks return from France to commence the rebuilding of Buckfast Abbey in Devon, largely destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
- 25 November – the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera Iolanthe is first produced, at the Savoy Theatre in London.[4]
- 4 December – Queen Victoria opens the Royal Courts of Justice in London.[10]
- 28 December – Newlands Mill chimney in Bradford collapses causing the loss of 54 lives, mostly young girls and boys.[11] [12]
Undated
Publications
Births
- 5 January – Dorothy Levitt, born Elizabeth Levi, racing driver (died 1922)
- 18 January – A. A. Milne, author (died 1956)
- 25 January – Virginia Woolf, novelist (suicide 1941)
- 2 February – James Joyce, Irish-born novelist (died 1941 in Switzerland)
- 22 February – Eric Gill, sculptor and writer (died 1940)
- 5 March – Dora Marsden, radical feminist and modernist literary editor (died 1960)
- 18 April – Leopold Stokowski, orchestral conductor (died 1977)
- 24 April – Hugh Dowding, Scottish-born Air Chief Marshal (died 1970)
- 5 May – Sylvia Pankhurst, suffragette (died 1960)
- 30 May – Wyndham Halswelle, runner (died 1915)
- 10 June – Nevile Henderson, diplomat (died 1942)
- 8 July – John Anderson, civil servant and politician (died 1958)
- 17 July – James Somerville, admiral (died 1949)
- 27 July
- 14 August – Gisela Richter, art historian (died 1972)
- 11 September – James Chuter Ede, Labour politician, Home Secretary (died 1965)
- 16 September – Robert Hichens, RMS Titanic quartermaster (died 1940)
- 19 September – Christopher Stone, first disc jockey in the U.K. (died 1965)
- 29 September – Lilias Armstrong, phonetician (died 1937)
- 14 October – Charlie Parker, cricketer (died 1959)
- 24 October – Sybil Thorndike, stage actress (died 1976)
- 25 October – Florence Easton, operatic soprano (died 1955)
- 3 November – G. H. Elliott, blackface music hall singer (died 1962)
- 21 November – Harold Lowe, Welsh 5th Officer of RMS Titanic (died 1944)
- 9 December – Percy C. Mather, Protestant missionary (died 1933 in China)
- 12 December – Edward Maufe, architect (died 1974)
- 16 December – Jack Hobbs, cricketer (died 1963)
- 27 December – Noel Laurence, admiral (died 1970)
- 28 December – Arthur Stanley Eddington, astrophysicist (died 1944)
Deaths
- 20 January – John Linnell, painter (born 1792)
- 27 January – Sir Robert Christison, Scottish physician and toxicologist (born 1797)
- 8 March – William Bulkeley Hughes, Welsh politician (born 1797)
- 9 April – Dante Gabriel Rossetti, poet and painter (born 1828)
- 17 April – George Jennings, sanitary engineer (born 1801)
- 18 April – Sir Henry Cole, civil servant and inventor (born 1808)
- 19 April – Charles Darwin, naturalist (born 1809)
- 23 April – William Brighty Rands, writer, author of nursery rhymes (born 1823)
- 29 April – John Nelson Darby, evangelist (born 1800)
- 27 May – Edwin Abbott, educator (born 1808)
- 3 June – James Thomson ("B.V."), Scottish-born poet (born 1834)
- 8 June – John Scott Russell, Scottish-born shipbuilder (born 1808)
- 3 July – Benjamin Nottingham Webster, actor-manager and dramatist (born 1797)
- 13 August – William Stanley Jevons, economist (born 1835)
- 16 August – Sir Woodbine Parish, diplomat (born 1796)
- 24 August – John Dillwyn Llewelyn, botanist and photographer (born 1810)
- 16 September – Edward Bouverie Pusey, theologian (born 1800)
- 6 October – John Cobbold, brewer, railway developer and politician (born 1797)
- 3 December – Archibald Campbell Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury (born 1811)
- 6 December – Anthony Trollope, novelist and postal service official (born 1815)
- 18 December – Francis Close, Anglican priest, rector of Cheltenham and Dean of Carlisle (born 1797)
Notes and References
- The electricity of Holborn. New Scientist. London. Jack. Harris. 1982-01-14.
- Book: Palmer, Alan. Palmer . Veronica. 1992. The Chronology of British History. Century Ltd. London. 306–307. 0-7126-5616-2.
- .
- Book: Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 0-14-102715-0. 2006.
- Book: Slee, Christopher. The Guinness Book of Lasts. Enfield. Guinness Publishing. 1994. 0-85112-783-5.
- Book: Murphy . James H. . Abject Loyalty: Nationalism and Monarchy in Ireland During the Reign of Queen Victoria . 2001 . CUA Press . 978-0-8132-1076-6 . 312 . en.
- Book: Majdalany, Fred. The Red Rocks of Eddystone. London. Longmans. 1959. 200.
- Web site: British Occupation of Egypt 1882 timeline . 3 May 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070930201008/http://onwar.com/aced/chrono/c1800s/yr80/fegypt1882b.htm . 30 September 2007 . dead.
- Web site: Bobby Buckle - born 150 years ago today . Tottenham Hotspur . 7 April 2020 . en.
- Web site: Royal Courts of Justice visitors guide . 2007-12-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071112121611/http://www.hmcourts-service.gov.uk/infoabout/rcj/history.htm . 12 November 2007 . dead .
- Web site: Newlands Mill Disaster 1882. All About Bradford. 2012-10-31.
- Alan. McEwen. Death and Destruction: the collapse of Newlands Mill chimney. Vintage Spirit. 124. 60–3. November 2012.
- Web site: Mundella, Anthony John. Dictionary of National Biography. 1901. Wikisource. 2020-08-02.
- Web site: Clearances – Battle of the Braes. Highland Clearances. 2010-10-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20080515073942/http://www.highlandclearances.info/clearances/clearances_battleofthebrae.htm. 15 May 2008. dead.
- Web site: The Battle of the Braes – 1882. Scotland's History. BBC. 2010-10-10.
- Web site: The Newlyn School (c.1880–c.1940). Penlee House Gallery & Museum. Penzance. 2011-03-10. 13 March 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110313202249/http://www.penleehouse.org.uk/newlyn-school.html. dead.