Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. 1800. 8 January: The first soup kitchens are opened in London. [1] 13 January: The Royal Institution is granted a royal charter. [2] 22 March: The Company of Surgeons is granted a royal charter to become the Royal College of Surgeons in London. [2] 15 May: George III survives 2 assassination attempts in London.

  2. During the 19th century, London grew enormously to become a global city of immense importance. It was the largest city in the world from about 1825, [1] the world's largest port, and the heart of international finance and trade. [2] Railways connecting London to the rest of Britain, as well as the London Underground, were built, as were roads ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Mar 12, 2015 · Horses drive traffic on London's Oxford Street in 1890. According to author Lee Jackson, by the 1890s, the city's horses produced approximately 1,000 tons of dung a day. In the 19th century ...

  5. Dr. Johnson's house burns down. 1808. Tottenham Court Fair, held at junction of Euston and Hampstead Roads, abolished. Covent Garden theatre burns down. 1809. Lyceum Theatre opens. Drury-lane theatre burns down. Deptford - Croydon canal opens. 1810.

    • Incumbents
    • Events
    • Publications
    • Births
    • Deaths
    Monarch – Victoria
    Prime Minister – Benjamin Disraeli (Conservative) (until 21 April), William Ewart Gladstone (Liberal) (starting 23 April)
    January–March – great fog continues to engulf London.
    21 January – an underground firedamp explosion at Fair Lady Pit, Leycett, in the North Staffordshire Coalfield, kills 62 coal miners.
    31 January – training frigate HMS Atalanta leaves Bermuda bound for Falmouthbut is lost in the Atlantic with all 281 on board.
    2 February – the first successful shipment of frozen mutton from Australia arrives in London aboard the SS Strathleven.
    Benjamin Disraeli's novel Endymion.
    Thomas Hardy's novel The Trumpet-Major.
    28 January – Herbert Strudwick, cricketer (died 1970)
    8 February – Arthur Greenwood, politician (died 1954)
    17 February – Reginald Farrer, botanist (died 1920)
    1 March – Lytton Strachey, biographer and critic, member of the Bloomsbury Group (died 1932)
    27 January – Edward Middleton Barry, architect (born 1830)
    2 February – Sir George Hamilton Seymour, diplomat (born 1797)
    3 April – John Laing, bibliographer and Free Church of Scotland minister (born 1809)
    12 April – Joseph Brown, Roman Catholic bishop (born 1796)
  6. Jun 21, 2018 · The City of London created its own police force in the same year, though it has remained separate from the Met since its inception. Amongst the changes that would take place during Victoria’s reign, the first was the creation of what would become the Criminal Investigative Division would occur in 1842 in response to a grisly murder that ...

  7. The dreadful working and living conditions of the early 19th century persisted in many areas until the end of the Victorian age. The dark shadow of the workhouse loomed over the unemployed and destitute. By the 1880s and 1890s, however, most people were benefiting from cheaper imported food and other goods.

  1. People also search for