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1859

From Encyclopedia Jr, free information reference for Kids

Centuries: 18th century · 19th century · 20th century
Decades: 1820s 1830s 1840s 1850s 1860s 1870s 1880s
Years: 1856 1857 1858 1859 1860 1861 1862
1859 in topic:
Humanities
Archaeology - Architecture - Art - Literature - Music
By country
Australia - Canada - Mexico - South Africa - U.S. - UK
Other topics
Rail Transport - Science - Sports
Lists of leaders
Colonial Governors - State leaders
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
Works category
Works
1859 in other calendars
Gregorian calendar 1859
MDCCCLIX
Ab urbe condita 2612
Armenian calendar 1308
ԹՎ ՌՅԸ
Chinese calendar 4555 – 4556
戊午 – 己未
Ethiopian calendar 1851 – 1852
Hebrew calendar 5619 – 5620
Hindu calendars
- Vikram Samvat 1914 – 1915
- Shaka Samvat 1781 – 1782
- Kali Yuga 4960 – 4961
Iranian calendar 1237 – 1238
Islamic calendar 1276 – 1277

1859 (MDCCCLIX) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Monday of the Julian calendar).

Contents

Events

January

February

  • February 14 - Oregon is admitted as the 33rd U.S. state.
  • February 27 - US congressman Daniel Sickles shoots Philip Barton Key for having an affair with his wife

March

  • March 9 - The army of Piedmont-Sardinia mobilizes against Austria, beginning the crisis which will lead to the Austro-Sardinian War.
  • March 26 - French amateur astronomer claims to have noticed a planet closer to the Sun than Mercury - later named Vulcan

April

  • April 9 - The Austrian army in Italy mobilizes against Piedmont.
  • April 23 - The Austrians send an ultimatum to Piedmont, demanding demobilization. This puts Austria in the position of an aggressor, and leads to French intervention. Piedmont rejects the ultimatum, and war breaks out.
  • April 25 - Ground is broken for the Suez Canal
  • April 26 - Austro-Sardinian War - Giuseppe Garibaldi's Hunters of the Alps confront Austrian forces led by Field Marshal-Lieutenant Carl Baron Urban at Varese.
  • April 29 - Austrian troops begin to cross the Ticino River to Piedmont


May

  • May 4 - Cornwall Railway opened across the Royal Albert Bridge linking the counties of Devon and Cornwall in England
  • May 21 - The bell Big Ben first activated
  • May 22 - Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies is succeeded by his 23-year-old son Francis II of the Two Sicilies
  • May 30 - Sardinians defeat the Austrian army at Battle of Palestro

June

  • June 4 - Battle of Magenta in Austro-Sardinian War - French and Sardinians defeat Austrians
  • June 6 - The British Crown colony of Queensland in Australia is created by devolving part of the territory of New South Wales
  • June 8 - French and Piedmontese forces enter Milan.
  • June 8 - Battle of Marignaro (1859) French victory over Austrians
  • June 24 - Battle of Solferino: Kingdom of Sardinia and Napoleon III of France armies defeat Franz Josef I of Austria in northern Italy. Battle inspires Henri Dunant to found the Red Cross

July

  • July 1 - First intercollegiate baseball game is played, between Amherst and Williams Colleges.
  • July 6 - Australia: Queensland is established as a separate colony from New South Wales.
  • July 8 - Charles XV succeeds his father Oscar I King of Sweden and Norway (as Charles IV).
  • July 8 - Armistice between Austria and others
  • July 11 - Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph, faced with an expensive war against France and the Kingdom of Sardinia and potential revolution in Hungary, meets Napoleon III, who also worries at the costs of extending the war and fears the effects of Italian nationalism, at Villafranca. By the preliminary treaty signed there, hostilities cease. Lombardy is ceded to the French (who immediately cede it to Sardinia), while the Austrians keep Venetia and the French promise to restore the Central Italian rulers expelled in the course of the war. This brings the Austro-Sardinian War effectively to a close.

August

September

  • September 2 - Peak of the great auroral storm seen nearly worldwide in the northern hemisphere.
  • September 18 - Joshua A. Norton proclaims himself "Emperor of These United States"

October

November

  • November 1 - The current Cape Lookout, North Carolina, lighthouse was lighted for the first time. Its first-order Fresnel lens can be seen for nineteen miles.
  • November 10 - The Treaty of Zurich, reaffirming the terms of Villafranca, brings the Austro-Sardinian War to an official close.
  • November 19 - Opera "Genevieve de Brabant", composed by Jacques Offenbach, debuts at the Theatre de Bouffes Parisians in Paris.
  • 24 November - The French Navy's La Gloire ("Glory"), the first ocean-going ironclad warship in history, is launched.
  • November 24 - British naturalist Charles Darwin publishes The Origin of Species, a book which argues that organisms gradually evolve through natural selection. (It immediately sold out its initial print run.)

December

Unknown Dates

  • "Forty-Niners" stream into the Rocky Mountains in the U.S. during the 1859 Gold Rush
  • Island of Timor is divided between Portugal and the Netherlands
  • Trinity College in Cambridge UK bans Origin of Species
  • Paraguay mediates a truce between Buenos Aires government and the Argentinean Confederation
  • Charles Blondin crosses Niagara Falls on a tightrope
  • Codex Sinaiticus found by Constantin von Tischendorf on his third visit to the monastery of Santa Katerina, on Mount Sinai
  • Bernhard Riemann formulates the Riemann hypothesis, one of the most important open problems of contemporary mathematics
  • Solar flares first observed on the Sun by English astronomer Richard Carrington.
  • Brisbane declared the capital of newly-made-separate colony Queensland, Australia
  • University of Michigan Law School founded

Births

January-June

  • January 11 - Lord George Nathaniel Curzon, British statesman and Viceroy of India (d. 1925)
  • January 27 - Wilhelm II of Germany, last Emperor of Germany and King of Prussia (d. 1941)
  • February 1 - Victor Herbert, Irish-born composer (d. 1924)
  • February 1 - Jeff "the bulldog" Roth, famous bank robber (d. 1883)
  • February 3 - Hugo Junkers, German industrialist and aircraft designer (d. 1935)
  • February 6 - Elias Disney, American farmer and father of Walt Disney (d. 1941)
  • February 14 - Henry Valentine Knaggs, English physician and author (d. 1954)
  • February 16 - George Washington Gale Ferris, Jr., inventor of the Ferris wheel (d. 1896)
  • February 19 - Svante Arrhenius, Swedish chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1927)
  • February 28 - Florian Cajori, Swiss historian of mathematics (d. 1930)
  • March 2 - Sholom Aleichem, Ukrainian Yiddish novelist (d. 1916)
  • March 8 - Kenneth Grahame, English author (d. 1932)
  • March 26 - Alfred Edward Housman, English poet (d. 1936)
  • April 8 - Edmund Husserl, Austrian philosopher (d. 1938)
  • May 15 - Pierre Curie, French physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1906)
  • May 22 - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Scottish writer (d. 1930)

July-December

Unknown dates

  • William Bliss Baker, American painter (d. 1886)
  • Gaston Moch, Secretary of the Esperantist Centra Oficejo and a member of the Lingva Komitato

Deaths

  • January 28 - Frederick John Robinson, 1st Viscount Goderich, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1782)
  • February 13 - Eliza Acton, English cookery writer (b. 1799)
  • April 16 - Alexis de Tocqueville, French historian (b. 1805)
  • May 6 - Alexander von Humboldt, German naturalist and geographer (b. 1769)
  • July 8 - Oscar I, King of Sweden and Norway (b. 1799)
  • August 2 - Horace Mann, American educator and abolitionist (b. 1796)
  • September 15 - Isambard Kingdom Brunel, British engineer (b. 1806)
  • October 4 - Karl Baedeker, German author and publisher (b. 1801)
  • October 22 - Louis Spohr, German violinist and composer (b. 1784)
  • November 28 - Washington Irving, American author (b. 1783)
  • December 2 - John Brown, American abolitionist (hanged) (b. 1800)
  • December 8 - Thomas de Quincey, English writer (b. 1785)
  • December 16 - Wilhelm Grimm, German writer (b. 1786)
  • Abderrahmane, Sultan of Morocco

Citation Help

APA Style: Reference List

Encyclopedia Jr (2007). 1859. Retrieved January 9, 2009, from http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/1/8/5/1859.

MLA Style: Works Cited Page

"1859." Encyclopedia Jr. 2007. 9 Jan 2009 <http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/1/8/5/1859>.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article 1859.


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