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1850

1850 (MDCCCL) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar, the 1850th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 850th year of the 2nd millennium, the 50th year of the 19th century, and the 1st year of the 1850s decade. As of the start of 1850, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Events
January–March January 29Henry Clay introduces the Compromise of 1850 to the United States Congress. • January 31 – The University of Rochester is founded in Rochester, New York. • JanuarySacramento floods. • February 1 - Abraham Lincoln’s second son, Edward Baker Lincoln, died at the age of three after 52 days for struggling with tuberculosis (consumption) before his fourth birthday in Springfield, Illinois. • February 28 – The University of Utah opens in Salt Lake City. • March 5 – The Britannia Bridge opens over the Menai Strait in Wales. • March 7United States Senator Daniel Webster gives his "Seventh of March" speech, in which he endorses the Compromise of 1850, in order to prevent a possible civil war. • March 16Nathaniel Hawthorne's historical novel The Scarlet Letter is published in Boston, Massachusetts. • March 19American Express is founded by Henry Wells and William Fargo. • March 31 – The paddle steamer , bound from Cork to London, is wrecked in the English Channel with the loss of all 250 on board. April–June April 4Los Angeles is incorporated as a city in California. • April 15San Francisco is incorporated as a city in California. • Angers Bridge collapses in France killing around 226 of the soldiers crossing it at the time. • April 19 – The Clayton–Bulwer Treaty is signed by the United States and Great Britain, allowing both countries to share Nicaragua, and not claim complete control over the proposed Nicaragua Canal. • AprilPope Pius IX returns from exile to Rome. • Stephen Foster's parlor ballad "Ah! May the Red Rose Live Alway" is published in the United States. • May 15 – The Bloody Island Massacre takes place at Clear Lake in northern California. • May 23 – The puts to sea from New York to search for Franklin's lost expedition in the Arctic. • May 25 – The hippopotamus Obaysch arrives at London Zoo from Egypt, the first seen in Europe since Roman times. • June 1 • The transportation of British convicts to Western Australia begins, as the transportation of British convicts to other parts of Australia is phased out, when the ship Scindian arrives in Fremantle, with 75 male prisoners. • The postage stamp issues of Austria begin with a series of imperforate typographed stamps, featuring the coat of arms. • The 1850 United States census shows that 11.2% of the population classed as "Negro" are of mixed race. • June 3Kansas City, Missouri, is incorporated by Jackson County, Missouri, as the Town of Kansas (traditional date of its founding). • June 3 – the Cayuse Five (five members of the Cayuse people) were executed for murder following the Whitman massacre (an attack on a mission settlement near present-day Walla Walla, Washington) July–September JulyTaiping Rebellion: Hong Xiuquan orders the general mobilisation of rebel forces in China. • July 1 – St. Mary School for Boys (the future University of Dayton) opens its doors in Dayton, Ohio. • July 2 – Twice-served former British Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel dies following a fall from his horse at Constitution Hill, London. • July 9 • The Báb (Mírzá 'Alí-Muhammad) is executed by a firing squad in Tabriz, Persia, for claiming to be a prophet. • Vice President Millard Fillmore becomes the 13th president of the United States upon the death of President Zachary Taylor, aged 65. • July 17Vega becomes the first star (other than the Sun) to be photographed. • July 19 – The ship Elizabeth, an American merchant freighter carrying cargo that included mostly marble from Carrara, slammed into a sandbar less than 100 yards from Fire Island, New York, drowning Margaret Fuller, her husband Ossoli, and their young son Angelino. • August 28Richard Wagner's romantic opera Lohengrin (including the Bridal Chorus) premieres under the direction of Franz Liszt, in Weimar. • September 4 – The Eusébio de Queirós Law is passed in the Brazilian Empire to abolish the international slave trade. • September 9California is admitted as the 31st U.S. state. • The New Mexico Territory is organized by order of the United States Congress. • September 12 – The 1850 Xichang earthquake (7.9) shakes the Chinese province of Sichuan killing more than 20,000 people. • September 13Piz Bernina, the highest summit of the eastern Alps, is first ascended. • September 18 • The Fugitive Slave Law is passed by the United States Congress. • Harriet Tubman becomes an official conductor of the Underground Railroad. • September 29 – Papal bull Universalis Ecclesiae: The Catholic hierarchy is re-established in England and Wales, by Pope Pius IX and future Pope Pius X. October–December October 1 – The University of Sydney (the oldest in Australia) is founded. • October 19 – The Phi Kappa Sigma international fraternity is founded, at the University of Pennsylvania. • October 28 – Delegate Edward Ralph May delivers a speech on behalf of African-American suffrage, to the Indiana Constitutional Convention. • NovemberTaiping Rebellion: The first clashes of the Taiping Rebellion occur, between the Imperialist militia and the Heavenly Army. • Undergraduates at Exeter College, Oxford arrange a "foot grind" (a cross-country steeplechase), the first organised university athletic event. • November 29 – The treaty known as the Punctation of Olmütz is signed in Olomouc. It means diplomatic capitulation of Prussia to the Austrian Empire, which takes over the leadership of the German Confederation. • December 16 – Members of the Canterbury Association, the first settlers bound for Christchurch, arrive from England at the port of Lyttelton, New Zealand, aboard the Charlotte Jane and Randolph. Date unknown Dost Mohammad Barakzai, emir of Afghanistan, captures Balkh. • The first portion of the Oudh Bequest is transferred from Oudh State in the British Raj to the Shia Islam holy cities of Najaf and Karbala, in Persia. • The American system of watch manufacturing is started in Roxbury, Massachusetts, by the Waltham Watch Company. • Bingley Hall, the world's first purpose-built exhibition hall, opens in Birmingham, England. • Allan Pinkerton forms the North-Western Police Agency, later the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, in the United States. • The temperance organisation, International Organisation of Good Templars, is established in Utica, New York, as the order of the Knights of Jericho. • Mayer Lehman arrives from Germany to join his siblings in Lehman Brothers dry-goods business (predecessor of the bank) in Montgomery, Alabama. • One of the original segments of the historic Pacific Highway (United States) in Washington (state) in Clark and Cowlitz counties is established. • German physicist Rudolf Clausius publishes his paper on the mechanical theory of heat ("On the Moving Force of Heat") which first states the basic ideas of the second law of thermodynamics. • The city of Manchester, England, reaches 400,000 inhabitants. • From this year until 1880, 144,000 East Indian laborers go to Trinidad and 39,000 to Jamaica. • Ongoing – Great Famine (Ireland) subsides. == Births ==
Births
January–February January 1John Barclay Armstrong, Texas Ranger, U.S. Marshal (d. 1913) • January 6Eduard Bernstein, German social democratic theoretician, politician (d. 1932) • Xaver Scharwenka, Polish-German composer (d. 1924) • January 10John Wellborn Root, American architect (d. 1891) • January 11Philipp von Ferrary, Italian stamp collector (d. 1917) • January 14Pierre Loti, French novelist (d. 1923) • January 15Mihai Eminescu, Romanian romantic poet (d. 1889) • Sofia Kovalevskaya, Russian mathematician (d. 1891) • January 18Seth Low, American educator (d. 1916) • January 19Augustine Birrell, English author, politician (d. 1933) • January 24Hermann Ebbinghaus, German psychologist (d. 1909) • January 27John Collier, British writer and painter (d. 1934) • Edward Smith, British captain of the Titanic (d. 1912) • Samuel Gompers, American labor union leader (d. 1924) • January 29Sir Ebenezer Howard, British urban planner (d. 1928) • Lawrence Hargrave, Australian engineer (d. 1915) • January 30Victor-Constant Michel, French general (d. 1937) • February 8Kate Chopin, American writer (d. 1904) • February 10Alexander von Linsingen, German general (d. 1935) • February 12William Morris Davis, American geographer (d. 1934) • February 14Kiyoura Keigo, Prime Minister of Japan (d. 1942) • February 15Albert B. Cummins, American lawyer and politician (d. 1926) • February 17Alf Morgans, 4th Premier of Western Australia (d. 1933) • February 18Sir George Henschel, English musician (d. 1934) • February 23César Ritz, Swiss hotelier (d. 1918) • February 27Henry E. Huntington, American railroad pioneer, art collector (d. 1927) March–April March 6Sagen Ishizuka, Japanese physician, dietitian (d. 1909) • March 7Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, President of Czechoslovakia (d. 1937) • Champ Clark, American politician (d. 1921) • March 9Josias von Heeringen, German general (d. 1926) • Sir Hamo Thornycroft, British sculptor (d. 1925) • March 10Spencer Gore, British tennis player, cricketer (d. 1906) • March 13Sir Hugh John Macdonald, premier of Manitoba (d. 1929) • March 26Edward Bellamy, American author (d. 1898) • March 31Charles Doolittle Walcott, American invertebrate paleontologist (d. 1927) • April 1Hans von Pechmann, German chemist (d. 1902) • April 8Kawamura Kageaki, Japanese field marshal (d. 1926) • April 9Sir Julius Wernher, German-born British businessman, art collector (d. 1912) • April 10Fanny Davenport, English-born American actress (d. 1898) • Mary Emilie Holmes, American geologist, educator (d. 1906) • April 12Nikolai Golitsyn, Prime Minister of Russia (d. 1925) • April 13Arthur Matthew Weld Downing, British astronomer (d. 1917) • April 15Edmund Peck, Canadian missionary (d. 1924) • William Thomas Pipes, Canadian politician, 6th Premier of Nova Scotia (d. 1909) • April 18Jo Labadie, American labor organizer (d. 1933) • April 20Daniel Chester French, American sculptor (d. 1931) • April 23Agda Montelius, Swedish feminist (d. 1920) • April 26Harry Bates, English sculptor (d. 1899) • James Drake, Australian politician (d. 1941) • April 27Hans Hartwig von Beseler, German general (d. 1921) May–June May 1Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, British prince and Governor General of Canada (d. 1942) • May 3Johnny Ringo, American cowboy (d. 1882) • May 7Anton Seidl, Hungarian conductor (d. 1898) • May 8Ross Barnes, American baseball player (d. 1915) • May 10Sir Thomas Lipton, Scottish merchant, yachtsman (d. 1931) • May 12Henry Cabot Lodge, American statesman (d. 1924) • Sir Frederick Holder, 19th Premier of South Australia (d. 1909) • May 18Oliver Heaviside, British engineer (d. 1925) • May 21Giuseppe Mercalli, Italian volcanologist (d. 1914) • Gustav Lindenthal, Czech civil engineer, bridge designer (d. 1935) • May 27Thomas Neill Cream, Scottish-Canadian serial killer (d. 1892) • May 28Frederic William Maitland, English jurist and historian (d. 1906) • May 30Frederick Dent Grant, U.S. soldier, statesman (d. 1912) • June 2Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent, British businessman (d. 1931) • Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer, English physiologist, pioneer in endocrinology (d. 1935) • June 5Pat Garrett, American bartender and sheriff (d. 1908) • June 6Karl Ferdinand Braun, German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1918) • June 15Charles Hazelius Sternberg, American fossil collector, amateur paleontologist (d. 1943) • June 21Daniel Carter Beard, American scouting pioneer (d. 1941) • June 22Ignaz Goldziher, Hungarian orientalist (d. 1921) • June 24Horatio Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener, British field marshal, statesman (d. 1916) • June 27Lafcadio Hearn, Greco-Japanese author (d. 1904) • Ivan Vazov, Bulgarian poet (d. 1921) • June 30Paul von Plehwe, Russian general (d. 1916) July–August July 2Robert Ridgway, American ornithologist (d. 1929) • July 9George F. Durand, Canadian architect (d. 1889) • July 11Annie Armstrong, American missionary leader (d. 1938) • July 15Frances Xavier Cabrini, American saint (d. 1917) • July 31Robert Love Taylor, American congressman, senator and Governor from Tennessee (d. 1912) • Robert Planquette, French composer of stage musicals (d. 1903) • August 5Guy de Maupassant, French writer (d. 1893) • August 9Johann Büttikofer, Swiss zoologist (d. 1927) • August 10Ella M. S. Marble, American physician (d. 1929) • August 25Charles Richet, French physiologist, Nobel Prize winner (d. 1935) • August 30Marcelo H. del Pilar, Filipino writer, journalist (d. 1896) • Bernardo Reyes, Mexican general (d. 1913) September–October September 4Luigi Cadorna, Italian general (d. 1928) • September 5Eugen Goldstein, German physicist (d. 1930) • September 8Paul Gerson Unna, German dermatologist (d. 1929) • September 20Ōshima Yoshimasa, Japanese general (d. 1926) • October 1David R. Francis, American politician (d. 1927) • Agustín de Luque y Coca, Spanish general and politician (d. 1937) • October 8Henry Louis Le Châtelier, French chemist (d. 1936) • October 18Ferdinand von Quast, German general (d. 1939) November–December November 2Antonio Jacobsen, Danish-born American maritime artist (d. 1921) • November 11Silva Porto, Portuguese painter (d. 1893) • November 13Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish writer (d. 1894) • November 15Victor Laloux, French architect (d. 1937) • November 24László Lukács, 17th Prime Minister of Hungary (d. 1932) • December 22Victoriano Huerta, 35th President of Mexico (d. 1916) • December 26Walter Dinnie, British and New Zealand police officer (d. 1923) Date unknown Abdul Wahid Bengali, Muslim theologian and teacher (d. 1905) • Mikael of Wollo, Ethiopian army commander and Ras of Wollo (d. 1918) == Deaths ==
Deaths
January–March January 2Manuel de la Peña y Peña, interim President of Mexico (b. 1789) • January 10Pedro Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil (b. 1848) • January 17Elizabeth Simcoe, English-born wife of John Graves Simcoe (b. 1762) • January 20Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger, Danish poet, playwright (b. 1779) • January 22William Joseph Chaminade, French Catholic priest (b. 1761) • Saint Vincent Pallotti, Italian missionary (b. 1795) • January 26Francis Jeffrey, Scottish judge, literary critic (b. 1773) • January 27 • Philipp Röth, German composer (b. 1779) • Johann Gottfried Schadow, German sculptor (b. 1764) • February 4Daniel Turner, officer in the United States Navy (b. 1794) • February 20Valentín Canalizo, acting president of Mexico (b. 1794) • February 23Matthew Whitworth-Aylmer, 5th Baron Aylmer, British military officer, colonial administrator (b. 1775) • February 24Tan Tock Seng, Singaporean businessman, philanthropist (b. 1798) • February 25Daoguang Emperor of the Qing dynasty of China (b. 1782) • February 27Samuel Adams, Democratic Governor of the State of Arkansas (b. 1805) • February 28Edward Bickersteth, English evangelical divine (b. 1786) • March 3Oliver Cowdery, American religious leader (b. 1806) • March 7Sir Hercules Robert Pakenham, British army general (b. 1781) • March 13Juan Martín de Pueyrredón y O'Dogan, Argentine general, politician (b. 1776) • Owen Stanley, British naval officer, explorer of New Guinea (b. 1811) • March 26Samuel Turell Armstrong, American political figure (b. 1784) • March 27Wilhelm Beer, German banker, astronomer (b. 1797) • March 28Gerard Brandon, Governor of Mississippi (b. 1788) • March 31John C. Calhoun, 7th Vice President of the United States (b. 1782) April–June April 7William Lisle Bowles, English poet, critic (b. 1762) • April 9William Prout, English chemist, physician (b. 1785) • April 11Raja Nara Singh, regent of Manipur (b. 1792) • April 12Adoniram Judson, American Baptist missionary (b. 1788) • April 16Marie Tussaud, French wax sculptor (b. 1761) • April 17Jan Krukowiecki, Polish general (b. 1772) • April 22Friedrich Robert Faehlmann, Estonian philologist, physician (b. 1798) • April 23William Wordsworth, English poet (b. 1770) • April 24John Norvell, American newspaperman, senator (b. 1789) • May 1Henri Marie Ducrotay de Blainville, French zoologist, anatomist (b. 1777) • May 2Joseph Plumb Martin, American Revolutionary soldier, narrative author (b. 1760) • May 10Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac, French chemist, physicist (b. 1778) • May 12Frances Sargent Osgood, U.S. poet (b. 1811) • May 21Christoph Friedrich von Ammon, German theological writer, preacher (b. 1766) • May 24Jane Porter, English novelist (b. 1776) • Michał Gedeon Radziwiłł, Polish noble (b. 1778) • May 31Giuseppe Giusti, Tuscan satirical poet (b. 1809) • June 9John Green Crosse, English surgeon (b. 1790) • June 16William Lawson, British explorer of New South Wales (b. 1774) • June 30Richard Dillingham, American Quaker teacher (b. 1823) July–September July 2Robert Peel, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1788) • July 4William Kirby, English entomologist (b. 1759) • July 7Timothy Hackworth, British steam locomotive engineer (b. 1786) • July 8Prince Adolphus of the United Kingdom, 1st Duke of Cambridge (b. 1774) • July 9 • The Báb, Persian founder of the Bábí Faith (executed by a firing squad) (b. 1819) • Zachary Taylor, 65, 12th President of the United States (b. 1784) • Jean-Pierre Boyer, President of Haiti (b. 1776) • July 12Robert Stevenson, Scottish lighthouse engineer (b. 1772) • July 14August Neander, German theologian, church historian (b. 1789) • July 16Julia Glover, Irish-born British stage actress (b. ca. 1779) • July 19Margaret Fuller, American journalist (b. 1810) • July 23Vicente Filisola, Italian-born Mexican General (b. 1785) • July 25Richard Barnes Mason, military governor of California (b. 1797) • August 3Jacob Jones, U.S. Navy officer (b. 1768) • August 6Edward Walsh, Irish poet (b. 1805) • Hōne Heke, Maori chief and war leader (b. c. 1807) • August 13Martin Archer Shee, Irish painter, president of the Royal Academy (b. 1770) • August 17 – General José de San Martín, Argentine military and South American independence hero (b. 1778) • August 18Charles Arbuthnot, British Tory politician (b. 1767) • Honoré de Balzac, French author (b. 1799) • August 22Nikolaus Lenau, Austrian poet (b. 1802) • August 26 – King Louis Philippe I of France (b. 1773) • August 27Thomas Kidd, English classical scholar, schoolmaster (b. 1770) • September 2Charles Watkin Williams-Wynn, British Tory politician (b. 1775) • September 12Presley O'Bannon, officer in the United States Marine Corps (b. 1784) • September 22Johann Heinrich von Thünen, German economist (b. 1783) • September 23José Gervasio Artigas, Uruguayan revolutionary (b. 1764) October–December October 2Sarah Biffen, English painter (b. 1784) • October 11Louise, Queen of the Belgians (b. 1812) • October 17Lodewijk van Heiden, Dutch-born Russian admiral (b. 1773) • October 29Marmaduke Williams, Democratic-Republican U.S. Congressman from North Carolina (b. 1774) • November 2Richard Dobbs Spaight Jr., Democratic governor of the U.S. state of North Carolina (b. 1796) • November 3Thomas Ford, governor of Illinois (b. 1800) • November 4Gustav Schwab, German classical scholar (b. 1792) • November 9François-Xavier-Joseph Droz, French writer on ethics and political science (b. 1773) • November 19Richard Mentor Johnson, 9th Vice President of the United States (b. 1780) • November 22Lin Zexu, Chinese politician (b. 1785) • November 30Germain Henri Hess, Swiss chemist, doctor (b. 1802) • December 4William Sturgeon, English physicist, inventor (b. 1783) • December 10Józef Bem, Polish general (b. 1794) • François Sulpice Beudant, French mineralogist, geologist (b. 1787) • December 22William Plumer, American lawyer, lay preacher (b. 1759) • December 24Frédéric Bastiat French author, economist (b. 1801) • December 28Heinrich Christian Schumacher, German astronomer (b. 1780) • December 30Pierre M. Lapie, French cartographer (b. 1777) Date unknown Mary Anne Whitby, English scientist (b. 1783) == References ==
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