Events from the year 1839 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
Events
- January â The first parallax measurement of the distance to Alpha Centauri is published by Thomas Henderson.
- 19 January â British East India Company captures Aden.
- 25 January â H. Fox Talbot shows his "photogenic drawings" at the Royal Institution in London. Sara Anne Bright is also producing such photographic reproductions this year.
- 29 January â Naturalist Charles Darwin marries his cousin Emma Wedgwood at Maer, Staffordshire.
- February â Report on the Affairs of British North America published.
- 26 February â The first nationally recognised Grand National run, at Aintree. It is won by Jem Mason riding Lottery.
- 1 March â Sussex County Cricket Club, England's oldest county club, is formed.
- 26 March â The first Henley Royal Regatta is held on the River Thames.
- 9 April â The world's first commercial electric telegraph line comes into operation alongside the Great Western Railway line from London Paddington station to West Drayton.
- 19 April â The Treaty of London establishes Belgium as a kingdom with its independence and neutrality guaranteed by Britain and the other great powers of Europe.
- May
- J. M. W. Turner completes his painting The Fighting Temeraire.
- Cambridge Camden Society established by John Mason Neale, Alexander Beresford Hope and Benjamin Webb to promote Gothic architecture.
- 1 May â The start of Eyre's expeditions to the interior of South Australia.
- 7âÂÂ11 May â Bedchamber Crisis: Robert Peel asks that Queen Victoria dismiss her Ladies of the Bedchamber as a condition for his forming a government. Victoria refuses to accept the condition and Melbourne is persuaded to stay on as Prime Minister.
- 13 May â First Rebecca Riots targeted against Welsh turnpikes, at Efailwen in Carmarthenshire.
- 31 May â Important British constitutional case of Stockdale v Hansard is launched when publisher John Joseph Stockdale sues for libel after John Roberton's pseudo-medical work On Diseases of the Generative System (1811) is declared in a parliamentary report to be indecent.
- 3 June â Destruction of opium at Humen begins, casus belli for Britain to open the 3-year First Opium War against Qing dynasty China.
- 28 June â Coal mine explosion at St Hilda pit, South Shields, kills 51.
- July â The first Royal Show (agricultural show) is held in Oxford.
- 4 July â Chartists riot in Birmingham.
- 15 July â The first clipper ship is launched in Britain, the schooner Scottish Maid at Alexander Hall's yard in Aberdeen.
- 23 July â British forces under Sir John Keane capture the fortress city of Ghazni, Afghanistan in the Battle of Ghazni during the First Anglo-Afghan War.
- 17 August â Custody of Infants Act (based largely on campaigning by Caroline Norton) permits limited rights of custody of young children to divorced mothers.
- 23 August â British forces seize Hong Kong as a base, as Britain prepares to wage the First Opium War.
- 27 August â County Police Act enables the appointment of police in rural areas. On 28 November, Wiltshire becomes the first county to appoint a chief constable under the act. Also this year, City of London Police Act confirms establishment of a force in the City.
- 30 August â The Eglinton Tournament, a recreation of a medieval tourney, takes place at Eglinton Castle, North Ayrshire, Scotland.
- 5 October â James Clark Ross sets out on the Antarctic expedition of and which will chart much of the coastline of the continent.
- 19 October â George Bradshaw publishes the first national railway timetable, Bradshaw's Railway Time Tables and Assistant to Railway Travelling, in Manchester.
- 4 November â Newport Rising: between 5,000 and 10,000 Chartist sympathisers led by John Frost, many of them coal miners, march on Newport, Monmouthshire, to liberate Chartist prisoners; around 22 are killed when troops, directed by Thomas Phillips, the mayor, fire on the crowd. This is the last large-scale armed civil rebellion against authority in mainland Britain and sees the most deaths.
- 23 November â Launch of the first British ocean-going iron warship, for the East India Company, by William Laird at Birkenhead.
- December â New Committee of Council on education sets up a new national system of Inspectors of Schools for grant-aided establishments.
- 5 December â Uniform Fourpenny Post introduced, a major postal reform, whereby 4d is levied for pre-paid letters up to half an ounce in weight instead of postage being calculated by distance and number of sheets of paper.
- 24 December â An enormous landslide occurs at Axmouth in Devon, creating the Axmouth to Lyme Regis Undercliff. A report by geologists William Daniel Conybeare and William Buckland is one of the earliest scientific descriptions of such an event.
Undated
Ongoing
Publications
Births
Deaths
- 16 January â Edmund Lodge, writer (born 1756)
- 28 January â Sir William Beechey, portrait painter (born 1753)
- 11 April â John Galt, novelist (born 1779)
- 22 April â Thomas Haynes Bayly, poet (died 1839)
- 17 May â Archibald Alison, author (born 1757)
- 15 July â Winthrop Mackworth Praed, politician and poet (born 1802)
- 28 August â William Smith, geologist (born 1769)
- 24 October â Sir William Charles Ellis, physician specialising in mental illness (born 1780)
- 15 November â William Murdoch, inventor (born 1754)
- 24 December â James Smith, author (born 1775)
References