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Because the timeline grew so large, we've split it into three parts:
Dates 1800-1850 - a timeline (this page)
Print calendar
for month of any year (interface to Unix "cal" command)
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- 1800
- April 2...Vienna: Beethoven performs 1st Piano Concerto and 1st Symphony
- April 14..Washington, D.C.: Congress establishes library
- Paris: first coffee percolator invented
- March 20...Alessandro Volta publishes description of first battery
- 1803
- May 25...Boston, Mass.: Ralph Waldo Emerson born
- 1804
- Feb. 12.....Prussia: the great philosopher
Kant dies
- May 14...St. Louis: Jefferson sends Lewis and Clark to explore Louisiana Purchase to the Pacific
- May 18...Paris: Napoleon becomes Emperor
- July 4....
Salem, Mass., 27 Union St.: Nathaniel Hathorne, Jr., born to
Nathaniel Hathorne and Elizabeth Clarke Manning Hathorne
- U.S.: Alexander Hamilton killed by Aaron Burr in duel
- 1805
- U.S. ends Barbary War with Tripoli
- England, Wordsworth publishes The Prelude
- Oct. 21...
Battle of Trafalgar, Lord Nelson wins but dies
- 1806
- Hartford, Conn.: Noah Webster publishes dictionary
- 1807
- Feb. 27...Portland, Me.: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow born
- U.S. stops exports with Embargo Act as ships seized by England
and France in Napoleonic Wars
- New York: Fulton launches steamboat Clermont
- 1808
- Feb.?...Dutch Guiana: Nathaniel Hathorne's father, a ship captain, dies of yellow fever
- U.S.: African slave trade ended by act of Congress
- 1809
- Salem, Mass.: 12 Herbert St.: Nathaniel Hathorne, his mother, and sisters move
in with the Mannings
- Feb. 12...Kentucky: Abraham Lincoln born
- Mar. 31...Russia: Nikolai Gogol born
- 1810
- England: Walter Scott publishes The Lady of the Lake
- 1811
- St. Louis: Largest earthquake in U.S. history rocks Mississippi and Ohio
- Concord, Mass.: William Emerson dies
- November...England: Luddite uprisings begin
- 1812
- Apr. 19...Concord, Mass.: militia assembles to take part in war with British
- June 18...War of 1812 between U.S. and Britain officially begins
- 1813
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hathorne is taught at home by Joseph Worcester,
following an injury to his foot that requires crutches for the next two years.
- England, Jane Austen publishes Pride and Prejudice
- 1814
- Washington, D.C.: British burn capitol
- Waltham, Mass.: first textile mill built
- 1815
- June 18...Belgium: Napoleon meets his Waterloo
- June 22...Paris: Napoleon abdicates again, Louis XVIII is restored to throne
- 1816
- Raymond, Me.: Nathaniel Hathorne lives near Sebago Lake
- 1817
- Albany, N.Y.: work begins on Erie Canal
- U.S.: Great Lakes demilitarized by Rush-Bagot Treaty
- July 12...Concord, Mass.: Henry David Thoreau born
- July 18...England: Jane Austen dies
- Dec. 17...Haverhill, Mass.: John Greenleaf Whittier born
- Dec. 31...Portsmouth, N.H.: James T. Fields born
- 1818
- Portland, Me.: Nathaniel Hathorne attends school
- U.S.: Cumberland Road opens
- England: Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein
- 1819
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hathorne returns to prepare for college,
attends Samuel Archer's school
- Apr. 11...England: Coleridge meets Keats
- June 20...U.S.: First steamship crossing of Atlantic by Savannah
- U.S.: Economic Panic causes depression
- Aug. 1...New York: Herman Melville born
- England: the future Queen Victoria born
- England: Percy Shelley publishes The Cenci
- 1820
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hathorne tutored by Benj. Oliver
- U.S.: Missouri Compromise--Missouri admitted to union as slave state, Maine free
- U.S.: Washington Irving publishes "Rip van Winkle"
- England: Percy Bysse Shelley writes "Prometheus Unbound"
- 1821
- Feb. 23...Rome: Keats dies
- May 5...St. Helena: Napoleon dies
- Brunswick, Me.: Nathaniel Hathorne studies at Bowdoin College with Longfellow,
Pierce
- Cambridge, Mass.: Ralph Waldo Emerson graduates from Harvard
- Italy: Shelley dies
- 1822
- Joseph Nicéphore Niepce takes first permanent photograph
- July 2...South Carolina: Vesey's Rebellion of slaves fails
- Africa: Liberia founded as refuge for freed American slaves
- Jean-Francois Champollion deciphers part of Rosetta stone
- 1823
- Dec. 2...U.S.: James Monroe pronounces Monroe Doctrine to keep European powers from Americas
- U.S.: John Howard Payne publishes the song, "Home, Sweet Home"
- Germany: Beethoven composes Ninth Symphony
- New York: Cooper publishes The Pioneers
- England: Lord Byron publishes Don Juan
- 1824
- Apr. 19..Byron dies
- Dec. 1...U.S.: Presidential election deadlocks, goes to House;
John Quincy Adams prevails
- Sequoya defines Cherokee alphabet
- 1825
- Brunswick, Me.: Nathaniel Hathorne graduates, Bowdoin College
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hathorne lives with mother and sisters, writes
- Boston: Caleb Snow publishes A History of Boston
- Boston: John Winthrop's Journal turns up, is published
- Oct. 26...Albany, N.Y.: Erie Canal opens
- England: first railway opens
- France: Pierre-Fidele Bretonneau performs first successful tracheotomy
- Russia: Nicholas I becomes Czar
- 1826
- July 4....U.S.: Thomas Jefferson and John Adams die
- U.S.: James Fenimore Cooper publishes The Last of the Mohicans
- England: Thomas Malthus publishes expanded Essay on Population
- Boston, Mass.: Elizabeth Palmer Peabody volunteers as Rev. William Ellery Channing's
secretary for the next few years
- 1827
- Mar. 26...Germany: Beethoven dies
- Germany: Heinrich Heine publishes book of lieder
- U.S.: Poe publishes Poems, Tamerlane
- Salem: Joseph B. Felt publishes The Annals of Salem
- U.S., England: Audubon publishes first The Birds of North America
- 1828
- Boston, Mass.: Nathaniel Hathorne anonymously publishes Fanshawe,
a romantic novel of college life (later he tried to recover all copies; it was republished after his death)
- Conn.: Noah Webster publishes An American Dictionary of the English Language
- 1829
- Paris: Rossini's William Tell opens
- New York: William Cullen Bryant becomes editor of Evening Post
- Mexico: After Spanish troops are repelled by Santa Anna, slavery is abolished
- Carbondale, Pa.: first steam locomotive begins service
- Boston: "Siamese twins" arrive; later, they are displayed in Barnum's circus
- 1830
- October....Nathaniel Hathorne publishes "Sights from a Steeple" in
The Token
- November....Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hathorne publishes "The Hollow of the
Three Hills" in The Salem Gazette
- Nathaniel Hathorne adds "w" to spelling of last name after this date
- U.S.: Sarah Josepha Hale writes "Mary Had a Little Lamb"
- England: Charles Lyell publishes Principles of Geology
- U.S.: W. E. Channing publishes "The Importance and Means of a National Literature"
- France: Stendahl publishes The Red and the Black
- Germany, Europe: rebellions put down, Louis-Phillipe crowned in France
- 1831
- Canterbury, N.H.: Nathaniel Hawthorne visits Shaker community
- U.S.: Samuel Francis Smith writes "America"
- England: Charles Darwin begins trip around world in Beagle
- Nov. 11...Virginia: Nat Turner's Rebellion of slaves fails
- 1832
- Mar. 22...Germany: Goethe dies; second part of Faust is published
- Sept. 21...Scott dies
- September....Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne takes a trip to New Hampshire,
the Erie Canal, and Niagara Falls
- November....Washington, D.C.: Andrew Jackson, Democrat, elected President
- New York: horse-drawn rail cars start operation
- Nov. 29..Louisa May Alcott born
- 1833
- Aug. 5...England: Emerson visits Coleridge
- Aug. 23...London: Slave-owning illegal in realm after one year
- U.S.: Oberlin College becomes first coeducational college
- Boston: Massachusetts ends tax support for churches
- London: Charles Babbage invents first calculating machine
- Denmark: Han Christian Anderson publishes his first fairy tales
- 1834
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne finishes The Story Teller,
a group of stories in a frame narrative (although rejected and manuscript lost, some of the stories
were later published in magazines and collections)
- U.S.: Davy Crockett publishes autobiography of frontier life
- Paris: Braille invented
- July 25...England: Coleridge dies
- 1835
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne publishes "Young Goodman Brown" in
New-England Magazine
- U.S.: Samuel Morse invents telegraph
- Halley's Comet reappears
- Paris: Louis Daguerre invents daguerrotype photography
- Concord, Mass.: Ralph Waldo Emerson remarries and moves to town
- Concord, N.H.: John Greenleaf Whittier, a Massachusetts legislator and
abolitionist, is attacked by mob
- Nov. 30...Florida, Mo.: Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) born
- Paris: Alexis de Tocqueville publishes first volume of Democracy in
America
- 1836
- Boston, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne edits and mostly writes American
Magazine of Useful and
Entertaining Knowledge
- Mar. 6....San Antonio: Mexican army captures Alamo in Texas Republic; Davy Crockett killed
- Boston: Ralph Waldo Emerson publishes his first book, Nature,
written at the Old Manse in Concord
- Cambridge, Mass.: Longfellow becomes professor of modern languages at Harvard
- November....Washington, D.C.: Martin Van Buren, Democrat, elected President
- U.S.: Samuel Colt invents revolver
- Paris: Arch of Triumph completed
- U.S.: Alonzo Phillips patents phosphorous match
- 1837
- Jan. 7...J. Pierpont Morgan born
- Boston: Nathaniel Hawthorne edits Peter Parley's Universal History
- March 6..Nathaniel Hawthorne publishes Twice-Told Tales, a collection
of stories previously published in magazines
- Salem, Mass.: Elizabeth Palmer Peabody visits Hawthorne's sister, who she believes
wrote Twice-Told Tales
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne meets Sophia Peabody
- U.S.: Economic Panic begins long depression; mills and banks close, including, the next
year, Hawthorne's publisher
- Cambridge, Mass.: Thoreau graduates from Harvard
- Japan: Tokugawa shogun Ienari resigns
- New York: Samuel Morse patents and demonstrates telegraphy with Morse
code, which was actually invented by his assistant, Alfred Lewis Vail
- Massachusetts: Mount Holyoke Female Seminary, first college for women, opens
- England: Queen Victoria begins long reign
- 1838
- Nathaniel Hawthorne writes for Democratic Review
- Washington, D.C.: Hawthorne's friend, Jonathan Cilley, is killed in a duel
- U.S.: First regular steamship service across Atlantic
- Jan. 4...Tom Thumb born; will star in P.T. Barnum's circus
- England: Dickens publishes Oliver Twist
- U.S.: Poe publishes Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym
- Boston: Prescott publishes History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella
- July 15..Cambridge, Mass.: Emerson delivers Divinity Hall Sermon
- November...Boston, Mass.: Elizabeth Palmer Peabody persuades George Bancroft to offer
Nathaniel Hawthorne a job
- Nathaniel Hawthorne and Sophia Peabody become secretly
engaged
- 1839
- Aug. 19...Paris: daguerreotype process made public by French government at
extraordinary joint Academy and Legislature meeting
- Boston, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne works as measurer in Custom House for
historian George Bancroft, Collector of the Port; lives at 54 Pinckney St., 8 Somerset Place
- England: Samuel Cunard founds steamship line
- England: Carl August Steinheil builds first electric clock
- Washington, D.C.: Congress outlaws dueling
- U.S.: Charles Goodyear discovers vulcanization of rubber
- Boston: Longfellow publishes Hyperion and Voices of the
Night
- China: Opium War with England begins
- Kirkpatrick MacMillan introduces first modern bicycle with brakes and
pedals, though with iron tires
- U.S.: Poe publishes "The Fall of the House of Usher"
- 1840
- Boston, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne publishes children's books of
stories, Grandfather's Chair, Famous Old People, and Liberty
Tree
- March..Concord, Mass.: Bronson Alcott moves family from Boston after Temple School fails;
Louisa May Alcott enrolls in Thoreau's Concord Academy
- July...Boston, Mass., 13 West St.: Elizabeth Palmer Peabody opens bookshop
- Concord, Mass.: Margaret Fuller publishes The Dial, with Thoreau poem
- November....Washington, D.C.: William Henry Harrison, a Whig, elected President; dies after
one month and John Tyler takes office
- May 1..England: first adhesive (penny) stamp introduced
- Belgium: Antoine Joseph Sax invents saxophone
- Boston: Durgin Park restaurant opens
- Boston: Richard Henry Dana publishes Two Years Before the Mast
- Scotland: James Nasmyth invents steam hammer
- Florence: Giovanni Battista Amici introduces oil immersion microscope
- England: Duchess of Bedford institutes afternoon tea ritual
- France: Pierre Joseph Proudhon publishes socialist What is Property?
- China: Opium War
- 1841
- April-Nov....Boston, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne lives at Brook Farm,
a utopian community, 670 Baker St., West Roxbury; Thoreau declines invitation to join
- New Bedford, Mass.: First Japanese immigrant to U.S. arrives
- California: first covered wagon train arrives
- Syracuse, N.Y.: first state fair opens
- Concord, Mass.: Emerson publishes first volume of Essays
- U.S.: Cooper publishes The Deerslayer
- U.S.: Channing's Works published
- New York: New York Tribune begins publication
- London: a photograph first appears in a newspaper
- London: Punch begins publication
- Paris: arc light street lamps demonstrated
- 1842
- Jan 11....Concord, Mass.: John Thoreau dies in Henry's arms after Jan 1 razor cut leads to
lockjaw
- May...U.S.: Poe's "Masque of the Red Death" appears
- July...Concord, Mass.: Thoreau's Natural History of Massachusetts draws
Hawthorne's attentions
- England: Darwin composes abstract of theory of evolution
- July 9....Boston, Mass., 13 West St.: Nathaniel Hawthorne marries Sophia
Peabody
- July 9....Concord, Mass.: Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne move into the
Old Manse,
rented from Emerson, with garden dug by Thoreau
- Tahiti: Herman Melville deserts ship, later signs onto Nantucket whaler
- U.S. and Britain settle boundary disputes
- Massachusetts child labor law limits under-12 to 10 hours a day
- Concord, Mass.: Bronson Alcott travels to England
- Concord, Mass.: Emerson publishes Essays (Second Series)
- Boston: Longfellow publishes Ballads
- 1843
- U.S.: Mormons begin practicing polygamy
- England: William Wordsworth appointed poet laureate
- U.S.: John Greenleaf Whittier publishes Lays of My Home
- April 15...Cambridge, Mass.: Henry James born
- May 1..Boston, Mass., 13 West Street: Mary Peabody marries Henry Mann
- June 1..Concord, Mass.: Bronson Alcott moves family to Fruitlands utopian
community in Harvard, Mass.
- July 13....Boston, Mass.: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow marries Frances Appleton at 39 Beacon
St.
- November...Concord, Mass.: Thoreau publishes "Paradise (to be) Regained,"
criticizing technological utopianism
- Denmark: Soren Kierkegaard publishes Either-Or
- U.S.: Poe publishes "The Black Cat"
- New Britain, Conn.: Frederick Stanley founds bolt factory, first steam power in area
- Paris: first "millionaire", tobacco baron Pierre Lorillard, dies
- Boston: Prescott publishes History of the Conquest of Mexico
- London: John Stuart Mill publishes A System of Logic
- London: Charles Dickens publishes A Christmas Carol
- California: John Fremont establishes Oregon Trail
- London: John Bennett Lawes produces superphosphate, first artificial fertilizer
- Charles Macintosh and Thomas Hancock produce first waterproof clothes
- Germany: Samuel Schwabe describes sunspot cycle
- New York: Jerome Increase Case introduces threshing machine
- England: James Joule develops mechanical theory of heat
- London: The Economist begins publication
- 1844
- January..Harvard, Mass.: Alcotts leave Fruitlands
- Concord, Mass.: Una Hawthorne born to Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne
- April 30...Thoreau accidentally sets fire in Concord woods
- November....Washington, D.C.: James Polk, Democrat, elected President
- May 24...Washington, D.C.-Baltimore: Samuel Morse demonstrates first telegraph line
- Hartford, Conn.: Horace Wells first uses nitrous oxide as dental anesthetic
- Paris: Karl Marx meets Friedrich Engels
- First book published to include photographic illustrations, Pencil of Nature
- Germany: Mendelssohn composes Violin Concerto
- U.S.: Poe publishes "The Purloined Letter"
- Iceland: Last great auk killed
- 1845
- Concord, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne edits Journal of an African
Cruiser for Horatio Bridge, USN.
- Jan....New York: Rainbow, first clipper ship, launched
- Jan. 29...U.S.: Poe publishes "The Raven"
- Mar. 3...U.S.: Florida becomes 27th state
- Mar. 4...Washington, D.C.: Polk inaugurated
- May...Pittsburgh: first wire cable aqueduct suspension bridge opens
- June 8...Nashville, Tenn.: former President Andrew Jackson dies
- July 4....Concord, Mass.: Henry David Thoreau moves into Walden Pond home
- Aug. 28...Washington, D.C.: Scientific American starts publication
- October 2....Concord, Mass.: Hawthornes leave Old Manse
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne moves family into mother's home
- Ireland: Potato famine begins; immigrants come to U.S.
- Paris: Alexandre Dumas publishes The Count of Monte Cristo
- West Boylston, Mass.: Erastus Bigelow opens power loom factory for carpets
- Poland Springs, Me.: water is first bottled here
- England: Charles Darwin publishes Voyage of the Beagle
- 1846
- Jan. 13...Texas: U.S. begins war with Mexico
- U.S.: Nancy Johnson invents first hand-cranked ice cream maker
- March....New York: Herman Melville publishes Typee
- Apr. 13...U.S.: Pennsylvania Railroad officially chartered
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne becomes Surveyor of Port in Custom
House
- June 5....New York: Nathaniel Hawthorne's Mosses from an Old
Manse published by Wiley and Putnam
- June 15...U.S.: Oregon Treaty establishes 49th parallel as boundary with Canada
- June 19...Hoboken, N.J.: first official baseball game
- June 22...Boston, Mass.: Julian Hawthorne born to Nathaniel and Sophia
- July...Concord, Mass.: Thoreau spends night in jail in protest of Mexican War tax
- Aug. 10....Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution opens (founded by 1829 bequest
from James Smithson, who never came to America)
- Aug 31...Maine: Thoreau visits Mount Kathahdin in Maine
- Sept. 10...Elias Howe patents first sewing machine
- Sept. 23...Germany: John Galle discovers Neptune
- Oct. 16...Boston: Ether demonstrated as anesthetic for surgery
- Russia: Dostoyevsky's Poor Folk published
- England: Corn Laws repealed
- 1847
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne moves family to Mall Street,
along with mother and sisters
- Feb. 11...Thomas Alva Edison is born
- Mar. 9...Vera Cruz, Mexico: first amphibious landing by U.S. Army
- U.S. captures Mexico City; Gen. Winfield Scott and Gen. Franklin Pierce command troops
- July 24...Salt Lake City, Utah: Mormons found city
- Sept. 6....Concord, Mass.: Henry David Thoreau leaves Walden
- Oct. 1...Nantucket, Mass.: Maria Mitchell discovers comet
- Cambridge, Mass.: Longfellow publishes Evangeline, reviewed by Hawthorne
- Chicago: McCormick Harvesting Machinery Co. opens
- England: Brontes publish Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre
- Italy: Ascanio Sobrero discovers nitroglycerine
- U.S.: Richard March Hoe patents rotary printing press
- U.S.: Asa Gray publishes Manual of Botany
- Germany: Hermann von Helmhotz publishes law of conservation of energy
- 1848
- Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne becomes manager of Lyceum, invites
Emerson, Thoreau, Agassiz, Horace Mann, to lecture
- Jan. 24...California: Sutter discovers gold; Gold Rush begins, but
more so in 1849
- Jan. 26...Concord, Mass.: Thoreau delivers lecture, "Civil Disobedience"
- Feb. 23...Washington, D.C.: John Quincy Adams dies
- China: Taiping Rebellion begins, resulting in 20 million dead
- Germany: Revolution put down; many emigrate
- Bangor, Me.: John Curtis perfects chewing gum
- Mexico cedes territory to U.S. in Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo, ending Mexican War
- July 19..Seneca Falls, N.Y.: Women's Rights Convention, by Elizabeth Cady Stanton
and Lucretia Mott
- New York: Charles Burton creates first baby carriage
- Salem, Mass.: Essex Institute founded
- New York: utopian Oneida Community is formed
- U.S.: Stephen Foster writes song, "Oh, Susanna!"
- England: William Makepeace Thackeray publishes Vanity Fair
- Europe: Marx and Engels publish Communist Manifesto
- Nov. 7....Washington, D.C.: Zachary Taylor, a Whig, elected President (first on first
Tuesday in November)
- Boston, Mass.: Alcott family moves to Pinckney Street; Mrs. Alcott supports family
as a visitor to the poor
- 1849
- April 12..U.S.: Walter Hunt patents first safety pin
- May 14....Concord, Mass.: E. P. Peabody publishes "Resistance
to Civil Government," later retitled, "Civil Disobedience"
- May 30....Concord, Mass.: Thoreau publishes A Week on the Concord and Merrimack
Rivers
- Roxbury, Mass.: Waltham Watch Co. founded
- June 7...Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne fired as Surveyor of Port
- July 31...Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne's mother dies
- Sept. 3....South Berwick, Me.: Sarah Orne Jewett born
- September....Salem, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne starts writing The
Scarlet Letter
- Oct. 7...Edgar Allan Poe dies
- Venice: unmanned Austrian balloon drops bombs for first time from air
- Brooklyn, N.Y.: Pharmaceutical firm Pfizer, Inc., formed, issues candy-coated dewormer
- Paris: Joseph Monier invents reinforced concrete
- 1850
- March 16..Boston, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter
published by Ticknor, Reed and Fields
- May...Lenox, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne moves family to Tanglewood cottage
- U.S.: Emerson publishes Representative Men
- July 19..Fire Island, N.Y.: Margaret Fuller dies in shipwreck; Thoreau and Channing, sent by Emerson, can't find
remains
- June...New York: Harper's Magazine begins publication
- July 9....Washington, D.C.: Zachary Taylor dies and Millard Fillmore becomes President, signs
the Compromise of 1850, supported by Pierce but not
by abolitionists
- Aug. 5...Stockbridge, Mass.: Nathaniel Hawthorne meets Herman Melville at a picnic
- England: Charles Dickens publishes David Copperfield
- England: Elizabeth Barrett Browning publishes Sonnets from the Portuguese
- Aug. 28...Weimar, Germany: Wagner's Lohengrin performed (Wagner still in hiding
in Switzerland after German revolution fails)
- Sept. 9...U.S.: California admitted as 31st state
- U.S.: Aeta Life Insurance Company issues its first policies
- Buffalo, N.Y.: American Express formed
- San Francisco: Levi Strauss & Co. founded
- Washington, D.C.: Emmanuel Leutze finishes painting Washington Crosses the
Delaware, (destroyed in Germany in World War II, but a
second version is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)
- England: Francis Dalton invents the teletype
- Brooklyn, N.Y.: 16 English sparrows imported to control insects
Other chronologies online
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