1860s

From top left, clockwise: Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell formulates the classical theory of electromagnetic radiation, bringing together for the first time electricity, magnetism, and light as different manifestations of the same phenomenon; the Meiji Restoration leads to enormous changes in Japan's political and social structure; the International Workingmen's Association is formed in 1864, aimed at uniting a variety of different left-wing socialist, communist and anarchist groups; the Battle of Avay, fought in 1868 during the Paraguayan War, the bloodiest inter-state war in Latin America's history; execution in 1867 of Maximilian I of Mexico, ruler of the Second Mexican Empire, established during the Second French intervention in Mexico; the Battle of Gettysburg, the turning point of the American Civil War, fought in the United States from 1861 to 1865, between the North (the Union) and the South (the Confederacy) as a result of the long-standing controversy over the enslavement of black people; the Suez Canal is inaugurated in 1869; Victor Emmanuel meets Garibaldi near Teano in 1860, at the end of the Expedition of the Thousand.

The 1860s (pronounced "eighteen-sixties") was a decade of the Gregorian calendar that began on January 1, 1860 and ended on December 31, 1869.

The decade was noted for featuring numerous major societal shifts in the Americas. In North America, the election of Free Soiler Abraham Lincoln to the presidency in 1860 in the United States led to the secession of eleven southern states as the Confederate States of America (CSA). The resulting American Civil War (1861–1865) would be among the first industrial wars, featuring advanced technology such as steel warships and machine guns. The victory of the Union and subsequent abolition of slavery would contribute to the decline of the global slave trade. Conflict in Mexico ensued after the French Empire installed Maximilian I as Emperor of Mexico; former President Benito Suarez would regain his position in 1867 after a power struggle.

In South America, the Triple Alliance of the Empire of Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay in the Paraguayan War (1864–1870) would be among the bloodiest conflicts in the continent's history, leading to the death of almost 60% of the Paraguayan population.

In Europe, the formation of the union of Austria-Hungary in 1867 and the ongoing campaign to unify Italy by Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia-Piedmont would affect the European balance of power. The United Kingdom would continue engaging in a series of conflicts known as the New Zealand Wars with the indigenous Māori, with the New Zealand land confiscations beginning in 1863.

In Asia, the Meiji Restoration of 1868 would begin the process of transforming Japan into a global imperial power. The Qing Dynasty of China would experience decline following its defeat to the British in 1860 in the Second Opium War. In 1864, the Russian Empire would embark upon the Circassian genocide in the Caucasus, leading to the deaths or expulsion of at least 75% of the Circassian people.

The last living person from this decade was Nellie Spencer, who died on November 13, 1982.

Politics and wars

Emperor Maximilian being executed (1867), marking the end of the Second Mexican Empire

Wars

  • French occupation of Mexico (1863–1867). Replacement of President of Mexico Benito Juárez (1861–1863) at first with Juan Nepomuceno Almonte (1863–1864) and then by Emperor Maximilian of Mexico (1864–1867) with the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire. Juárez eventually manages to recover his position (1867–1872).
  • On 18 October 1860, the first Convention of Peking formally ended the Second Opium War.
  • The American Civil War which lasted from 1861 to 1865.[1]
  • The Paraguayan War (1864–1870) starts in South America, with the invasion of Paraguay by the Triple Alliance (Empire of Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay). It will kill almost 60% of the country's population.
  • The main phase of the New Zealand Wars between British colonials and the Māori population begins with the First Taranaki War in 1860. The most significant campaign is the Invasion of the Waikato in 1863, which sees some 14,000 British and colonial troops engaged.
    The Battle of Königgrätz was the decisive battle of the Austro-Prussian War
  • The Kingdom of Prussia under Bismarck invaded Denmark in 1864, which ended in the division of Schleswig, the location of a pro-German revolt, between Prussia and the Austrian Empire. Though Prussia and Austria had both fought side by side in this war, Prussia later attacked Austria in the Austro-Prussian war of 1866. The technological and logistical superiority of Prussia's armed forces obliterated Austria and its allies, the former also having to deal with Prussia's ally Italy in Venice. By the end of these conflicts, Prussia was seen as the most powerful state in Germany, and had total hegemony over the other German states. The NGF was formed after the Austro-Prussian war, uniting the states of north Germany, and Prussia soon led it into another conflict with France.
  • The Bhutan War between the British Empire and Bhutan lasted from 1864 to 1865. It ended in a British victory and the loss of some Bhutanese territory to British India.
  • The British Expedition to Abyssinia was a rescue mission and punitive expedition carried out in 1868 by the armed forces of the British Empire against the Ethiopian Empire.
  • Conclusion of the Russo-Circassian War (1763–1864) resulting in Russian victory and subsequent Circassian genocide and diaspora.

Internal conflicts

American Civil War: Battle of Antietam by Thure de Thulstrup

Prominent political events

Political map of the world in 1860

Assassinations and attempts

Prominent assassinations, targeted killings, and assassination attempts include:

Year Date Name Position Culprits Country Description Image
1860 March 24 Ii Naosuke Tairō of the Tokugawa Shogunate 17 young samurai loyalists Japan While Naosuke was at staying at the Edo Castle a group of 17 loyalist ambushed and was decapitated.
1861 October 23 Jorge Córdova president of Bolivia Colonel Plácido Yáñez Bolivia Jorge was captured by Colonel Plácido Yáñez and executed along with 50 other prisoners.
1862 January 11 José Santos Guardiola President of Honduras unknown presidential guard Honduras Jose was sleeping with his wife Ana Arbizú y Flores when an unknown assassin shot him and fled.
1863 May 12 Radama II King of Madagascar Men led by Rainivoninahitriniony Madagascar Radama's absolutism in pursuing dramatic reforms in disregard of the advice of his ministers ultimately turned them against him. In a coup led by his prime minister, Rainivoninahitriniony, Radama II was strangled on May 12, 1863.
1863 October 30 Serizawa Kamo chief of Shinsen-gumi likely Hijikata, Okita, Yamanami Keisuke, Inoue, Harada or Tōdō and Saitō Japan While sleeping with a woman named Oume he was assassinated by an unknown assassin.
1865 March 27 Manuel Isidoro Belzu Humérez President of Bolivia A group of men led by Mariano Melgarejo Bolivia When Belzu entered the Palacio Quemado for a meeting with Mariano Melgarejo he was ambushed by Melgarejo and a group of men who murdered him.
1865 April 14 Abraham Lincoln President of America John Wilkes Booth United States of America On the night of April 14 of 1865, John Wilkes Booth sneaked into Ford's Theatre and assassinated the President whilst he watched Our America Cousin. Image of Lincoln being shot by Booth while sitting in a theater booth.
1868 February 19 Venancio Flores and Bernardo Prudencio Berro President of Uruguay Group of unknown assassins Uruguay Four days after stepping down as President, Flores and Berro were murdered by a group of unidentified assassins in Montevideo.
1868 April 7 Thomas D'Arcy McGee Member of the Canadian Parliament for Montreal West Patrick J. Whelan Canada McGee was entering a boarding house in Ottawa when he was shot in the head by a Catholic Fenian sympathizer.
1868 October 22 James M. Hinds Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Arkansas's 2nd district George Clark United States En route to a campaign event for Grant near the village of Indian Bay in Monroe County, Clark shot Hinds and fellow Republican politician Joseph Brooks in the back with a shotgun. Brooks managed to stay on his horse and ride to the event to bring back assistance, before his death Hinds wrote a message to his wife revealing the killers identity as secretary of the Monroe County Democratic Party and local Klansman, George Clark.
1868 December 10 Sakamoto Ryōma and Nakaoka Shintarō Japanese samurai and influential figure of the Bakumatsu unknown assassin Tokugawa Shogunate Ryōma and Shintarō where eating in the Ōmiya Inn when an unknown broke in and killed the men and the bodyguards.
1869 December 7 Ōmura Masujirō military leader and theorist unknown assassin Japan Omura was stabbed in a Kyoto inn and died in Osaka.

Disasters and natural events

  • 1860 to 1861 – Upper Doab famine of 1860–1861
  • 1860 to 1861 – the Black Winter of 1860-1861 in Qajar Iran[2]
  • 1862 – the Great Flood of 1862, the largest flood in the recorded history of California, Oregon, and Nevada, inundated the western United States and portions of British Columbia and Mexico[3]
  • 1865 flooding of Bucharest, Romania, the result of snowmelt
  • April 27, 1865 - The Steamboat Sultana explodes due to overcrowding putting pressure on a patched boiler which makes it explode and instantly sink, killing up to 1800 people in the worst maritime disaster in US History.
  • May 12, 1866 – the 1866 Bingöl earthquake struck the Ottoman Empire, associated with faulting along the East Anatolian Fault
  • 1866 to 1868 – famine in French Algeria, 820,000 died[4]
  • December 18, 1867 – the 1867 Keelung earthquake and tsunami, affected the northern coast of Taiwan
  • 1867 to 1869 – the Swedish famine of 1867–1869
  • October 4–5, 1869 – the 1869 Saxby Gale, a Category 2 hurricane struck Canada's Bay of Fundy region[5]

Science and technology

Alfred Nobel invents dynamite in Sweden, patenting it in 1867
  • The Metropolitan Railway, the world's first underground railway, opens in London in 1863.[6]
  • The Plongeur, the first mechanically powered submarine in the world, is launched in 1863 after three years of construction.
  • The United States’ first transcontinental railroad is completed in 1869.
  • The Suez Canal in Egypt is opened in 1869.
  • Carl Wilhelm Borchardt discovers and proves Cayley's formula in graph theory in 1860.
  • The first transatlantic telegraph cable is successfully laid in 1866, enabling almost instant communication between America and Europe.
  • Alfred Nobel invents dynamite in Sweden, patenting it in 1867.
  • James Clerk Maxwell publishes his equations that quantify the relationship between electricity and magnetism, and shows that light is a form of electromagnetic radiation
  • Joseph Lister develops antiseptic methods for use in surgery in 1867, introducing carbolic acid as an antiseptic, turning it into the first widely used surgical antiseptic in surgery, and publishing Antiseptic Principle of the Practice of Surgery. As a result, deaths from infections due to surgery greatly decrease.[7]
  • Gregor Mendel formulates Mendel's laws of inheritance, the basis for genetics, in a two-part paper written in 1865 and published in 1866, although it is largely ignored until 1900.
  • Dmitri Mendeleev develops the modern periodic table
  • Helium was first detected during the total solar eclipse of August 18, 1868, in parts of India. It was the first eclipse expedition in which a spectroscope was used.
  • J. Norman Lockyer and Pierre Janssen are honored for their discovery of the nature of the Sun's prominences. They were the first to notice bright spectral emission lines when viewing the limb of the Sun without the aid of a total solar eclipse.
  • 1862 International Exhibition in London, England and 1867 International Exposition in Paris.
  • Louis Pasteur develops a technique of food preservation known as Pasteurization, advancing understanding of the Germ theory of disease.

Establishments

The signing of the First Geneva Convention by some of the major European powers in 1864
T. H. Huxley's famous debate in 1860 with Samuel Wilberforce was a key moment in the wider acceptance of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution

Religion

Culture

Literature and arts

Sports

Fashion

  • The Victorian era and its culture largely thrived from 1860 until 1901.
  • The culture of the Victorian era comes to America and remains in place until around the turn of the 20th century, where the year it ends is disputed as to whether it ended with the rise of progressivism in 1896 or with the death of Queen Victoria in 1901.
  • The start of the bicycle craze of 1860–1900

People

Politics

  • Louis Curchod, Director International Telecommunication Union

Famous and infamous personalities

Births

1860

Takaaki Kato
Douglas Hyde
Anton Chekhov
Carl Georg Barth
Lizzie Borden
Annie Oakley
Joseph Cook
Georgina Fraser Newhall
Juliette Gordon Low
Hjalmar Branting

1861

Helen Herron Taft
Rabindranath Tagore
Kate M. Gordon
Edith Roosevelt
Myra Belle Martin
James Naismith
  • Dixie Haygood, American magician (d. 1915)
  • Kallirhoe Parren, founder of the Greek women's movement (d. 1940)
  • Victoire Jean-Baptiste, Haitian politician (d. 1923)
  • Abba Jifar II, king of the Gibe Kingdom of Jimma (d. 1932)

1862

David Hilbert
Edith Wharton
  • January 9 – Carrie Clark Ward, American silent film actress (d. 1926)
  • January 14 – Carrie Derick, Canadian botanist and geneticist (d. 1941)
  • January 15 – Loie Fuller, American dancer (d. 1928)
  • January 23David Hilbert, German mathematician (d. 1943)
  • January 24Edith Wharton, American fiction writer (d. 1937)
  • January 29 – Frederick Delius, English composer (d. 1934)
  • January 30 – Walter Damrosch, German-born American orchestral conductor (d. 1950)
  • February 3 – James Clark McReynolds, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (d. 1946)
  • February 4
    • Hjalmar Hammarskjöld, 13th Prime Minister of Sweden (d. 1953)
    • George Ernest Morrison, Australian adventurer, journalist (d. 1920)
  • February 7 – Bernard Maybeck, American Arts and Crafts architect (d. 1957)
  • February 8 – Ferdinand Ferber, French Army captain, aviation pioneer (d. 1909)
  • February 17 – Edward German, English composer (d. 1936)
  • March 4 – Robert Emden, Swiss astrophysicist, meteorologist (d. 1940)
  • March 8 – George Frederick Phillips, Canadian-born American military hero (d. 1904)
  • March 13 – Jane Delano, American founder of the American Red Cross Nursing Service (d. 1919)
  • March 14 – Vilhelm Bjerknes, Norwegian physicist, meteorologist (d. 1951)
  • March 25 – George Sutherland, American politician, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (d. 1942)
  • March 28Aristide Briand, French politician, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1932)
  • March 29 – Adolfo Müller-Ury, Swiss-born American painter (d. 1947)
Gustav Klimt
Claude Debussy
Ida B. Wells
Andrew Fisher
Billy Hughes
Gerhart Hauptmann
  • Al Herpin (The Man Who Never Slept), notable French-born American insomniac (d. 1947)
  • Jessie King, Scottish author (unknown year of death)
  • Antoinette Kinney, American state senator (d. 1945)
  • Sufi Azizur Rahman, Bengali Muslim theologian and teacher (d. 1922)[16]

1863

Photo of Swami Vivekananda in 1893
Swami Vivekananda
Helen Dortch Longstreet
  • April 15 – Ida Freund, Austrian-born chemist and educator (d. 1914)
  • April 18 – Count Leopold Berchtold, Austro-Hungarian foreign minister (d. 1942)
  • April 20 – Helen Dortch Longstreet, American social advocate, librarian and newspaper woman (d. 1962)
  • April 28 – Josiah Thomas, Australian politician (d. 1933)
  • April 29
  • May 18 – Ehrhard Schmidt, German admiral (d. 1946)
  • May 21 – Archduke Eugen of Austria, Austrian field marshal (d. 1954)
  • May 24 – George Grey Barnard, American sculptor (d. 1938)
  • May 29 – Arthur Mold, English cricketer (d. 1921)
  • June 2 – Felix Weingartner, Austrian conductor (d. 1942)
  • June 13 – Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon, English fashion designer (d. 1942)
  • June 17 – Charles Michael, Duke of Mecklenburg, head of the House of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (d. 1934)
Hugo Winckler
Amélie Rives Troubetzkoy
Henry Ford
Carlos I of Portugal
Edvard Munch

1864

Wilhelm Wien
Marguerite Durand
Ana Echazarreta
Max Weber
Richard Strauss, 1918
Walther Nernst
Alois Alzheimer
  • April 10
    • Clara Lachmann, Danish-Swedish patron of the arts (d. 1920)[18]
    • Michael Mayr, 2nd Chancellor of Austria (d. 1922)
    • Tully Marshall, American actor (d. 1943)
  • April 11 – Johanna Elberskirchen, German feminist (d. 1943)
  • April 12 – Rosslyn Wemyss, 1st Baron Wester Wemyss, British admiral (d. 1933)
  • April 14 – Artur Văitoianu, Romanian general and politician, 27th Prime Minister of Romania (d. 1956)
  • April 21Max Weber, German sociologist (d. 1920)
  • May 5 – Sir Henry Wilson, 1st Baronet, British field marshal, politician (d. 1922)
  • May 10 – Léon Gaumont, French film pioneer (d. 1946)
  • May 15 – Vilhelm Hammershøi, Danish painter (d. 1916)
  • May 20 – Vasily Gurko, Russian general (d. 1937)
  • May 25 – Princess Anne of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg, British-born German aristocrat, aviation enthusiast (d. 1927, officially declared dead February 1928)
  • June 2 – Wilhelm Souchon, German admiral (d. 1946)
  • June 3 – Ransom E. Olds, American automotive pioneer (d. 1950)
  • June 10 – Ninian Comper, British architect (d. 1960)
  • June 11Richard Strauss, German composer (d. 1949)
  • June 13 – Dwight B. Waldo, American educator, historian (d. 1939)
  • June 14 – Alois Alzheimer, German psychiatrist, neuropathologist (d. 1915)
  • June 22Hermann Minkowski, German mathematician (d. 1909)
  • June 25Walther Nernst, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1941)
  • June 30 – Frederick Bligh Bond, English architect (d. 1945)
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Emma Sheridan Fry
  • Ali Rikabi, 2-time prime minister of Jordan (d. 1943)

1865 * January 5 – Julio Garavito Armero, Colombian astronomer (d. 1920)

Elma Danielsson
  • March 1 – Elma Danielsson, Swedish socialist, journalist (d. 1936)
  • March 10 – Tan Sitong, Chinese reformist leader (d. 1898)
  • March 15 – Sui Sin Far, English-born writer (d. 1914)
  • March 19 – William Morton Wheeler, American entomologist (d. 1937)
  • March 30 – Heinrich Rubens, German physicist (d. 1922)
  • April – Richard Rushall, British sea captain and businessman (d. 1953)
  • April 1 – Richard Adolf Zsigmondy, Austrian-born chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1929)
  • April 2 – Gyorche Petrov, Macedonian and Bulgarian revolutionary (d. 1921)
  • April 6 – Victory Bateman, American stage and screen actress (d. 1926)
  • April 9
  • April 14 – Alfred Hoare Powell, English Arts and Crafts architect, and designer and painter of pottery (d. 1960)
  • April 16 – Harry Chauvel, Australian Army general (d. 1945)[22]
  • April 18 – Leónidas Plaza, 16th President of Ecuador (d. 1932)
  • April 19 – Josephine Hall, American actress and soprano (d. 1920)
  • April 26 – Akseli Gallen-Kallela, Finnish artist (d. 1931)[23]
  • April 28
    • Vital Brazil, Brazilian physician, immunologist (d. 1950)
    • Charles W. Woodworth, American entomologist (d. 1940)
Pieter Zeeman
King George V of the United Kingdom
Philipp Scheidemann
Julia Marlowe
Charles W. Clark
Hovhannes Abelian
Warren G. Harding
Jean Sibelius
Rudyard Kipling
  • Ernest Hogan, African-American dancer, musician, and comedian (d. 1909)
  • Habibullah Qurayshi, Bengali Islamic scholar and educationist (d. 1943)[27]

1866

Frank Tudor
Emilia Broomé
Matthew Charlton
Wakatsuki Reijirō
Butch Cassidy
Anne Sullivan
H. G. Wells
La Goulue
Thomas Hunt Morgan
Wassily Kandinsky
  • July 6 – Charles Mangin, French general (d. 1925)
  • July 9 – Macklyn Arbuckle, American actor (d. 1931)
  • July 13 – La Goulue, French dancer (d. 1929)
  • July 25 – Frederick Blackman, English plant physiologist (d. 1947)
  • July 27 – António José de Almeida, 6th President of Portugal and 64th Prime Minister of Portugal (d. 1929)
  • July 28Beatrix Potter, English children's author (Peter Rabbit and Jemima Puddle-Duck) (d. 1943)
  • August 2 – Adrien de Gerlache, Belgian naval officer and explorer (d. 1934)
  • August 4 – Gheorghe Mărdărescu, Romanian general and politician (d. 1938)
  • August 6 – Chief Thunderbird, Native American actor (d. 1946)
  • August 8 – Matthew Henson, African-American explorer (d. 1955)
  • August 12 – Jacinto Benavente, Spanish writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1954)
  • August 14 – Dmitry Merezhkovsky, Russian novelist, poet and religious thinker (d. 1941)
  • September 1
Sun Yat-sen
Ramsay MacDonald
  • Ilia Solomonovich Abelman, Russian astronomer (d. 1898)[30]
  • William M. Dalton, American Old West outlaw (d. 1894)

1867

Carl Laemmle
Cy Young
Chris Watson
Queen Mary
Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim
Frank Lloyd Wright
Marie Curie
Nakamura Yoshikoto
Elena Meissner
  • Lilian Bell, American novelist and travel writer (d. 1929)
  • Habib Pacha Es-Saad, 3rd Prime Minister and 2nd President of Lebanon (d. 1942)
  • Florence Fuller, South African-born Australian artist (d. 1946)
  • Zhang Haipeng, Chinese and Manchukuoan general (d. 1949)
  • Abdul Awwal Jaunpuri, Indian Islamic scholar and author (d. 1921)[35]
  • Elena Meissner, Romanian women's rights activist (d. 1940)

1868

Felix Hoffmann
Countess Markiewicz
Nicholas II of Russia
John L. Hines
Robert Falcon Scott
Karl Landsteiner
Miklós Horthy
  • July 2 – Traian Moșoiu, Romanian general and politician (d. 1932)
  • July 4 – Henrietta Swan Leavitt, American astronomer (d. 1921)[49]
  • July 12 – Stefan George, German poet (d. 1933)
  • July 14 – Gertrude Bell, English archaeologist, writer, spy and administrator (d. 1926)[50]
  • July 15 – Nobuyoshi Mutō, Japanese field marshal and ambassador (d. 1933)
  • July 17 – Mikhail Bakhirev, Russian admiral (d. 1920)
  • July 19 – Florence Foster Jenkins, American socialite and amateur operatic soprano (d. 1944)[51]
  • July 20 – Patriarch Miron of Romania, 38th Prime Minister of Romania (d. 1939)
  • July 24 – Princess Srivilailaksana The Princess of Suphanburi daughter of King Chulalongkorn of Siam and Chao Chom Manda Pae Bunnag (d.1904)
  • July 28 – Theodor Wulf, German physicist and Jesuit (d. 1946)
  • August 5 – Oskar Merikanto, Finnish composer (d. 1924)
  • August 6Paul Claudel, French poet, dramatist and diplomat (d. 1955)[52]
  • August 7
    • Oo Zun, Burmese social worker and Buddhist nun (d. 1944)
    • Martin Wetzer, Finnish general (d. 1954)
  • August 10 – Hugo Eckener, German dirigible engineer, Commander of Graf Zeppelin I (d. 1954)
  • August 23 – Edgar Lee Masters, American poet, biographer and dramatist (d. 1950)
  • August 26 – Charles Stewart, Premier of Alberta (d. 1946)
  • September 1 – Henri Bourassa, Canadian politician and publisher (d. 1952)
  • September 6 – Heinrich Häberlin, Swiss politician, member of the Federal Council (d. 1947)
  • September 17 – James Alexander Calder, Canadian politician (d. 1956)
  • September 22 – John T. Raulston, American state judge (Scopes Monkey Trial) (d. 1956)
Mary Brewster Hazelton
Arturo Alessandri
Fritz Haber

1869

Else Lasker-Schüler
Stanisław Wojciechowski
Edith Anne Stoney
Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
Emilio Aguinaldo
Calouste Gulbenkian
Hans Spemann
Mohandas Gandhi
Victor Emmanuel III
André Gide
Henri Matisse
Komitas

Deaths

1860

Anne Isabella Milbanke
  • January 1 – Thomas Hobbes Scott, English clergyman (b. 1783)
  • January 5 – John Neumann, Saint and Roman Catholic Bishop of Philadelphia (b. 1811)
  • January 10 – Ezequiel Zamora, leader of the Federalist Army in Venezuela (b. 1817)
  • January 13 – William Mason, American politician (b. 1786)
  • January 18 – John Nelson (lawyer), American lawyer (b. 1791)
  • January 27
    • János Bolyai, Hungarian mathematician (b. 1802)
    • Thomas Brisbane, Scottish astronomer (b. 1773)
  • January 29
    • Ernst Moritz Arndt, German poet and author (b. 1769)[65]
    • Stéphanie de Beauharnais, Grand Duchess of Baden (b. 1789)
  • February 29 – George Bridgetower, Afro-Polish violinist (b. 1778)
  • March 6 – Justus Johann Friedrich Dotzauer, German cellist, composer (b. 1783)
  • March 14 – Carl Ritter von Ghega, Albanian-born Venetian road engineer (b. 1802)
  • March 17 – Anna Brownell Jameson, British art historian (b. 1794)[66]
  • March 25 – James Braid, Scottish surgeon (b. 1795)
  • May 1 – Anders Sandøe Ørsted, 3rd Prime Minister of Denmark (b. 1778)
  • May 10 – Theodore Parker, American preacher, Transcendentalist, and abolitionist (b. 1810)
  • May 12 – Sir Charles Barry, English architect (b. 1795)[67]
  • May 21Phineas Gage, improbable American head injury survivor (b. 1823)
  • June 26 – George Montgomery White, American politician (b. 1828)[68]
  • June 30 – Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert, German naturalist (b. 1780)
Charles Goodyear
Arthur Schopenhauer
  • Dai Xi, Chinese painter (b. 1801)

1861

Frederick William IV of Prussia
Abdülmecid I
Xianfeng Emperor
Ernst Anschütz

1862

Samuel Colt
John Tyler
Henry David Thoreau
Judith Montefiore
Martin Van Buren

1863

Antonio Valero de Bernabé


Eugène Delacroix
Jacob Grimm

1864

John Sedgwick
J. E. B. Stuart
Juan José Flores
Princess Caraboo
  • Fu Shanxiang, Chinese scholar, Chancellor (b. 1833)

1865

Abraham Lincoln
John Wilkes Booth
Paul Bogle
Henry John Temple
Leopold I of Belgium

1866 * January (date unknown) – Thomas Baldwin Marsh, American religious leader (b. 1799)

  • January 16 – Phineas Quimby, American physician (b. 1802)
  • January 19 – Harriet Ludlow Clarke, British artist
  • January 23 – Thomas Love Peacock, English satirist (b. 1785)
  • January 31 – Friedrich Rückert, German poet, translator and professor of Oriental languages (b. 1788)
  • February 25 – Sarah Ann Gill, Barbadian national heroine (b. 1795)
  • March 4 – Alexander Campbell, Irish/U.S. founder of the Disciples of Christ (b. 1788)
  • March 6 – William Whewell, English scientist, philosopher and historian of science (b. 1794)
  • March 9 – Jakob Joseph Matthys, Swiss Catholic priest (b. 1802)
  • March 20 – Rikard Nordraak, Norwegian composer (b. 1842)
  • March 21 – Nadezhda Durova, first female Russian military officer (b. 1783)
  • March 24 – Maria Amalia of Naples and Sicily, Queen of France (b. 1782)[79]
  • March 28 – Solomon Foot, American politician (b. 1802)
  • March 29 – John Keble, British churchman (b. 1792)
  • April 1 – Elizabeth Jesser Reid, English social reformer, founder of Bedford College (b. 1789)
  • April 4 – William Dick, founder of Edinburgh Veterinary College (b. 1793)
  • April 5 – Thomas Hodgkin, British physician (b. 1798)
  • April 7 – Johann Sedlatzek, German flautist (b. 1789)
  • April 12 – Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood, English Member of Parliament and developer (b. 1801)
  • May 13 – Nikolai Brashman, Russian mathematician of Czech origin (b. 1796)
  • May 29Winfield Scott, American general and presidential candidate (b. 1786)
  • June 7 – Chief Sealth, Native American for whom Seattle is named (b. c. 1786)
  • June 17 – Lewis Cass, American military officer, politician, and statesman (b. 1782)
Bernhard Riemann
  • July 20Bernhard Riemann, German mathematician (b. 1826)
  • July 25 – Floride Calhoun, Second Lady of the United States (b. 1792)
  • July 29 – Madame Clicquot Ponsardin, French champagne producer (b. 1777)
  • August 1 – John Ross, long-serving principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, of natural causes, in Washington D. C. (born 1790 in Cherokee Nation East).
  • August 6 – Christian Eric Fahlcrantz, Swedish writer (b. 1790)
  • August 20 – Maria De Mattias, Italian Catholic saint (b. 1805)
  • August 29 – Tokugawa Iemochi, 14th shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan (b. 1846)
  • September 4 – Theresa Pulszky, European author (b. 1819)
  • September 30 – Per Gustaf Svinhufvud af Qvalstad, Swedo-Finnish treasurer of Tavastia province, manor host, and paternal grandfather of President P. E. Svinhufvud (b. 1804)[80]
  • October 13 – Celadon Leeds Daboll, American merchant and inventor (b. 1818)
  • October 18 – Manuel Bulnes, Chilean general and politician, President of Chile (b. 1799)
  • November 11 – Agustín Jerónimo de Iturbide y Huarte, Prince Imperial of Mexico (b. 1807)
  • November 14 – King Miguel I of Portugal (b. 1802)
  • November 26 – Jean-Jacques Willmar, Luxembourg politician (b. 1792)
  • December 1 – George Everest, Welsh geodesist (b. 1790)
  • December 21 – William J. Fetterman, United States Army officer (b. 1835?)[81]
  • December 21 – Mercedes Marín del Solar, Chilean poet, reform educator (b. 1804)
  • December 25 – Hayrullah Efendi, Ottoman physician, historian, and official (b. 1818)[82]
  • Du Bois Agett, early settler of Western Australia (b. 1796)

1867

Emperor Kōmei
Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico
King Otto of Greece
Michael Faraday
Metropolitan Abuna Salama III
Filaret, Metropolitan of Moscow
  • July – Thomas Baker, Methodist missionary to Fiji (b. 1832)
  • July 1 – Thomas Francis Meagher, American Civil War general (b. 1823)
  • July 26 – King Otto of Greece (b. 1815)
  • July 31
    • Benoît Fourneyron, French engineer, inventor of the turbine (b. 1802)
    • Catharine Maria Sedgwick, American "domestic fiction" novelist (b. 1789)
  • August 3 – August Böckh, German scholar and antiquarian (b. 1785)
  • August 6 – David R. Porter, American politician (b. 1788)
  • August 8 – Maria Theresa of Austria, second Queen consort of Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies (b. 1816)
  • August 21 – Juan Álvarez, interim president of Mexico in 1855 (b. 1790)[85]
  • August 25Michael Faraday, English chemist and physicist (b. 1791)
  • August 31Charles Baudelaire, French writer (b. 1821)
  • September 10 – Simon Sechter, Austrian music teacher (b. 1788)
  • September 26 – James Ferguson, Scotland-born American astronomer (b. 1797)
  • October – Kerekorio Manu Rangi, last king of Easter Island, tuberculosis (b. 1853/5)
  • October 9 – Ignacy Feliks Dobrzyński, Polish composer (b. 1807)
  • October 11 – Gunatitanand Swami, Indian paramahamsa of the Hindu Swaminarayan Sampraday sect (b. 1785)
  • October 23 – Franz Bopp, German linguist (b. 1791)
  • October 25 – Abuna Salama III, metropolitan of the Ethiopian Church
  • October 31 – William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, Irish astronomer (b. 1800)
  • November 19
    • Fitz-Greene Halleck, American poet (b. 1790)
    • Ren Zhu, Chinese leader of the Nian Rebellion, killed in battle (b. 1830?)
  • December 1 – Filaret, Metropolitan of Moscow, Russian Orthodox leader (b. 1782)
  • December 10 – Sakamoto Ryōma, Japanese samurai, politician and businessman (b. 1836)
  • December 26 – József Kossics, Hungarian-Slovenian Catholic priest, writer and ethnologist (b. 1788)
  • December 30 – Sarah Booth, English actress (b. 1793)

1868 * January 20 – Damien Marchesseault, 7th Mayor of Los Angeles (suicide) (b. 1818)

John Crawfurd
Gioachino Rossini
Adah Isaacs Menken
Mongkut

1869

Hector Berlioz
Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer

See also

References

  1. ^ "American Civil War". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 4 May 2014.
  2. ^ Kazemi, Ranin (2017-05-01). "The Black Winter of 1860–61: War, Famine, and the Political Ecology of Disasters in Qajar Iran". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 37 (1): 24–48. doi:10.1215/1089201x-3821285. ISSN 1089-201X.
  3. ^ Guinn, J. M. (1890). "Exceptional Years: A History of California Floods and Drought". Historical Society of Southern California, Los Angeles (1890). 1 (5): 33–39. doi:10.2307/41167825. ISSN 2163-2995. JSTOR 41167825.
  4. ^ Slobodkin, Yan (2023-11-15). The Starving Empire: A History of Famine in France's Colonies. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-7236-8.
  5. ^ "The Deadliest Atlantic Tropical Cyclones, 1492-1996". www.nhc.noaa.gov. Retrieved 2024-12-14.
  6. ^ Lin, Luna (10 September 2014). "A short history of world metro systems – in pictures". the Guardian. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  7. ^ "Medical Advances Timeline". www.infoplease.com.
  8. ^ Richmond, Sam (2023-11-06). "1st college football game ever was New Jersey vs. Rutgers in 1869". NCAA.com. Retrieved 2025-03-03.
  9. ^ Morris, A.J.A. (January 2011). "Bottomley, Horatio William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31981. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 16 June 2014. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  10. ^ Edmonds, , J.; Bunton, M. (3 January 2008). "Sir Archibald Murray". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35155.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  11. ^ Duffy, Michael. "Who's Who- Gustav Bachmann". First World War.com. Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  12. ^ The Quarterly Review of Historical Studies. Institute of Historical Studies. 1995. p. 38.
  13. ^ Dunn, Elwood D.; Beyan, Amos J.; Burrowes, Carl Patrick (2000). Historical Dictionary of Liberia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. pp. 167–168. ISBN 9781461659310.
  14. ^ "S. (Simon) de Graaff" (in Dutch). Parlementair Documentatie Centrum. Archived from the original on 31 October 2019. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
  15. ^ "August Karl Gustav Bier (1861–1949) | the Embryo Project Encyclopedia".
  16. ^ Ahmadullah, Mufti (2016). Mashayekh-e-Chatgam. Vol. 1 (3 ed.). Dhaka: Ahmad Publishers. pp. 137–139. ISBN 978-984-92106-4-1.
  17. ^ "Pierre, baron de Coubertin | Biography, Olympics, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 15 April 2022.
  18. ^ Kjellander, Rune (1979). "Clara Lachmann". Dictionary of Swedish National Biography (in Swedish). Vol. 22. p. 23.
  19. ^ "仙頭武央 ~日本海海戦 対馬艦長~". bujinkensyokai. Retrieved September 4, 2022.
  20. ^ James Louis Garvin; Franklin Henry Hooper; Warren E. Cox (1929). The Encyclopædia Britannica: A New Survey of Universal Knowledge. Encyclopædia britannica Company, Limited. p. 291.
  21. ^ Italian Navy website page dedicated to Enrico Millo, 2008 (in Italian).
  22. ^ Hill, Alec (1979). "'Chauvel, Sir Henry George (Harry) (1865–1945)'". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 11 January 2010.
  23. ^ O'Sullivan, James (April 26, 2015). "An artist's mark on the story of Finland (150th anniversary of Gallen-Kallela's birth)". thisisFINLAND. Retrieved April 26, 2022.
  24. ^ Cecil Edwards "John Monash" (State Electricity Commission of Victoria, 1970), p. 5.
  25. ^ Serle, Percival (1949). "Ryrie, Granville". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. Retrieved 2008-11-01.
  26. ^ "Death Record Detail: James Munroe Canty". West Virginia Archives and History, West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History. 2019. Archived from the original on August 2, 2020. Retrieved August 2, 2020.
  27. ^ Ahmadullah, Mufti (2016). Mashayekh-e-Chatgam. Vol. 1 (3 ed.). Dhaka: Ahmad Publishers. pp. 109–136. ISBN 978-984-92106-4-1.
  28. ^ Poel, JMG van der (12 November 2013). "Lovink, Hermanus Johannes (1866–1938)" (in Dutch). Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 8 June 2024. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
  29. ^ "James J. Corbett | American boxer". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  30. ^ Public Domain Herman Rosenthal (1901). "ABELMAN, ILIA SOLOMONOVICH". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 52.
  31. ^ Doel, HW van den (November 12, 2013). "Koningsberger, Jacob Christiaan (1867-1951)" (in Dutch). Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 20 July 2019. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  32. ^ Ames Township Archived 2007-10-09 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ "ACTON, Alfredo in "Dizionario Biografico"". www.treccani.it. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  34. ^ Robinson, Wilhelmena S. (1968). Historical Negro Biographies. International Library of Negro Life and History. New York: Publishers Company, Inc., under the auspices of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. p. 59. ISBN 9780877812036. LCCN 68002920. OCLC 1035607110 – via Internet Archive.
  35. ^ Afaz Uddin, Muhammad (2012). "Jaunpuri, Abdul Awal". In Sirajul Islam; Miah, Sajahan; Khanam, Mahfuza; Ahmed, Sabbir (eds.). Banglapedia: the National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Online ed.). Dhaka, Bangladesh: Banglapedia Trust, Asiatic Society of Bangladesh. ISBN 984-32-0576-6. OCLC 52727562. OL 30677644M. Retrieved 11 January 2026.
  36. ^ Philip James Bone (1914). The Guitar and Mandolin: Biographies of Celebrated Players and Composers. Schott. p. 243.
  37. ^ William Henry Kautt; William Kautt (1999). The Anglo-Irish War, 1916-1921: A People's War. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-275-96311-8.
  38. ^ The Crisis Publishing Company, Inc. (November 1980). The Crisis. The Crisis Publishing Company, Inc. p. 399.
  39. ^ "Robert A. Millikan – Biographical". nobelprize.org.
  40. ^ Frank Marshall Borras (1967). Maxim Gorky, the Writer: An Interpretation. Oxford. p. ix. ISBN 978-0-19-815622-2.
  41. ^ E. J. Freeman (1995). Edmond Rostand, Cyrano de Bergerac. University of Glasgow French and German Publications. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-85261-467-9.
  42. ^ Laura Paola Pellegrini (April 27, 2012). Le Fantôme de l'Opéra by Gaston Leroux: The novel's evolution and its theatrical and cinematic adaptations in the twentieth century. LED Edizioni Universitarie. p. 20. ISBN 978-88-7916-584-6.
  43. ^ Alexander Wasil Benko (1991). Emperor Alexander the First of Russia: A Sketch. A.W. Benko. p. 88.
  44. ^ Robert Falcon Scott. In the Hands of a Child. p. 7.
  45. ^ Douglas Percy Bliss (1978). Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Glasgow School of Art: Furniture in the School Collection. The School. p. 7.
  46. ^ Von Engel, A. (1957). "John Sealy Edward Townsend. 1868-1957". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 3: 256–272. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1957.0018. S2CID 186208966.
  47. ^ Rous, P. (1947). "Karl Landsteiner. 1868–1943". Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society. 5 (15): 294–324. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1947.0002. JSTOR 769085. S2CID 161789667.
  48. ^ Fiery Ted: Anzac Commander by Michael Smith (2008, Christchurch NZ) ISBN 978-0-473-13363-4
  49. ^ Lamb, Gregory M. (July 5, 2005). "Before computers, there were these humans..." The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  50. ^ Alan Myers (1995). Myers' Literary Guide: The North East. Mid Northumberland Arts Group. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-85754-199-1.
  51. ^ Nicholas Martin; Jasper Rees (5 May 2016). Florence Foster Jenkins. Pan Macmillan. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-5098-2469-4.
  52. ^ Paul Claudel (1964). The Correspondence, 1899-1926, Between Paul Claudel and André Gide. Beacon Press. p. 242.
  53. ^ Livro de Registo de Baptismos 1869 (folha 15 v.), Paróquia de Santa Maria do Castelo, Tavira – Arquivo Distrital de Faro
  54. ^ Born, Max, Arnold Johannes Wilhelm Sommerfeld, 1868–1951, Obituary Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society Volume 8, Number 21, pp. 274–296 (1952)
  55. ^ Goran, Morris (1967). The Story of Fritz Haber. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-8061-0756-1. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  56. ^ Eleanor H Porter (September 2018). Pollyanna : Om Illustrated Classics. Om Books International. p. 117. ISBN 978-93-80070-87-2.
  57. ^ Alyn Shipton (21 February 2002). Jazz Makers: Vanguards of Sound. Oxford University Press. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-19-976130-2.
  58. ^ "Blackwood, Algernon Henry". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31913. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  59. ^ Drinnon, Richard (1961). Rebel in Paradise: A Biography of Emma Goldman. University of Chicago Press. OCLC 266217.
  60. ^ Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1922–1941. Amsterdam: Elsevier. 1965.
  61. ^ McColl, Sandra (1996). Music criticism in Vienna, 1896-1897: critically moving forms. Oxford New York: Clarendon Press Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780198165644.
  62. ^ Linnankoski, Johannes – Doria (in Finnish)
  63. ^ Sheridan, Alan (1999). André Gide: a life in the present. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780674035270.
  64. ^ Smith, Danny D. "Biography of Edwin Arlington Robinson". A Virtual Tour of Robinson's Gardiner, Maine. Gardiner Public Library. Archived from the original on October 2, 2012. Retrieved December 4, 2021.
  65. ^ Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Arndt, Ernst Moritz" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  66. ^ One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Jameson, Anna Brownell". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 147.
  67. ^ "Sir Charles Barry | British architect". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
  68. ^ "George Montgomery White's death notice". The Wilmington Journal. Wilmington, North Carolina. July 19, 1860.
  69. ^ Stewart, Jon (2015). The cultural crisis of the Danish golden age: Heiberg, Martensen and Kierkegaard. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press. p. 39. ISBN 9788763542692.
  70. ^ Schopenhauer, Arthur (1999). Prize essay on the freedom of the will. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. p. xi. ISBN 9780521577663.
  71. ^ Overbeck, Franz (2002). On the Christianity of Theology Translated with an Introduction and Notes. Eugene: Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 58. ISBN 9781725242128.
  72. ^ Subodh Chandra Sengupta; Basu, Anjali, eds. (2002). সংসদ বাঙালি চরিতাভিধান (in Bengali). Vol. 1. Sahitya Sangsad. p. 463.
  73. ^ "Albert, Prince Consort | Biography, Children, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  74. ^ "Samuel Colt | American inventor and manufacturer". Britannica. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  75. ^ "IGNACIO COMONFORT" (in Spanish). Presidency de la Republica de Mexico. Archived from the original on May 30, 2019. Retrieved May 30, 2019.
  76. ^ Allardice, Bruce S. (2008). Confederate Colonels: A Biographical Register. Shades of Blue and Gray Series. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-8262-1809-4. OL 16839816M.
  77. ^ "Mrs Beeton". BBC. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  78. ^ Munske, Roberta R.; Kerns, Wilmer L., eds. (2004). Hampshire County, West Virginia, 1754–2004. Romney, West Virginia: The Hampshire County 250th Anniversary Committee. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-9715738-2-6. OCLC 55983178.
  79. ^ "Marie-Amélie de Bourbon | queen of France | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
  80. ^ PEHR EVIND SVINHUFVUD (1861–1944), 1ST REGENT OF FINLAND (1918), 3RD PRESIDENT OF FINLAND (1931–1937)
  81. ^ McDermott, John D. (Spring 1991). "Price of Arrogance: The Short and Controversial Life of William Judd Fetterman". Annals of Wyoming by Wyoming State Historical Society. 63 (2): 42–53.
  82. ^ Akün, Ömer Faruk (1998). "Hayrullah Efendi". TDV Encyclopedia of Islam, Vol. 17 (Hayal – Hi̇lâfi̇yat) (in Turkish). Istanbul: Turkiye Diyanet Foundation, Centre for Islamic Studies. pp. 67–75. ISBN 978-975-389-444-9.
  83. ^ Basadre, Jorge (2005) [First published 1939]. Historia de la República del Perú (1822 - 1933) [History of the Republic of Peru (1822 - 1933)] (in Spanish). Vol. 6 (9th ed.). Lima: El Comercio. pp. 252–253. ISBN 978-612-306-359-7.
  84. ^ Minster, Christopher (March 13, 2019). "Biography of Maximilian, Emperor of Mexico". ThoughtCo. Retrieved May 30, 2019.
  85. ^ "Juan Álvarez" (in Spanish). Presidencia de la Republica de Mexico. Archived from the original on May 28, 2019. Retrieved May 30, 2019.
  86. ^ Gordon, Margaret Maria (1881). The home life of sir David Brewster. D. Douglas. pp. 231–236. Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  87. ^ John Guy Porter; Patrick Moore (1967). Yearbook of Astronomy. W. W. Norton. p. 47.
  88. ^ William Harbutt Dawson (1888). German Socialism and Ferdinand Lassalle: A Biographical History of German Socialistic Movements During this Century. S. Sonnenschein. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-598-44389-2. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  89. ^ BBC Music Magazine. BBC Magazines. 2000. p. 45.
  90. ^ Edwin Legrand Sabin (1 January 1935). Kit Carson Days, 1809-1868: Adventures in the Path of Empire. U of Nebraska Press. p. 800. ISBN 0-8032-9238-4. {{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  91. ^ The Statistician and Economist: 1st-23d Issue 1876-1905/06. L.P. McCarty. 1876. p. 133.
  92. ^ Franceschetti, Donald (1999). Biographical encyclopedia of mathematicians. New York: Marshall Cavendish. p. 377. ISBN 9780761470717.
  93. ^ Edward Ledger (1874). The Era Almanack, Dramatic & Musical. Era. p. 2.
  94. ^ Day, Lance (1996). Biographical dictionary of the history of technology. London New York: Routledge. p. 1345. ISBN 9781134650194.

Further reading

  • 1860s in fashion – Clothing, Hair Styles and Personal Appearance.