Year |
United States |
Outside the United States |
1856 |
• Harold Henry Frederick (he dropped the
“k” from his name by 1878, possibly earlier) was
born August 19 in Utica, New York (d. 1898). |
• Sigmund Freud was born in Austria
(d. 1939). • Neanderthal skull was found in Feldhofer
Cave near Düsseldorf. |
1857 |
• Irish Republican Brotherhood
(the Fenians) was founded in New York. |
• National Portrait
Gallery was opened in London.
• Victorian and Albert Museum was opened in London.
• Transatlantic pipeline installation began (construction
continued through 1866). |
1858 |
• Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President
of the United States (1901-1909), was born in New York (d. 1919).
• Frederic’s father was killed in a railroad accident. |
• The Blessed Virgin Mary was reputed
to have appeared to Bernadette Soubirous (1844-1879) at Lourdes,
France. |
1859 |
|
• Origin
of Species, by Charles Darwin (1809-1882), was published.
• German Emperor William II
was born in Germany (d. 1941). |
1860 |
• Abraham Lincoln
(1809-1865) was elected 16th President of the United States
(1861-1865). • Free
Methodism was established. |
• 424,000 people from Britain and
914,000 people from Ireland immigrated to the United States
(between 1850-1860). |
1861 |
• Civil War
began on April 12. •
United States’ population numbered 32 million. |
• Royal Academy of Music was founded
in London. • Great Britain’s
population numbered 23 million. |
1862 |
• Edith Wharton
was born in New York (d. 1937). |
|
1863 |
• “Emancipation
Proclamation” became effective on January 1.
• National Academy of Sciences
was founded in Washington, D.C. |
• London Underground Railroad construction
began. |
1864 |
• Abraham Lincoln
(1809-1865) was re-elected President of the United States (1865).
• Nathaniel Hawthorne died
(b. 1804). • “In
God We Trust” first appeared on U.S. coins. |
• Pope Pius IX (1792-1878) issued
Syllabus Errorum, which condemns Liberalism, Socialism,
and Rationalism. |
|
1865 |
• Confederate States of America
formally surrendered at Appomattox on April 9. • Abraham
Lincoln was assassinated on April 14 (b. 1809). •
Andrew Johnson (1808-1869) became 17th President of the United
States (1865-1869). • Civil War ended on May 26.
• Thirteenth Amendment to U.S. Constitution abolished
slavery. |
• Christian Revival Association
was organized in London (renamed The Salvation Army in 1878). |
1866 |
• American Evangelical Alliance
was founded. |
• London Stock Exchange experienced
“Black Friday.” |
1867 |
• Russia sold
Alaska to the United States for $7,200,000. •
Gold was discovered in Wyoming. •
Father Edward McGlynn (1837-1900) of New York advocated an “American
Ideal” in Catholicism. |
• Fenian outrages
occurred in Ireland and Manchester.
• British North American Act established Dominion of Canada.
• Pope Pius IX (1792-1878),
on the 18th centenary of St. Peter and St. Paul, announced his
intention to hold an ecumenical council. |
1868 |
• Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885)
was elected 18th President of the United States (1869-1873). |
• Benjamin
Disraeli (1804-1881) became British Prime Minister (resigned
same year).
• William E. Gladstone (1809-1898) succeeded Benjamin
Disraeli as British Prime Minister.
• Revolution began in Spain. •
Skeleton of Cro-Magnon man from Upper Paleolithic age (first
homo sapiens in Europe, successor of Neanderthal man) was found
in France. |
1869 |
• The Innocents Abroad,
by Mark Twain (1835-1910), was published. |
• Parliamentary
system was reintroduced in France. •
Culture and Anarchy, by Matthew Arnold (1822-1888),
was published. |
1870 |
|
• First Vatican Council officially
announced the dogma of papal infallibility. |
1871 |
• Frederic’s
formal education ended in the eighth grade.
• Frederic began working for various photographers (until
1875). • P. T. Barnum
(1810-1891) opened his circus, “The Greatest Show on Earth,”
in Brooklyn, New York. •
Stephen Crane was born in New Jersey (d. 1900).
• Theodore Dreiser was born in Indiana (d. 1945).
• The Great Fire destroyed large
portions of Chicago. •
United States’ population numbered 39 million. |
• William I
(1797-1888), King of Prussia, was proclaimed German Emperor
at Versailles. •
The Descent of Man, by Charles Darwin (1809-1882),
was published. •
Great Britain’s population numbered 26 million.
• Ireland’s population numbered 5.4 million.
• Italian Law of Guarantees,
allowing the Pope possession of the Vatican, was established.
• First Congress of Old Catholics met in Munich. |
1872 |
• Ulysses S.
Grant (1822-1885) was re-elected President of the United States
(1873-1877). • The
Brooklyn Bridge was opened. •
Horace Greeley, famous for his saying, “Go West, young
man,” died (b. 1811). |
• Civil War
began in Spain. •
Germany expelled the Jesuits. |
1873 |
• Frederic moved to
Boston (until 1874). •
Financial panic occurred in New York in September. |
• Republic
was proclaimed in Spain.
• Financial panic occurred in Vienna in May. |
1874 |
|
• Winston Churchill
(future British Prime Minister and author) was born in England
(d. 1965). • Benjamin
Disraeli (1804-1881) became British Prime Minister for the second
time (until 1880). |
1875 |
• Frederic began working
as a proofreader for the Utica Herald and the Utica
Daily Observer.
• Frederic attended a Methodist camp meeting and wrote
an essay about his experience. •
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain (1835-1910),
published. |
• Public Health
Act was passed in Britain. •
London’s main sewage system was completed.
• Le Protestantisme et
le Catholicisme (Protestantism and Catholicism), by Emile
Laveleye, was published. •
Prussia abolished religious orders. |
1876 |
• Frederic published
his first story, “The Two Rochards,” in
the Utica Daily Observer.
• Frederic reviewed a number of novels by William Dean
Howells (1837-1920) for the Utica Daily Observer.
• Roderick Hudson,
by Henry James (1843-1916), was published. •
Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922) invented the telephone. |
• George Sand died (b. 1804). |
1877 |
• Frederic married Grace
Green Williams on October 10. (They had five children.)
• Rutherford B. Hayes (1822-1893)
was inaugurated as 19th President of the United States (1877-1881),
after a disputed electoral vote. •
Thomas Edison (1847-1931) invented the phonograph.
• The American, by
Henry James (1843-1916), was published. |
|
1878 |
|
• Pope Pius
IX died (b. 1792).
• Cardinal Count Pecci was elected Pope Leo XIII (1810-1903).
• Humbert I (1844-1900) was
crowned King of Italy (until 1900). |
1879 |
• “Daisy Miller,” by
Henry James (1843-1916), was published. |
• Anti-Jesuit Laws were introduced
in France. • St. Thomas Aquinas (c. 1225-1274) was
proclaimed a Doctor of the Roman Catholic Church. |
|
1880 |
• Frederic was named
Editor of the Utica Daily Observer (a position held
until August 1882). •
James Garfield (1831-1881) was elected 20th President of the
United States (1881). •
Electricity lit the streets of New York for the first time. |
• Transvaal declared itself independent
of Britain. • Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881) resigned
as British Prime Minister. • William E. Gladstone
(1809-1898) became British Prime Minister for the second time. |
1881 |
• James Garfield
was assassinated in September (b. 1831).
• Chester Arthur (1830-1886) became 21st President of
the United States (1881-1885). •
Portrait of a Lady, by Henry James (1843-1916), was
published. |
• Vatican first
opened its archives to scholars. •
Freedom of press was established in France.
• Benjamin Disraeli died (b. 1804). |
1882 |
• Frederic was named
Editor of the Albany Evening Journal (a position held
until March 1884).
• Frederic persuaded his newspaper to support Grover Cleveland
for Governor of New York. •
Ralph Waldo Emerson died (b. 1803). •
United States banned Chinese emigration for 10 years. |
• Fenians murdered
Lord Frederick Cavendish and T. H. Burke in Phoenix Park, Dublin.
• Charles Darwin died (b. 1809). |
1883 |
• Northern Pacific Railroad line
was completed. • First skyscraper was built in Chicago
(10 stories). |
• Souveniers d’enfance
et de jeunesse (Recollections of My Youth), by Ernest Renan
(1823-1892), was published. |
1884 |
• Grover Cleveland
(1837-1908) was elected 22nd President of the United States
(1885-1889). • Huckleberry
Finn, by Mark Twain (1835-1910), was published. |
• Frederic moved to England to become London
Correspondent for the New York Times (until his death
in 1898). • Frederic covered the cholera epidemic
in France and Italy. |
1885 |
• Frederic began correspondence
with William Dean Howells (1837-1920). •
Ulysses S. Grant died (b. 1822). •
Sinclair Lewis was born in Minnesota (d. 1951). |
|
1886 |
• Installation
of hydroelectric facilities began at Niagara Falls.
• The Bostonians,
by Henry James (1843-1916), was published. |
• Bonaparte
and Orléans families were banished from France.
• British Prime Minister William E. Gladstone (1809-1898)
introduced bill for Home Rule in Ireland. •
Das Kapital, by Karl Marx (1818-1883), was published
in English. |
1887 |
• Frederic reviewed
Princess Casamassima, by Henry James (1843-1916).
• Father McGlynn (1837-1900)
was excommunicated. |
• Frederic’s Seth’s Brother’s
Wife was published. •
Queen Victoria (1819-1901) celebrated her Golden Jubilee. |
1888 |
• Benjamin Harrison (1833-1901)
was elected 23rd President of the United States (1889-1893). |
• German Emperor
William I died in March; Frederick III, who succeeded William
I, died in June.
• William II (1859-1941), the “Kaiser,” succeeded
Frederick III (gave up throne when Germany was defeated in 1918).
• Matthew Arnold died (b. 1822).
• “Jack the Ripper”
murdered five women in London. |
1889 |
• A Connecticut Yankee
in King Arthur’s Court, by Mark Twain (1835-1910),
was published. •
Catholic University was opened in Washington, D.C. |
• London Dock Strike occurred.
• British South Africa Company, headed by Cecil Rhodes
(1853-1902), was granted a royal charter. |
1890 |
• The Principles of Psychology,
by William James (1842-1910), was published. |
• Frederic’s In the Valley
was published. • Frederic’s The Lawton Girl
was published. • The
Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde (1854-1900), was
published. |
1891 |
• American Protective Association
(APA) was established to promote anti-Catholicism (through 1897). |
• Frederic established a second household
with mistress Kate Lyon. (They had three children.) •
Frederic’s The Young Emperor William II of Germany;
A Study in Character Development on a Throne, a non-fiction
work, was published. • First
submarine telephone cable connected London with Paris. |
1892 |
• Grover Cleveland (1837-1908)
was elected 24th President of the United States (1893-1897)
for a second non-consecutive term. |
• Frederic’s The Return of the
O’Mahony was published. • Frederic’s
The New Exodus; A Study of Israel in Russia, a non-fiction
work, was published. •
William E. Gladstone (1809-1898) became British Prime Minister
for the third time. •
Ernest Renan died (b. 1823). |
1893 |
• Henry Ford (1863-1947) built
his first car. •
Father McGlynn (1837-1900) reconciled with the Catholic Church. |
• Frederic’s The Copperhead
was published. • Franco-Russian
alliance was signed.
• Second Irish Home Rule Bill was passed by Commons but
rejected by Lords. •
“Art Nouveau” appeared in Europe. |
1894 |
• Father McGlynn (1837-1900) was
assigned to St. Mary’s parish in upstate New York. |
• Frederic’s The Copperhead and
Other Stories of the North During the American War was
published. • Frederic’s Marsena and Other
Stories of Wartime was published. •
Nicholas II (1868-1918) became Czar (until the revolution in
1917). |
1895 |
|
• London School
of Economics and Political Science was founded.
•
Oscar Wilde unsuccessfully sued the Marquis of Queensberry
for libel. |
1896 |
• Frederic’s The Damnation of
Theron Ware was published. • Frederic reviewed
The Red Badge of Courage, by Stephen Crane (1871-1900).
• William McKinley (1843-1901) was elected 25th President
of the United States (1897-1901). |
• Frederic’s The Damnation of
Theron Ware was published in England under the title
Illumination. • Frederic’s March Hares
was published. • Frederic’s Mrs. Albert
Grundy; Observations in Philistia was published. •
Frederic’s Marsena was published. •
Marchese Guglielmo Marconi (1874-1937) patented the wireless
telegraph. • Czar
Nicholas II visited Paris and London. •
Klondike gold rush began. |
1897 |
• Frederic met Stephen Crane (1871-1900).
(They became close friends.) |
• Frederic’s In the Sixties
(a collection of stories) was published. •
Severe famine devastated India. •
Queen Victoria (1819-1901) celebrated her Diamond Jubilee. |
1898 |
• United States declared war on
Spain over Cuba. • Spain ceded Cuba, Puerto Rico,
Guam, and the Philippines to the United States for $20 million. |
• Frederic died on October 19 at the age
of 42 after an extended illness. • Lyon was charged
and acquitted for manslaughter in the negligent death of Frederic.
• Frederic’s Gloria Mundi was published
posthumously (a condensed version of this novel was published
in 1913 under the title Pomp and Vanities). •
Frederic’s “The Deserter” and Other Stories;
A Book of Two Wars was published. •
William E. Gladstone died (b. 1809). |
1899 |
• Horatio Alger died (b. 1832). |
• Frederic’s The Market-Place
was published posthumously. • Frederic’s wife,
Grace, died of cancer on March 17. •
Pope Leo XIII (1810-1903) issued Testem Benevolentiae,
which condemns “Americanism.” |