|  | Date | Event(s) | 
	
| 1 | 1700 | 1700—1799:  SA - VOC slave trading in Mozambique; Zanzibar and Madagascar
 | 
| 2 | 1720 | 1720—1749:  SA - Western Cape Khoekhoe reduced to labouring class
 | 
| 3 | 1737 | 1737—1743:  SA - Short-lived Moravian mission to Khoekhoe
 | 
| 4 | 1738 | 24 May 1738—24 May 1738:  John Wesley has his conversion experience
 | 
| 5 | 1739 | 1739—1739:  Wesley and Whitefield commence great Methodist revival
7 Apr 1739—7 Apr 1739:  Dick Turpin, highwayman, hanged at York
23 Oct 1739—23 Oct 1739:  War of Jenkins' Ear starts: Robert Walpole reluctantly declares war on Spain
 | 
| 6 | 1741 | 1741—1741:  Benjamin Ingham founded the Moravian Methodists or Inghamites -  Earliest Moravian
registers
 | 
| 7 | 1742 | 1742—1742:  England goes to war with Spain -  incited by William Pitt the Elder (Earl of Chatham)
for the sake of trade
 | 
| 8 | 1743 | 1743—1743:  SA - First recorded Trekboer loan farms in Roggeveld
1743—1743:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregations founded in Roodezand and Tulbagh.
16 Jun 1743—16 Jun 1743:  (June 27 in Gregorian calendar): Battle of Dettingen -  last time a British
sovereign (George II) led troops in battle
 | 
| 9 | 1744 | 1744—1744:  Tune 'God Save the King' makes its appearance
 | 
| 10 | 1745 | 1745—1745:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregations founded in Swartland (Malmesbury).
1745—1745:  Jacobite rebellion in Scotland ('The Forty-five')
19 Aug 1745—19 Aug 1745:  Bonnie Prince Charlie (The Young Pretender) lands in the western Highlands - 
raises support among Episcopalian and Catholic clans -  The Pretender's army invades Perth,
Edinburgh, and England as far as Derby
 | 
| 11 | 1746 | 1746—1746:  SA - Swellendam is founded.
16 Apr 1746—16 Apr 1746:  Battle of Culloden -  last battle fought in Britain -  5,000 Highlanders routed by
the Duke of Cumberland and 9,000 loyalists Scots -  Young Pretender Charles flees to
Continent, ending Jacobite hopes forever -  the wearing of the kilt prohibited
 | 
| 12 | 1747 | 1747—1747:  Act for Pacification of the Highlands
1747—1747:  Abolition of Heritable Jurisdictions in Scotland
 | 
| 13 | 1749 | 27 Apr 1749—27 Apr 1749:  First performance of Handel's Music for the Royal Fireworks (in Green Park,
London)
 | 
| 14 | 1750 | Feb 1750—Feb 1750:  Series of earthquakes in London and the Home Counties cause panic with
predictions of an apocalypse (Feb/Mar)
16 Nov 1750—16 Nov 1750:  Original Westminster Bridge opened (replaced in 1862 due to subsidence)
 | 
| 15 | 1751 | Mar 1751—Mar 1751:  Chesterfield's Calendar Act passed -  royal assent to the bill was given on 22
May 1751 -  decision to adopt Gregorian Calendar in 1752: In and throughout all his
 | 
| 16 | 1752 | 1752—1752:  Benjamin Franklin invents the lightning conductor
1 Jan 1752—1 Jan 1752:  Beginning of the year 1752 [Scotland had adopted January as the start of the year
in 1600, and some other countries in Europe had adopted the Gregorian calendar as early as
1582]
3 Sep 1752—3 Sep 1752:  Julian Calendar dropped and Gregorian Calendar adopted in England and
Scotland, making this Sep 14
 | 
| 17 | 1753 | 1753—1753:  Private collection of Sir Hans Sloane forms the basis of the British Museum
1 May 1753—1 May 1753:  Publication of ?Species Plantarum' by Linnaeus  and the formal start date of plant
taxonomy
 | 
| 18 | 1754 | 1754—1754:  Hardwicke Act (1753): Banns to be called, and Printed Marriage Register forms to be
used -  Quakers & Jews exempt
1754—1754:  In the General Election, the Cow Inn at Haslemere, Surrey caused a national scandal by
subdividing the freehold to create eight votes instead of one
1754—1754:  First British troops not belonging to the East India Company despatched to India
1754—1754:  SA - First recorded Xam San resistance to Roggeveld Trekboers
 | 
| 19 | 1755 | 1755—1755:  Publication of Dictionary of the English Language' by Dr Samuel Johnson
1755—1755:  Period of canal construction began in Britain (till 1827)
1755—1755:  SA - Smallpox epidemic in the Cape. Foundation stone of Old Town House in Cape Town is laid.
2 Dec 1755—2 Dec 1755:  Second Eddystone Lighthouse destroyed by fire
 | 
| 20 | 1756 | 15 May 1756—15 May 1756:  The Seven Years War with France (Pitt's trade war) begins
Jun 1756—Jun 1756:  Black Hole of Calcutta -  146 Britons imprisoned, most die according to British
sources
 | 
| 21 | 1757 | 1757—1757:  The foundation laid for the Empire of India
14 Mar 1757—14 Mar 1757:  Admiral Byng shot at Portsmouth for failing to relieve Minorca
23 Jun 1757—23 Jun 1757:  The Nawab of Bengal tries to expel the British, but is defeated at the battle of
Plassey (Palashi, June 23) -  the East India Company forces are led by Robert Clive
 | 
| 22 | 1758 | 1758—1758:  India stops being merely a commercial venture -  England begins dominating it
politically -  The East India Company retains its monopoly although it ceased to trade
 | 
| 23 | 1759 | 1759—1759:  Wesley builds 356 Methodist chapels
15 Jan 1759—15 Jan 1759:  British Museum opens to the public in London
16 Oct 1759—16 Oct 1759:  Third Eddystone Lighthouse (John Smeaton's) completed
 | 
| 24 | 1760 | 1760—1760:  Carron Iron Works in operation in Scotland
1760—1760:  SA - Jansz; Coetse with Klaas Barends and others cross Gariep River
5 May 1760—5 May 1760:  First use of hangman's drop
25 Oct 1760—25 Oct 1760:  George II dies -  George III Hanover, his grandson, becomes king. The date conventionally marks the start of the so-called first Industrial Revolution'
 | 
| 25 | 1761 | 1761—1762:  SA - Hendrik Hop travels to Gariep River
16 Jan 1761—16 Jan 1761:  British capture Pondicherry, India from the French
 | 
| 26 | 1762 | 1762—1762:  Cigars introduced into Britain from Cuba
 | 
| 27 | 1763 | 1763—1763:  Treaty of Paris -  gives back to France everything Pitt fought to obtain -  (Newfoundland
[fishing], Guadaloupe and Martininque [sugar], Dakar [gum]) -  but English displaces French
as the international language
 | 
| 28 | 1764 | 1764—1764:  Lloyd's Register of shipping first prepared
1764—1764:  Practice of numbering houses introduced to London
1764—1764:  James Hargeaves invents the Spinning Jenny (but destroyed 1768)
1764—1764:  Mozart produces his first symphony at age eight
 | 
| 29 | 1765 | 1765—1765:  The potato becomes the most popular food in Europe
22 Mar 1765—22 Mar 1765:  Stamp Act passed -  imposed a tax on publications and legal documents in the
American colonies (repealed the following year)
 | 
| 30 | 1766 | 1766—1766:  Start of 'composite' national records on rainfall in the UK
5 Dec 1766—5 Dec 1766:  Christie's auction house founded in London by James Christie
 | 
| 31 | 1767 | 1767—1767:  Newcomen's steam pumping engine perfected by James Watt
 | 
| 32 | 1768 | 9 Jan 1768—9 Jan 1768:  Philip Astley starts his circus in London
6 Dec 1768—6 Dec 1768:  The first edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica' published in Edinburgh by
William Smellie
 | 
| 33 | 1769 | 1769—1769:  Arkwright invents water frame (textile production)
1769—1769:  Capt James Cook maps the coast of New Zealand
6 Sep 1769—6 Sep 1769:  David Garrick organises first Shakespeare festival at Stratford-upon-Avon
 | 
| 34 | 1770 | 1770—1770:  Clyde Trust created to convert the River Clyde, then an insignificant river, into a major
thoroughfare for maritime communications
1770—1799:  SA - Intensive Khoisan resistance to Trekboer occupation
28 Apr 1770—28 Apr 1770:  Capt James Cook lands in Australia (Botany Bay) ? Aug 21: formally claims
Australia for Britain
 | 
| 35 | 1771 | 1771—1771:  Right to report Parliamentary debates established in England
1771—1771:  SA - Clashes between Trekboers and Xhosa begin as trekkers cross the Gamtoos River in the east
 | 
| 36 | 1772 | 1772—1772:  First Travellers' Cheques issued by the London Credit Exchange Company
1772—1772:  Morning Post' first published (until 1937)
14 May 1772—14 May 1772:  Judge Mansfield rules that there is no legal basis for slavery in England
 | 
| 37 | 1774 | 1774—1774:  SA - General Commando mounted against San: 503 killed; 241 captured
13 Sep 1774—13 Sep 1774:  Cook arrives on Easter Island
 | 
| 38 | 1775 | 19 Apr 1775—19 Apr 1775:  Battle of Lexington: first action in American War of Independence (1775- 1783)
 | 
| 39 | 1776 | 1776—1776:  Somerset House in London becomes the repository of records of population
1776—1776:  Watt and Boulton produce their first commercial steam engine
4 Jul 1776—4 Jul 1776:  American Declaration of Independence
7 Sep 1776—7 Sep 1776:  First attack on a warship by a submarine -  David Bushnell's ?Turtle' attacked
HMS Eagle in New York harbour. The attack was perhaps spectacular (a charge did
detonate beneath the ship)  but was nevertheless unsuccessful. 'Turtle' was a one man
Affair  man-powered [Les Moore]
 | 
| 40 | 1777 | 1777—1777:  Samuel Miller of Southampton patents the circular saw.
 | 
| 41 | 1778 | 1778—1778:  SA - Colonial boundary extended to Buffels; Zak; and Fish Rivers
1778—1779:  SA - 	Hendrik Jacob Wikar and Robert Jacob Gordon meet Khoekhoe; Geisiqua and Tswana groups along lower and middle Gariep which Gordon names Orange River in honour of the Netherlands Stadtholder
 | 
| 42 | 1779 | 1779—1779:  Marc Isambard Brunel opens the first steamdriven sawmill at Chatham Dockyard in Kent
1779—1779:  First iron bridge built, over the Severn by John Wilkinson
1779—1779:  First Spinning Mills operational in Scotland
14 Feb 1779—14 Feb 1779:  Capt James Cook killed on Hawaii
23 Sep 1779—23 Sep 1779:  Naval engagement between Britain and USA off Flamborough Head
 | 
| 43 | 1780 | 1780—1780:  Male Servants Tax
1780—1780:  The English Reform Movement -  until now, only landowners and tenants (freeholders
with 40 shillings per year or more) allowed to vote, and in open poll books
1780—1780:  Fountain pen invented
1780—1780:  About this time the word 'Quiz' entered the language, said to have been invented as a
wager by Mr Daly, a Dublin theatre manager
1780—1780:  SA - First Frontier War between Xhosa and whites.
4 May 1780—4 May 1780:  First Derby run at Epsom (some say 2nd June)
2 Jun 1780—2 Jun 1780:  Jun 2- 8: The Gordon Riots -  Parliament passes a Roman Catholic relief measure -  for
days, London is at the mercy of a mob and destruction is widespread
 | 
| 44 | 1782 | 1782—1782:  Gilbert's Act establishes outdoor poor relief -  the way of life of the poor beginning to
alter due to industrialisation -  New factories in rapidly expanding towns required a workforce
that would adjust to new work patterns
1782—1782:  James Watt patents his steam engine
1782—1782:  SA - First issue of paper rix dollars.
 | 
| 45 | 1783 | 1783—1783:  Duty payable on Parish Register entries (3d per entry -  repealed 1794) -  led to a fall in
entries!
1783—1792:  SA - Le Vaillant and Van Reenen travel in Namaqualand and north of Orange River
3 Sep 1783—3 Sep 1783:  Treaty of Versailles (Britain/US)
3 Nov 1783—3 Nov 1783:  Last public execution at Tyburn in London (John Austin, a highwayman)
 | 
| 46 | 1784 | 1784—1784:  Pitt's India Act -  the Crown (as opposed to officers of the East India Company) has
power to guide Indian politics
1784—1784:  Wesley breaks with the Church of England
1784—1784:  First golf club founded at St Andrews
1784—1784:  Invention of threshing machine by Andrew Meikle
2 Aug 1784—2 Aug 1784:  First mail coaches in England (4pm Bristol / 8am London)
 | 
| 47 | 1785 | 1785—1785:  Sunday School Society founded to educate poor children (by 1851, enrols more than 2
million)
1 Jan 1785—1 Jan 1785:  John Walter publishes first edition of The Times (called The Daily Universal
Register for 3 years)
 | 
| 48 | 1786 | 1786—1786:  SA - Graaff-Reinet founded
 | 
| 49 | 1787 | 1787—1787:  MCC (Marylebone Cricket Club) established at Thomas Lord's ground in London
 | 
| 50 | 1788 | 1788—1788:  First steamboat demonstrated in Scotland
1788—1788:  Law passed requiring that chimney sweepers be a minimum of 8 years old (not
enforced)
1788—1788:  First slave carrying act, the Dolben Act of 1788, regulates the slave trade -  stipulates
more humane conditions on slave ships
1788—1788:  King George III's mental illness occasions the Regency Crisis -  Edmund Burke and
Charles James Fox attack ministry of William Pitt -  trying to obtain full regal powers for the
Prince of Wales
1788—1788:  Gibbon completes Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'
26 Jan 1788—26 Jan 1788:  First convicts (and free settlers) arrive in New South Wales (left Portsmouth 13
May 1787) ? the 'First Fleet'; eleven ships commanded by Captain Arthur Phillip
 | 
| 51 | 1789 | 1789—1789:  SA - Merino (wool-producing) sheep brought from Holland
1789—1793:  SA - Second Frontier War between Xhosa and whites.
28 Apr 1789—28 Apr 1789:  Mutiny on HMS Bounty -  Captain William Bligh and 18 sailors are set adrift
and the rebel crew ends up on Pitcairn Island
 | 
| 52 | 1790 | 1790—1790:  Forth and Clyde Canal opened in Scotland
1790—1799:  SA - In documented raids on "Bosjesmen" 2000 - 3000 Khoisan are killed
 | 
| 53 | 1791 | 1791—1791:  John Bell, printer, abandons the long s' (the 's' that looks like an 'f')
1791—1791:  Establishment of the Ordnance Survey of Great Britain
4 Dec 1791—4 Dec 1791:  First publication of The Observer -  world's oldest Sunday newspaper
 | 
| 54 | 1792 | 1792—1792:  Repression in Britain (restrictions on freedom of the press) -  Fox gets Libel Act through
Parliament, requiring a jury and not a judge to determine libel
1792—1792:  Boyle's Street Directory published
1792—1792:  Coal-gas lighting invented by William Murdock, an Ayrshire Scot
1792—1792:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded in Graaff-Reinet.
1792—1792:  SA - Morovian Mission founded at Genadendal.
1 Oct 1792—1 Oct 1792:  Introduction of Money Orders in Britain
1 Dec 1792—1 Dec 1792:  King's Proclamation drawing out the British militia
 | 
| 55 | 1793 | 11 Feb 1793—11 Feb 1793:  Britain declares war on France (1793-1802)
15 Apr 1793—15 Apr 1793:  ?5 notes first issued by the Bank of England
 | 
| 56 | 1794 | 1794—1794:  Abolition of Parish Register duties
6 Oct 1794—6 Oct 1794:  The prosecutor for Britain, Lord Justice Eyre, charges reformers with High
Treason -  he argued that, since reform of parliament would lead to revolution and revolution
to executing the King, the desire for reform endangered the King's life and was therefore
treasonous
 | 
| 57 | 1795 | 1795—1795:  The Famine Year
1795—1795:  Foundation of the Orange Order
1795—1795:  Speenhamland Act proclaims that the Parish is responsible for bringing up the labourer's
wage to subsistence level -  towards the end of the eighteenth century, the number of poor and
unemployed increased dramatically -  price increases during the Napoleonic Wars
(1793-1815) far outstripped wage rises -  many small farmers were bankrupted by the move
towards enclosures and became landless labourers -  their wages were often pitifully low
1795—1795:  Pitt and Grenville introduce The Gagging Acts' or 'Two Bills' (the Seditious Meetings and Treasonable Practices Bills) -  outlawed the mass meeting and the political lecture.
1795—1795:  Consumption of lime juice made compulsory in Royal Navy
1795—1795:  SA - Xhosa at Prieska
1795—1802:  SA - British occupy Cape on behalf of William of Orange. Slaves outnumber European settlers at this time
1795—1795:  SA - Revolt in Swellendam and Graaff-Reinet.
 | 
| 58 | 1796 | 1796—1796:  Pitt's Reign of Terror': More treason trials -  leading radicals emigrate
1796—1796:  Legacy Tax on sums over ?20 excluding those to wives, children, parents and
grandparents
1796—1796:  SA - Pieter Pienaar murdered by Jager Afrikaner at Hantam. Afrikaner becomes frontier leader
14 May 1796—14 May 1796:  Dr Edward Jenner gave first vaccination for smallpox in England
 | 
| 59 | 1797 | 1797—1797:  England in Crisis, Bank of England suspends cash payments
1797—1797:  Mutinies in the British Navy at Spithead and Nore
1797—1797:  Tax on newspapers (including cheap, topical journals) increased to repress radical
publications
1797—1797:  The first copper pennies were produced ('cartwheels') by application of steam power to
the coining press
22 Feb 1797—22 Feb 1797:  French invade Fishguard, Wales; last time UK invaded; all captured 2 days later
26 Feb 1797—26 Feb 1797:  First ?1 (and ?2) notes issued by Bank of England
 | 
| 60 | 1798 | 1798—1798:  First planned human experiment with vaccination, to test theories of Edward Jenner
1798—1798:  SA - First Post Office. Liquidation of Dutch East India Company. First mosque in southern Africa established in Dorp Street by Tuan Guru. Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded at Swellendam.
Feb 1798—Feb 1798:  The Irish Rebellion; 100,000 peasants revolt; approximately 25,000 die -  Irish
Parliament abolished (Feb-Oct)
1 Aug 1798—1 Aug 1798:  Battle of the Nile (won by Nelson)
 | 
| 61 | 1799 | 1799—1799:  Foundation of Royal Military College Sandhurst by the Duke of York
1799—1799:  Foundation of the Royal Institution of Great Britain
1799—1802:  SA - Eastern Cape Khoekhoe revolt
1799—1799:  SA - First London Missionary Society (LMS) station - to |Xam - on Zak River.
1799—1799:  SA - Fort Frederick built in Algoa Bay by British soldiers. Third Frontier War between the Xhosa and whites. Beginning of London Missionary Society work in South Africa.
9 Jan 1799—9 Jan 1799:  Pitt brings in 10% income tax, as a wartime financial measure
12 Jul 1799—12 Jul 1799:  'Combination Laws' in Britain against political associations and combinations
15 Jul 1799—15 Jul 1799:  ?Rosetta Stone' discovered in Egypt  made possible the deciphering (in 1822) of Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics
 | 
| 62 | 1800 | 1800—1800:  Electric light first produced by Sir Humphrey Davy
1800—1800:  Use of high pressure steam pioneered by Richard Trevithick (1771-1833)
1800—1800:  Royal College of Surgeons founded
1800—1800:  Herschel discovers infra-red light
1800—1800:  Volta makes first electrical battery
1800—1800:  SA - First printing press in Cape Town. Government Gazette started.
2 Jul 1800—2 Jul 1800:  Parliamentary union of Great Britain and Ireland
 | 
| 63 | 1801 | 1801—1801:  Grand Union Canal opens in England
1801—1801:  Elgin Marbles brought from Athens to London
1801—1801:  SA - Official expedition of Truter; Somerville; Barrow and Daniell; with missionaries Jan Matthys Kok and William Edwards; reaches Dithakong
1801—1801:  SA - William Anderson established mission at Aakaap and then Klaarwater (later Griquatown).  Khoisan spelling book printed by LMS
1 Jan 1801—1 Jan 1801:  Union Jack becomes the official British flag
10 Mar 1801—10 Mar 1801:  First census puts the population of England and Wales at 9,168,000. Population of Britain nearly 11 million (75% rural)
24 Dec 1801—24 Dec 1801:  Richard Trevithick built the first self-propelled passenger carrying road loco
 | 
| 64 | 1802 | Feb 1802—Jan 1806:  SA - Batavian Republic rules the Cape.
25 Mar 1802—25 Mar 1802:  Treaty of Amiens signed by Britain, France, Spain, and the Netherlands ? the 'Peace of Amiens' as it was known brought a temporary peace of 14 months during the Napoleonic Wars ? one of its most important cultural effects was that travel and correspondence across the English Channel became possible again
 | 
| 65 | 1803 | 1803—1803:  Poaching made a Capital offense in England if capture resisted
1803—1803:  Richard Trevithick built another steam carriage and ran it in London as the first
self-propelled vehicle in the capital and the first London bus
1803—1803:  Semaphore signaling perfected by Admiral Popham
30 Apr 1803—30 Apr 1803:  Louisiana Purchase: Napoleon sells French possessions in America to United States
12 May 1803—12 May 1803:  Peace of Amiens ends ? resumption of war with France ? The Napoleonic Wars (1803-18l5)
23 Jul 1803—23 Jul 1803:  First public railway opens (Surrey Iron Railway, 9 miles from Wandsworth to
Croydon, horse-drawn)
 | 
| 66 | 1804 | 1804—1804:  Matthew Flinders recommends that the newly discovered country, New Holland, be renamed 'Australia'
1804—1806:  SA - Heinrich Lichtenstein travels to Dithakong
1804—1804:  SA - Uitenhage founded.
21 Feb 1804—21 Feb 1804:  Richard Trevithick runs his railway engine on the Penydarren Railway (9.5 miles
from Pen-y-Darren to Abercynon in South Wales)  this hauled a train with 10 tons of
iron and 70 passengers. It was commemorated by the Royal Mint in 2004 in the form of
A ?2 coin.
3 Mar 1804—3 Mar 1804:  John Wedgwood (eldest son of the potter Josiah Wedgwood) founds The Royal
Horticultural Society
2 Dec 1804—2 Dec 1804:  Napoleon declares himself Emperor of the French
12 Dec 1804—12 Dec 1804:  Spain declares war on Britain
 | 
| 67 | 1805 | 1805—1805:  London docks opened
21 Oct 1805—21 Oct 1805:  Admiral Nelson's victory at Trafalgar
2 Dec 1805—2 Dec 1805:  Battle of Austerlitz; Napoleon defeats Austrians and Russians
 | 
| 68 | 1806 | 1806—1806:  Dartmoor Prison opened (built by French prisoners)
1806—1806:  SA - LMS station at Warmbad; Great Namaqualand
1806—1806:  SA - First regular inland postal service.
1806—1806:  SA - Second British occupation of the Cape
9 Jan 1806—9 Jan 1806:  Nelson buried in St Paul's cathedral, London
 | 
| 69 | 1807 | 1807—1807:  SA - British ban slave trade, importation of slaves to the Cape ends
25 Mar 1807—25 Mar 1807:  Parliament passes Act prohibiting slavery and the importation of slaves from 1808 ? but does not prohibit colonial slavery
 | 
| 70 | 1808 | 1808—1808:  SA - Clanwilliam founded.
1808—1808:  Gas lighting in London streets
13 Jul 1808—13 Jul 1808:  'Hot Wednesday' ? temperature of 101?F in the shade recorded in London
20 Dec 1808—20 Dec 1808:  Beethoven premieres his Fifth Symphony, Sixth Symphony, Fourth Piano Concerto and Choral Fantasy together in Vienna
 | 
| 71 | 1809 | 1809—1809:  SA - Gola's Xhosa community settles at Pramberg.
1809—1809:  SA - Severe drought in eastern frontier.
12 Feb 1809—12 Feb 1809:  Birth of Charles Darwin
18 Sep 1809—18 Sep 1809:  Royal Opera House opens in London
 | 
| 72 | 1810 | 1810—1810:  SA - Montshiwa of Rolong born
1810—1810:  John McAdam begins road construction in England, giving his name to the process of
road metalling
 | 
| 73 | 1811 | 1811—1812:  SA - William John Burchell travels in the interior
1811—1811:  SA - Caledon and George founded. Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded in Caledon. Regular circuit courts introduced.
1811—1812:  SA - Fourth Frontier War between Xhosa and whites.
5 Feb 1811—5 Feb 1811:  Prince of Wales (future George IV) made Regent after George III deemed insane
 | 
| 74 | 1812 | 1812—1812:  SA - Molehabangwe of Tlhaping died; succeeded by son Mothibi
1812—1812:  SA - Cradock and Grahamstown founded.
11 May 1812—11 May 1812:  Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval, assassinated ? shot as he entered the House of Commons by a bankrupt Liverpool broker, John Bellingham, who was subsequently hanged
18 Jun 1812—18 Jun 1812:  Start of American 'War of 1812' (to 1814) against England and Canada
Oct 1812—Oct 1812:  Napoleon retreats from Moscow with catastrophic losses
 | 
| 75 | 1813 | 1813—1813:  SA - Revd John Campbell conducts mission inspection in the interior
1813—1813:  SA - Adam Kok's people assert the name Griqua
1813—1813:  SA - Court proceedings opened to the public.
1813—1813:  Ireland: First recorded '12th of July' sectarian riots in Belfast
1813—1813:  Jane Austen wrote 'Pride and Prejudice'
 | 
| 76 | 1814 | 1814—1814:  SA - The Cape Colony is formally ceded to Britain. Mail packet service started between Britain and the Cape.
1 Jan 1814—1 Jan 1814:  Invasion of France by Allies
6 Apr 1814—6 Apr 1814:  Napoleon abdicates and is exiled to Elba
13 Aug 1814—13 Aug 1814:  Convention of London signed, a treaty between the UK and the Dutch
24 Aug 1814—24 Aug 1814:  The British burn the White House
29 Nov 1814—29 Nov 1814:  'The Times' first printed by a 'mechanical apparatus' (at 1100 sheets per hour)
24 Dec 1814—24 Dec 1814:  Treaty of Ghent signed ending the 1812 war between Britain and the US
 | 
| 77 | 1815 | 1815—1815:  SA - Slagter's Nek Rebellion.
1815—1815:  Trial by Jury established in Scotland
1815—1815:  Davy develops the safety lamp for miners
18 Jun 1815—18 Jun 1815:  The Battle of Waterloo: Napoleon defeated and exiled to St. Helena
 | 
| 78 | 1816 | 1816—1816:  SA - Missionaries Read and Hamilton; with Hendriks; Kakkerlak and Sedras establish Kuruman Mission (LMS)
1816—1816:  SA - Wesleyan Mission to Nama at Leliefontein
1816—1816:  Income tax abolished
1816—1816:  For the first time British silver coins were produced with an intrinsic value substantially
below their face value ? the first official 'token' coinage
1816—1816:  Climate: the 'year without a summer' ? followed a volcanic explosion of the mountain 'Tambora in Indonesia the previous year  the biggest volcanic explosion in 10000 years
1816—1816:  Large scale emigration to North America
1816—1816:  Trans-Atlantic packet service begins
 | 
| 79 | 1817 | 1817—1817:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded in Uitenhage.
1817—1817:  SA - Approximately 200 Scottish artisan immigrants brought to Cape by Benjamin Moodie.
1817—1817:  March of the Manchester Blanketeers; Habeas Corpus suspended
1817—1817:  Constable painted 'Flatford Mill'
 | 
| 80 | 1818 | 1818—1818:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded in Cradock. Settlement of land beyond Orange River. Beaufort West founded.
1818—1819:  SA - Fifth Frontier War between Xhosa and whites. Grahamstown attacked.
1818—1818:  Manchester cotton spinners' strike
20 Oct 1818—20 Oct 1818:  'Convention of 1818' signed between the United States and the United Kingdom
which, among other things, settled the US-Canada border on the 49th parallel for most of its
length
 | 
| 81 | 1819 | 1819—1819:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregations founded in Beaufort West and Somerset West.
1819—1819:  Primitive bicycle, the Dandy Horse, becomes popular
1819—1819:  Britain returns to gold standard
1819—1819:  Singapore founded by Sir Stamford Raffles
May 1819—May 1819:  SS 'Savannah' first steamship to cross Atlantic reaching Liverpool 20 June 1819 (26
Days reaching Liverpool 20 June 1819 (26
Days mostly under sail)
16 Aug 1819—16 Aug 1819:  Peterloo Massacre at Manchester ? a large, orderly group of 60,000 meets at St.
Peter's Fields, Manchester ? demand Parliamentary Reform ? mounted troops charge on the
meeting, killing 11 people and and maiming many others
 | 
| 82 | 1820 | 1820—1820:  SA - James Read produces first book in SeTswana
1820—1820:  SA - Andries Waterboer elected Griqua Captain at Griquatown
1820—1820:  SA - Port Elizabeth named by Sir Rufane Donkin. Worcester founded.
1820—1821:  SA - Approximately 4000 British settlers arrive in Port Elizabeth as part of the 1820 Settlers immigration scheme, they are settled in the Eastern Cape.
1820—1820:  Cato Street Conspiracy ? plot to assissinate British cabinet
1820—1820:  Abolition of the Spanish Inquisition
29 Jan 1820—29 Jan 1820:  Accession of George IV, previously Prince Regent
1 Aug 1820—1 Aug 1820:  Regent's Canal in London opens
17 Aug 1820—17 Aug 1820:  Trial of Queen Caroline to prove her infidelities so George IV can divorce her ?
George tries to secure a Bill of Pains and Penalties against her ? Caroline is virtually acquitted
because bill passed by such a small majority of Lords
 | 
| 83 | 1821 | 1821—1821:  SA - Robert Moffat; in Namaqualand from 1817; moves to Kuruman
1821—1821:  Faraday publishes 'Principles of electro-magnetic rotation'
1821—1821:  Constable paints 'The Hay Wain'
5 May 1821—5 May 1821:  Napoleon Bonaparte dies on St Helena
 | 
| 84 | 1822 | 1822—1828:  SA - English becomes the official language of the Cape Colony.
14 Jun 1822—14 Jun 1822:  Charles Babbage proposes a difference engine in a paper to the Royal Astronomical Society
 | 
| 85 | 1823 | 1823—1823:  SA - Difaqane (1820s) Battle of Dithakong - MaNthatisi repulsed by Tlhaping with help from Griquas. Tswana to north and east heavily disrupted by Difaqane raids. 1824 Bergenaar rebellion
1823—1823:  SA - Approximately 146 Irish settlers brought to the Cape by John Ingram.
1823—1823:  New laws concerning marriage by license ? 'very troublesome' according to some the Act was repealed all in a hurry  at the beginning of the next session
1823—1823:  Peel begins penal reforms ? death penalty abolished for over 100 crimes
1823—1823:  Rugby Football 'invented' at Rugby School
1823—1823:  Rubberised waterproof material produced by MacIntosh
1 Jul 1823—1823:  SA - Lewis Broadbent born to the wife of the Methodist missionary Samuel Broadbent at Leeudoringstad, 16km from Wolmaranstad, on the 1st July 1823. Lewis later became a missionary to India.
2 Dec 1823—2 Dec 1823:  US President James Monroe delivers a speech establishing American neutrality in
future European conflicts (the 'Monroe Doctrine')
 | 
| 86 | 1824 | 1824—1824:  SA - George Thompson travels inland - naming Augrabies Falls "Cataract of King George"
1824—1824:  SA - Construction of road through Fransch Hoek Pass. First Synod of the Dutch Reformed Church. Mission station at Lovedale founded. First lighthouse opened.
1824—1824:  RSPCA established
1824—1824:  Portland cement patented
4 Mar 1824—4 Mar 1824:  Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) founded (called the 'National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck' until 1854)
10 May 1824—10 May 1824:  National Gallery in London opens to the public
 | 
| 87 | 1825 | 1825—1825:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded in Somerset East.
1825—1825:  SA - First steamship in Table Bay. Depreciated rix dollar converted into British sterling. The Anglican St. Mary's Collegiate Church started in Port Elizabeth. The Jubilee Park Cemetery in Uitenhage in use circa 1825.
27 Sep 1825—27 Sep 1825:  Stockton to Darlington Railway opens ? world's first service of locomotive-hauled passenger trains
 | 
| 88 | 1826 | 1826—1826:  SA - Adam Kok II establishes Philippolis Griqua Captaincy
1826—1826:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregations founded in Clanwilliam, Colesberg, Durbanville and Tijgerberg.
 | 
| 89 | 1827 | 1827—1827:  Ohm's Law published
 | 
| 90 | 1828 | 1828—1828:  SA - Ordinance 50 repeals pass laws
1828—1828:  SA - Circa 1828, the Union Chapel (London Missionary Society - i.e. Congregational) in Port Elizabeth is founded, records start in 1831. St. Mary's Cemetery started in Port Elizabeth circa 1828.
25 Oct 1828—25 Oct 1828:  St Katharine Docks in London opened (designed by Thomas Telford)
 | 
| 91 | 1829 | 1829—1829:  London Metropolitan Police Force formed, nicknamed 'Bobbies' after Sir Robert Peel
1829—1829:  Louis Braille invents his system of finger-reading for the blind
10 Jun 1829—10 Jun 1829:  First Oxford/Cambridge Boat Race
6 Oct 1829—6 Oct 1829:  George Stephenson's Rocket wins the Rainhill trials (it was the only one to
complete the trial!)
 | 
| 92 | 1830 | 1830—1830:  SA - Moffat's printing press transported to Kuruman by ox wagon
1830—1830:  SA - Full civil privileges granted to Roman Catholics in the Cape. Colesberg founded. Road over Sir Lowry's Pass opened.
1830—1830:  Uprisings and agitation across Europe: the Netherlands are split into Holland and
Belgium
Jul 1830—Jul 1830:  Revolution in France, fall of Charles X and the Bourbons ? Louis Philippe (the
Citizen King) on the throne
15 Sep 1830—15 Sep 1830:  George Stephenson's Liverpool & Manchester Railway opened by the Duke of
Wellington ? first mail carried by rail, and first death on the railway as William Huskisson, a
leading politician, is run over!
 | 
| 93 | 1831 | 1831—1831:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church congregation founded in Albany. First publication of De Zuid Afrikaan (ons Land). First issue of Grahamstown Journal.
1831—1831:  A list of all parish registers dating prior to 1813 compiled
1 Jun 1831—1 Jun 1831:  James Clark Ross discovers the North Magnetic Pole
1 Aug 1831—1 Aug 1831:  'New' London Bridge opens (replaced 1973) ? old bridge (which had existed for over 600 years) then demolished
 | 
| 94 | 1832 | 1832—1832:  Electoral Registers introduced
1832—1832:  Electric telegraph invented by Morse
7 Jun 1832—7 Jun 1832:  Reform Bill passed ? Representation of the People Act
 | 
| 95 | 1833 | 1833—1833:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish in Piquetberg (Piketberg) founded.
1833—1839:  SA - Approximately 750 juveniles brought to the Cape as apprentices.
Jan 1833—Jan 1833:  Britain invades the Falkland Islands
29 Aug 1833—29 Aug 1833:  Factory Act forbids employment of children below age of 9
 | 
| 96 | 1834 | 1834—1834:  SA - Abolition of legal slavery; but slaves apprenticed for four years
1834—1835:  SA - Andrew Smith with artist Charles Davidson Bell travels in the interior
1834—1834:  SA - Berlin Mission Society establishes station at Bethulie; and out-station among Korana at Pniel in 1845.
1834—1834:  SA - The Anglican St. John's Church is built in Bathurst, but its burial records go back to 1823. King William's Town founded. Slaves officially freed but apprenticed for next 4 years.
1834—1834:  SA - Kommissie treks from Cape begins. Port Natal renamed Durban.
1834—1834:  Babbage invents forerunner of the computer
18 Mar 1834—18 Mar 1834:  'Tolpuddle Martyrs' transported (to Australia) for Trades Union activities
1 May 1834—1 May 1834:  Slavery abolished in British possessions
21 Dec 1834—Sep 1835:  SA - Sixth Frontier War between Xhosa and whites.
 | 
| 97 | 1835 | 1835—1836:  SA - Louis Trichardt, Hans van Rensburg and Andries Potgieter trek north.
1835—1835:  Christmas becomes a national holiday
1835—1835:  First railway boom period starts in Britain construction of Great Western Railway
 | 
| 98 | 1836 | 1836—1836:  SA - James Alexander travels through Namaqualand
1836—1836:  SA - The Great Trek has reached the Transvaal and the Free State areas.
1836—1836:  SA - Potgieter's trekkers defeat Ndebele at the Battle of Vegkop.
1836—1836:  First Potato famine in Ireland
30 Jan 1836—30 Jan 1836:  Telford's Menai Straits Bridge opened ? considered the world's first modern suspension bridge
25 Feb 1836—25 Feb 1836:  Samuel Colt patented the 'revolver'
6 Mar 1836—6 Mar 1836:  The Alamo falls to Mexican troops -  death of Davy Crockett
Jul 1836—Jul 1836:  Inauguration of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris
 | 
| 99 | 1837 | 1837—1837:  SA - Piet Retief publishes his "Manifesto".
1837—1837:  SA - Andries Potgieter and Piet Uys, helped by Rolong and Griqua tribes, defeat Ndebele at Mosega. Louis Trichardt arrives in Lourenco Marques. Seperate administrative districts granted to Port Elizabeth, Cradock and Colesburg.
1837—1837:  SA - Victoria
1837—1837:  Pitman introduces his shorthand system
1837—1837:  P&O Founded
20 Jun 1837—20 Jun 1837:  William IV dies -  accession of Queen Victoria (to 1901)
1 Jul 1837—1 Jul 1837:  Compulsory registration of Births, Marriages & Deaths in England & Wales - 
Registration Districts were formed covering several parishes; initially they had the same
boundaries as the Poor Law boundaries set up in 1834
13 Jul 1837—13 Jul 1837:  Queen Victoria moves into the first Buckingham Palace
20 Jul 1837—20 Jul 1837:  Euston Railway station opens -  first in London
 | 
| 100 | 1838 | 1838—1838:  SA - Russell Road (Hyman's Kloof) Cemetery established in Port Elizabeth. Pietermaritzburg founded in 1838. Boers found Republic of Natal.
Feb 1838—1838:  SA - Piet Retief and his people are murdered by Dingaan's soldiers at Dingaan's kraal and Weenen.
28 Jun 1838—28 Jun 1838:  Coronation of Queen Victoria at Westminster Abbey
16 Dec 1838—1838:  SA - Battle of Blood River fought between Zulus and Boers.
 | 
| 101 | 1839 | 1839—1839:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parishes founded in Bredasdorp and Riversdale. Potchefstroom founded.
1839—1839:  First Opium War between Britain and China (to 1842) -  Britain captures Hong Kong
1839—1839:  Scottish blacksmith Kirkpatrick MacMillan refines the primitive bicycle adding a
mechanical crank drive to the rear wheel,thus creating the first true 'bicycle' in the modern
Sense
1839—1839:  Charles Goodyear invented vulcanized rubber
 | 
| 102 | 1840 | 1840—1849:  SA - Expansion of commercial wool farmers in Karoo transforms colonial economy. Pedi migrate to work on Cape farms
1840—1840:  SA - The Anglican St. Katherine's Church is founded in Uitenhage.
1840—1840:  Population Act relating to taking of censuses in Britain
1840—1840:  Last convicts landed in NSW (some say 1842 or 1849, but these probably landed
elsewhere)
10 Jan 1840—10 Jan 1840:  Uniform Penny Postage introduced nationally
 | 
| 103 | 1841 | 1841—1841:  SA - Missionary David Livingstone arrives in South Africa - proceeds to Kuruman before journeying through Central Africa
1841—1841:  SA - Circa 1841, the Methodist Church founded in Port Elizabeth. Trekkers council set up in Potchefstroom.
1841—1841:  Thomas Cook starts package tours
10 Feb 1841—10 Feb 1841:  Penny Red replaces Penny Black postage stamp
6 Jun 1841—6 Jun 1841:  June 6: First full census in Britain in which all names were recorded (Population 18.5M)
 | 
| 104 | 1842 | 1842—1842:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Prince Albert. Dick King's ride from Durban to Grahamstown.
1842—1843:  SA - War between the British and the Boers in Natal.
1842—1842:  Income Tax reintroduced in Britain
30 Mar 1842—30 Mar 1842:  Ether used as an anesthetic for the first time (by Dr Crawford Long in America)
29 Aug 1842—29 Aug 1842:  Treaty of Nanking -  End of First Opium War -  Britain gains Hong Kong
 | 
| 105 | 1843 | 1843—1843:  SA - Natal annexed as a British Colony.
1843—1843:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Richmond.
1843—1843:  First Christmas card in England
27 May 1843—27 May 1843:  The Great Hall of Euston station opened in London
19 Jul 1843—19 Jul 1843:  Brunel's 'Great Britain' launched
 | 
| 106 | 1844 | 1844—1844:  SA - Access to land is changed from leasehold to free hold
1844—1844:  SA - Victoria West established
Apr 1844—1844:  SA - Boers from Natal settle at Potchefstroom, after crossing the Drakensberg Mountains. Hendrik Potgieter settles at Delagoa Bay.
6 Jun 1844—6 Jun 1844:  YMCA founded in London by Sir George Williams
 | 
| 107 | 1845 | 1845—1845:  SA - Mothibi of Tlhaping dies
1845—1845:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish founded at Mossel Bay. Ohrigstad founded. Natal becomes autonomous district of Cape Colony.
1845—1845:  SA - Battle of Zwartkoppies.
1845—1845:  Tarmac laid for first time (in Nottingham)
17 Mar 1845—17 Mar 1845:  The rubber band patented by Stephen Perry
 | 
| 108 | 1846 | 1846—1854:  SA - Orange River Sovereignty
1846—1846:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Burgersdorp. Bloemfontein founded.
1846—1848:  SA - Seventh Frontier War between Xhosa and whites, this war was also known as the War of the Axe.
1846—1847:  SA - Approximately 103 settlers arrive in Port Elizabeth from war-torn Buenos Aires, Argentinia.
10 Sep 1846—10 Sep 1846:  The sewing machine is patented by Elias Howe
 | 
| 109 | 1847 | 1847—1847:  SA - Colonial boundary extended to Orange River
1847—1847:  SA - Rhenish Missionary Christoph Alheit moves to Schietfontein (Carnarvon)
1847—1847:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Calvinia. Opening of Montagu Pass. Sugar cane plantations started in Natal. East London founded. Districts of Victoria East and British Kaffraria annexed as part of the Cape Colony.
1847—1847:  US Mormons make Salt Lake City their centre
Jan 1847—Jan 1847:  An anesthetic used for the first time in England (James Simpson used ether to numb the pain of labour)
 | 
| 110 | 1848 | 1848—1848:  SA - Boers cross the Vaal River. Orange River Sovereignty established. Battle of Boomplaats.
1848—1848:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Napier. Soutpansberg (later Schoemansdal) founded.
1848—1848:  First commercial production of chewing gum
24 Jan 1848—24 Jan 1848:  Gold found at Sutter's Mill, California -  starts the California gold rush
23 Mar 1848—1848:  SA - Approximately 163 German settlers, known as the Bergthiel Settlers, arrive in Natal.
11 Jul 1848—11 Jul 1848:  Waterloo railway station in London opens
 | 
| 111 | 1849 | 1849—1849:  SA - Circa 1849 the first Jewish Congregation founded in Cape Town.
1849—1850:  SA - The Byrne Settlers arrive in Natal.
1849—1849:  Florin (2 shilling coin) introduced as the first step to decimalisation -  which finally
occurred in 1971!
 | 
| 112 | 1850 | 1850—1859:  SA - First Afrikaans book written by an imam (Muslim prayer leader) of slave descent
1850—1850:  SA - Wesleyan Settlers arrive in Natal. Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Namaqualand.
1850—1853:  SA - Eighth Frontier War.
 | 
| 113 | 1851 | 1851—1851:  SA - Sugar first produced from cane in Natal.
1851—1851:  Gold discovered in Australia
1 May 1851—1 May 1851:  Great exhibition of the works of industry of all nations ('Crystal Palace' exhibition) opened in Hyde Park
 | 
| 114 | 1852 | 1852—1852:  SA - Copper mining in Namaqualand - migrant labour on small scale
1852—1852:  SA - The Transvaal Republic established. Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Middelburg. The New Church (Congregational / Presbyterian) established in Port Elizabeth. Copper mining begins at Springbokfontein. Wreck of the Birkenhead.
1852—1852:  Tasmania ceases to be a convict settlement
1852—1852:  Wells Fargo established in USA
 | 
| 115 | 1853 | 1853—1853:  SA - Hopetown established
1853—1853:  SA - Nicholas Waterboer succeeds as Griqua Captain
1853—1853:  SA - Settlement of Queenstown and Seymour. Union Steamship Line founded.
1853—1853:  Vaccination against smallpox made compulsory in Britain
 | 
| 116 | 1854 | 1854—1854:  SA - Orange Free State Republic proclaimed
1854—1854:  SA - Dutch Reformed Church parishes established in Montagu and Queenstown. First Cape Colony Parliament. Boers defeat Ndebele at Makapansgat.
1854—1854:  SA - Crimean War
1854—1854:  Cigarettes introduced into Britain
27 Mar 1854—27 Mar 1854:  Britain declares war on Russia (Crimean War)
25 Oct 1854—25 Oct 1854:  Battle of Balaklava in Crimea (charge of the Light Brigade)
 | 
| 117 | 1855 | 1855—1855:  SA - Pretoria founded. 20 Irish miners arrive to work in the Namaqualand copper mines.
 | 
| 118 | 1856 | 1856—1856:  SA - The Anglican St. Paul's Church in Port Elizabeth founded. Approximately 3000 Crimean War veterans (German Legionaires) settled in Kaffraria, later joined by 2700 German civilians. Dutch Reformed Church parish founded in Murraysburg.
1856—1856:  SA - Natal becomes a seperate colony.
1856—1857:  SA - Self-destruction of Xhosa tribe by cattle-killing.
1856—1862:  SA - Approximately 700 juveniles arrive from Holland.
1856—1856:  End of Crimean War
29 Jan 1856—29 Jan 1856:  Victoria Cross created by Royal Warrant, backdated to 1854 to recognise acts
during the Crimean War (first award ceremony 26 June 1857)
 | 
| 119 | 1857 | 1857—1857:  SA - Moffat completes Old Testament Bible translation into Setswana
1857—1857:  SA - Xhosa enter Karoo following Eastern Cape Cattle Killing.
1857—1857:  SA - Approximately 157 Irish girls arrive on the ship Lady Kennaway, settle in British Kaffraria. First Legislative Council in Natal. First mail contract with Union Steamship Company for regular mail service between Britain and South Africa.
1857—1862:  SA - Assisted immigration schemes bring about 12 000 settlers.
1857—1857:  Work starts on the laying of the Transatlantic cable
 | 
| 120 | 1858 | 1858—1858:  SA - Circa 1858, Jewish congregation founded in Port Elizabeth. The Anglican Holy Trinity Church built in Port Elizabeth. War between Orange Free State and Basuto tribe.
1858—1858:  'The great stink' -  smell of the River Thames forced Parliament to stop work
1858—1858:  Royal Opera House opens in Covent Garden, London
 | 
| 121 | 1859 | 1859—1859:  SA - Dopper Church leaves the Dutch Reformed Church. First railway in the Cape Colony commenced.
1859—1859:  Peaceful picketing legalised in Britain
25 Apr 1859—25 Apr 1859:  Work started on building the Suez canal (opened 17 Nov 1869)
4 May 1859—4 May 1859:  Brunel's Royal Albert Bridge opened at Saltash giving rail link between Devon
and Cornwall
24 Nov 1859—24 Nov 1859:  Charles Darwin publishes 'The Origin of Species'
 | 
| 122 | 1860 | 1860—1860:  SA - Boer republics north of Vaal unite as South African Republic
1860—1860:  SA - Indians arrive in Natal to work on sugar cane farms as indentured labourers. Between 1860-1911 about 152 000 Indians arrive and about 50% stay.
1860—1860:  SA - First telegraph service in South Africa, between Cape Town and Simonstown.
1860—1860:  SA - Start of penny post in Cape Town. Work began on Table Bay Docks. The Catholic St. Augustine's Church established in Port Elizabeth.Circa 1860, the first Baptist Church started in Port Elizabeth.
26 Jun 1860—1860:  SA - First railway in South Africa, between Market Square and Point, Durban, opens.
29 Aug 1860—29 Aug 1860:  First tram service in Europe starts in Birkenhead
 | 
| 123 | 1861 | 1861—1862:  SA - Griqua trek under Adam Kok III from Philippolis to Nomansland
1861—1861:  SA - American Civil War
25 May 1861—25 May 1861:  American Civil War begins
 | 
| 124 | 1862 | 1862—1862:  Lincoln issues first legal US paper money (Greenbacks)
20 Apr 1862—20 Apr 1862:  First pasteurisation test completed by Louis Pasteur and Claude Bernard
 | 
| 125 | 1863 | 1863—1863:  SA - The Hill Presbyterian Church started in Port Elizabeth.
1863—1863:  SA - North End Cemetery started in Port Elizabeth.
1863—1863:  Football Association founded (UK)
1863—1863:  Opening of state institution for criminally insane at Broadmoor, England
10 Jan 1863—10 Jan 1863:  First section of the London Underground Railway opens
 | 
| 126 | 1864 | 1864—1864:  SA - St. George's Cemetery established in Port Elizabeth.
1864—1864:  A man-powered submarine, 'Hunley'  sank a Federal steam ship  USS Housatonic  at the entrance to Charleston harbour in 1864 -  the first recorded successful attack by a submarine on a surface ship
11 Mar 1864—11 Mar 1864:  The Great Sheffield Flood -  over 250 died when a new dam broke while it was being filled for the first time
20 Aug 1864—20 Aug 1864:  Red Cross established -  Twelve nations sign the First Geneva Convention
8 Dec 1864—8 Dec 1864:  Clifton Suspension Bridge over the River Avon officially opened
 | 
| 127 | 1865 | 1865—1866:  SA - Albania Settlement Scheme
1865—1865:  SA - Ostriches first domesticated.
1865—1866:  SA - Economic depression throughout South Africa. War between Orange Free State and Basutos.
1865—1865:  Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836-1917) becomes first woman doctor in England [she later became the first woman mayor in England, in Aldeburgh 1908]
1865—1865:  First concrete roads built in Britain
14 Apr 1865—14 Apr 1865:  End of American Civil War -  slavery abolished in USA
14 Apr 1865—14 Apr 1865:  Abraham Lincoln assassinated in Ford's Theatre by John Wilkes Booth
5 Jul 1865—5 Jul 1865:  William Booth (1829-1912) founds Salvation Army, in London
 | 
| 128 | 1866 | 1866—1866:  SA - India officially stops sending Indian labourers to Natal.
 | 
| 129 | 1867 | Apr 1867—1867:  SA - 21.25 carat diamond found near Hopetown.
1 Jul 1867—1 Jul 1867:  The British North America Act takes effect, creating the Canadian Confederation
 | 
| 130 | 1868 | 1868—1869:  SA - Korana War along Orange River
1868—1868:  Last convicts landed in Australia (Western Australia)
 | 
| 131 | 1869 | 1869—1869:  SA - Railway from Port Nolloth to O'Kiep
1869—1869:  SA - Star of South Africa diamond discovered. Gold and diamond rush starts.
1869—1869:  Ball bearings, celluloid, margarine, and washing machines, all invented
23 Nov 1869—23 Nov 1869:  Cutty Sark launched in Dumbarton
 | 
| 132 | 1870 | 1870—1870:  SA - Galeshewe of Tlhaping born
1870—1884:  SA - |Xam prisoners at Cape Town interviewed by Wilhelm Bleek and Lucy Lloyd
1870—1871:  SA - The Anglican St. Peter's Church started in Port Elizabeth.
1870—1870:  SA - Opening of Cape Town Docks.
1870—1870:  GPO takes over the privately-owned Telegraph Companies (nationalised)
1870—1870:  Dr Thomas Barnardo opens his first home for destitute children
1870—1870:  Water closets come into wide use
1870—1870:  Diamonds discovered in Kimberley, South Africa
1 Oct 1870—1 Oct 1870:  First British postcard -  halfpenny post
 | 
| 133 | 1871 | 1871—1871:  SA - Diamonds found at New Rush; renamed Kimberley; 1873. Griqua claim to Diamond Fields recognised and Waterboer seeks British protection. Diamond mining stimulates migrant labour on unprecedented scale. Two thirds of black workforce comes from Limpopo valley
1871—1871:  SA - Gold discovered in Eastern Transvaal. Britain annexes the diamond fields of Kimberley and Griqua West. First mail from Cape Town to the diamond fields.
27 Mar 1871—27 Mar 1871:  First Rugby Football international, England v Scotland, played in Edinburgh
29 Mar 1871—29 Mar 1871:  Opening of Royal Albert Hall, London
29 Jun 1871—29 Jun 1871:  Trades Unions legalised in Britain, but picketing made illegal
 | 
| 134 | 1872 | 1872—1872:  Licensing hours introduced
1872—1872:  Penalties introduced for failing to register births, marriages & deaths (Eng & Wales)
4 Dec 1872—4 Dec 1872:  American ship 'Mary Celeste' is found abandoned by the British brig 'Dei Gratia' in the Atlantic Ocean
 | 
| 135 | 1873 | 1873—1873:  SA - Griqualand West proclaimed Crown Colony
1873—1873:  SA - Griqualand West established as a British colony. Gold discovered in Lydenburg district of Transvaal.
1873—1875:  SA - Approximately 3300 men, women and children arrive as agricultural settlers or labourers for public works.
 | 
| 136 | 1874 | 1874—1874:  SA - College founded at Stellenbosch (later Victoria College, today University of Stellenbosch). Railway line opened from Port Elizabeth to Uitenhage.
1874—1874:  Factory Act introduces 56-hour week
5 Apr 1874—5 Apr 1874:  Birkenhead Park opened, said to be the first civic public park in the world -  features of it later copied in Central Park, New York
 | 
| 137 | 1875 | 1875—1875:  SA - Black Flag Rebellion by white diggers at Kimberley
1875—1875:  SA - Genootskap vir Regte Afrikaners (Association for True Afrikaners) formed
1875—1875:  London's main sewage system completed
1 Jan 1875—1 Jan 1875:  Midland Railway abolishes Second Class passenger facilities, leaving First Class and Third Class. Other British railway companies followed during the rest of the year. (Third Class was renamed Second Class in 1956)
 | 
| 138 | 1876 | 1876—1876:  SA - Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje born
14 Feb 1876—14 Feb 1876:  Alexander Graham Bell and Elisha Gray each file a patent for the telephone -  Bell awarded the rights
 | 
| 139 | 1877 | 1877—1877:  SA - Native Locations for Tswana established in Griqualand West
1877—1877:  SA - Britain annexes the Transvaal Republic. Ninth Frontier War.
1877—1877:  Edison invents microphone and phonograph
 | 
| 140 | 1878 | 1878—1879:  SA - Griqualand West Rebellion and Korana War coincide with similar conflicts elsewhere in South Africa.
1878—1879:  SA - Griqualand West and Tswana Rebellion
1878—1878:  SA - Koegas atrocities
1878—1878:  SA - Walvis Bay proclaimed British territory. Telegraph service between Natal and Transvaal.
1878—1878:  Edison & Swan invent electric lamp
1878—1878:  Red Flag Act in Britain limits mechanical road vehicles to 4mph
1878—1878:  CID established at New Scotland Yard
 | 
| 141 | 1879 | 1 Sep 1879—1879:  SA - Zulu War starts, battles at Isandhlwana, Rorke's Drift and Ulundi.
18 Sep 1879—18 Sep 1879:  Blackpool illuminations switched on for first time
 | 
| 142 | 1880 | 1880—1880:  SA - Griqualand West annexed to Cape Colony
1880—1880:  SA - First Legislative Council in Transvaal. Formation of De Beers Company. Formation of the Afrikander Bond.
1880—1881:  SA - First Anglo-Boer War, Boers defeat Britain.
1880—1880:  Education Act: schooling compulsory for 5-10 year olds
1880—1880:  Mosquito found to be the carrier of malaria
2 Aug 1880—2 Aug 1880:  Greenwich Mean Time adopted throughout UK
 | 
| 143 | 1881 | 1881—1881:  SA - Jantje Mothibi of Tlhaping dies
1881—1882:  SA - Tswana-Kora wars with white mercenary involvement
1881—1881:  SA - Battle of Laing's Nek, 28 January. Battle of Majuba, 27 February. Britain recognises South African Republic (ZAR).
1881—1881:  Postal Orders introduced
1881—1881:  Flogging abolished in Army and Royal Navy
Sep 1881—Sep 1881:  Godalming in Surrey became the first town in England to have a public electricity
supply installed (but in 1884 it reverted to gas lighting until 1904)
26 Oct 1881—26 Oct 1881:  Gunfight at OK Corral
 | 
| 144 | 1882 | 1882—1882:  SA - Abraham September (freed slave) begins Orange River irrigation
1882—1882:  SA - Approximately 4645 settlers arrive. South End Cemetery in Port Elizabeth started. Use of Dutch recognised in Cape Parliament.
1882—1882:  Fourth Eddystone Lighthouse completed
29 Aug 1882—1882:  SA - 229 Norwegians arrive aboard the "Lapland" and settle at the mouth of the Umzimkulu river (Port Shepstone), Natal.
 | 
| 145 | 1883 | 1883—1890:  SA - Germans occupy South West Africa and German East Africa
1883—1883:  SA - Revd Gwayi Tyamzashe; last black man to hold a claim in Kimberley mines; loses his claim
1883—1883:  Statue of Liberty presented to USA by France
24 May 1883—24 May 1883:  Brooklyn Bridge, New York opens (crosses East River)
1 Aug 1883—1 Aug 1883:  Parcel post starts in Britain
27 Aug 1883—27 Aug 1883:  Eruption of Krakatoa near Java -  30,000 killed by tidal wave
 | 
| 146 | 1884 | 1884—1885:  SA - Warren takes over Stellaland and Goshen; establishes Crown Colony of British Bechuanaland and Bechuanaland Protectorate
1884—1884:  SA - The Anglican St. Cuthbert's Church built in Port Elizabeth. Barberton goldfields opened.
31 May 1884—31 May 1884:  John Harvey Kellogg patents corn flakes
13 Oct 1884—13 Oct 1884:  Greenwich made prime meridian of the world
 | 
| 147 | 1885 | 1885—1885:  SA - Railway line opened from Cape to Kimberley.
1885—1885:  Carl Benz builds the 'Motorwagen', a single-cylinder motor car
1885—1885:  Gottlieb Daimler patents the world's first motorcycle
1885—1885:  Eastman makes first coated photographic paper
1885—1885:  Canadian Pacific Railway completed
Mar 1885—Mar 1885:  First UK cremation in modern times took place at Woking
5 Sep 1885—5 Sep 1885:  The first train runs through the Severn Tunnel
29 Sep 1885—29 Sep 1885:  First electric tramcar used at Blackpool
 | 
| 148 | 1886 | 1886—1886:  SA - Gold found on Witwatersrand
1886—1886:  SA - Gold discovered in the Transvaal (Witwatersrand)
20 Jan 1886—20 Jan 1886:  Mersey railway (under Mersey) opened by Prince of Wales
May 1886—May 1886:  Pharmacist John Styth Pemberton invents a carbonated beverage later named 'Coca-Cola'
29 May 1886—29 May 1886:  Putney Bridge opens in London
 | 
| 149 | 1887 | 1887—1887:  Daimler produces a four-wheeled motor car
 | 
| 150 | 1888 | 1888—1888:  SA - C.J. Rhodes amalgamates Kimberley mining companies as De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd
1888—1888:  SA - 'Rudd concession' signed by Lobengula
1888—1888:  SA - British South Africa Company founded.
1888—1888:  Convention of Constantinople guarantees free maritime passage through Suez Canal in war and peace
1888—1888:  Jack the Ripper active in east London during the latter half of the year
1888—1888:  County Councils set up in Britain
1888—1888:  Dunlop invents pneumatic tyre
1888—1888:  First box camera -  George Eastman registers the trademark Kodak, and receives a patent
for his camera which uses roll film
20 Mar 1888—20 Mar 1888:  Football League formed
 | 
| 151 | 1889 | 1889—1889:  Celluloid film produced
1889—1889:  Dock Strike -  docker's won their 'Docker's Tanner' 6 old pennies
31 Mar 1889—31 Mar 1889:  Eiffel Tower completed (to mark centenary of French Revolution)
14 May 1889—14 May 1889:  Children's charity NSPCC launched in London
3 Jun 1889—3 Jun 1889:  Canadian Pacific Railway completed from coast to coast
28 Sep 1889—28 Sep 1889:  Length of a metre defined
 | 
| 152 | 1890 | 1890—1890:  SA - Pioneer Column of Rhodes's British South Africa Company departs from Kimberley to occupy Rhodesia
1890—1890:  SA - Railway line reaches from Cape to Bloemfontein. First railway line in Transvaal, from Johannesburg to Boksburg.
4 Mar 1890—4 Mar 1890:  Forth railway bridge opens -  took six years to build
4 Nov 1890—4 Nov 1890:  City & South London Railway opens -  London's first deep-level tube railway
and first major railway in the world to use electric traction
 | 
| 153 | 1891 | 1891—1891:  Primary education made free and compulsory
18 Mar 1891—18 Mar 1891:  First telephone link between London & Paris
4 May 1891—4 May 1891:  Fictional date when Sherlock Holmes throws Moriarty over Reichenbach Falls, then disappears for 3 years! (published in 1893)
24 Aug 1891—24 Aug 1891:  Thomas Edison patents the motion picture camera
 | 
| 154 | 1892 | 1892—1892:  SA - Mankurwane of Tlhaping dies
1892—1892:  SA - Railway line to Johannesburg completed with connections from Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and East London.
1892—1892:  Electric oven invented
1892—1892:  Shop Hours Act -  limit 74 hours per week for under-18's
6 Oct 1892—6 Oct 1892:  Alfred Lord Tennyson dies, aged 83, at his house Aldworth, near Haslemere
 | 
| 155 | 1893 | 1893—1893:  Henry Ford's first car
1893—1893:  Zip fastener invented
 | 
| 156 | 1894 | 1894—1894:  SA - Glen Grey Act passed in Cape to control African labour and land
1894—1894:  Picture postcard introduced in Britain
1 Jan 1894—1 Jan 1894:  Manchester Ship Canal opens
1 Mar 1894—1 Mar 1894:  Blackpool Tower opens
30 Jun 1894—30 Jun 1894:  Tower Bridge first opens
2 Aug 1894—2 Aug 1894:  Death duties first introduced in Britain
2 Nov 1894—1894:  SA - Railway line between Lourenco Marques and Johannesburg opened.
 | 
| 157 | 1895 | 1895—1895:  Sir Henry Wood starts Promenade Concerts in London
1895—1895:  SA - The Jameson Raid takes place in the Johannesburg district in December. The Pretoria-Delagoa Bay railway line opened by the South African Republic. Railway line opened between Durban and Johannesburg on 16 Dec 1896. Rinderpest causes big loss of cattle.
12 Jan 1895—12 Jan 1895:  The National Trust founded in England
24 May 1895—24 May 1895:  Henry Irving becomes the first person from the theatre to be knighted
28 May 1895—28 May 1895:  Oscar Wilde sent to prison
12 Jul 1895—12 Jul 1895:  First recorded motor journey of any length (56 miles) in Britain
17 Oct 1895—17 Oct 1895:  First people in Britain to be charged with motor offences -  John Henry Knight and James Pullinger of Farnham, Surrey
Nov 1895—Nov 1895:  X-rays discovered
 | 
| 158 | 1896 | 1896—1896:  SA - Montshiwa of Rolong dies
1896—1896:  SA - Rinderpest epidemic; spreading through Africa; breaks out here
1896—1897:  SA - Bechuanaland Campaign/Galeshewe's War begins at Phokwane and spreads to Langeberg
5 Apr 1896—5 Apr 1896:  First modern Olympic Games held in Athens
2 Jun 1896—2 Jun 1896:  Guglielmo Marconi receives a British patent (later disputed) for the radio
 | 
| 159 | 1897 | 1897—1897:  Thomas Edison patents the Kinetoscope, the first movie projector
1897—1897:  SA - Luka Mothibi killed in Langeberg
1897—1897:  SA - Zululand incorporated into Natal. Railway line opened between Cape Town and Bulawayo.
 | 
| 160 | 1898 | 1898—1898:  First photograph using artificial light
1898—1898:  Zeppelin builds airship
1898—1898:  Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company founded
17 Mar 1898—17 Mar 1898:  USS Holland launched, the first practical submarine
27 Jun 1898—27 Jun 1898:  The first solo circumnavigation of the globe completed at Rhode island by
Joshua Slocum in Spray (started from Boston, Mass on Apr 24, 1895)
 | 
| 161 | 1899 | 6 Mar 1899—6 Mar 1899:  Aspirin first marketed by Bayer
11 Oct 1899—11 Oct 1899:  Start of Second Boer War
11 Oct 1899—31 May 1902:  SA - The Second Anglo-Boer War.
13 Oct 1899—1899:  SA - Boers invade Natal
14 Oct 1899—1899:  SA - Sieges of Mafeking and Kimberley started.
20 Oct 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Talana.
21 Oct 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Elandslaagte.
30 Oct 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Lombard's Kop.
30 Oct 1899—1899:  SA - Siege of Ladysmith started.
23 Nov 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Belmont.
25 Nov 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Graspan.
28 Nov 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Modder River.
10 Dec 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Stormberg.
11 Dec 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Magersfontein.
15 Dec 1899—1899:  SA - Battle of Colenso. Battle of Dundee. Imperial Penny Postage adopted by Cape Colony
 | 
| 162 | 1900 | 1900—1900:  School leaving age in Britain raised to 14 years
1900—1900:  Central Line opens in London: underground is electrified
1900—1900:  Escalator shown at Paris exhibition
6 Jan 1900—1900:  SA - Boers attack Ladysmith.
23 Jan 1900—24 Jan 1900:  SA - Battle of Spion Kop.
5 Feb 1900—1900:  SA - Battle of Vaal Krantz.
9 Feb 1900—9 Feb 1900:  Davis Cup tennis competition established
15 Feb 1900—1900:  SA - Relief of Kimberley.
27 Feb 1900—27 Feb 1900:  Labour Party formed
28 Feb 1900—1900:  SA - Ladysmith relieved.
7 Mar 1900—1900:  SA - Battle of Poplar Grove.
13 Mar 1900—1900:  SA - Bloemfontein captured.
11 Jun 1900—1900:  SA - Battle of Diamond Hill. Burning of farms (scorched earth) policy authorised in July / August. Amalgamation of Union and Castle Steamship Lines.
 | 
| 163 | 1901 | 1901—1901:  Commonwealth of Australia founded
1901—1901:  Hubert Cecil Booth patents the vacuum cleaner
1901—1901:  SA - Bubonic plague in Cape Town.
1901—1902:  SA - 200 teachers arrive from England to teach in the British concentration camps, followed by 100 teachers from Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
22 Jan 1901—22 Jan 1901:  Queen Victoria dies -  Edward VII king
2 Feb 1901—2 Feb 1901:  Queen Victoria's funeral -  interred beside Prince Albert in the Frogmore
Mausoleum at Windsor Great Park
Jun 1901—Jun 1901:  Denunciation of use of concentration camps by British in Boer War
2 Oct 1901—2 Oct 1901:  Britain's first submarine launched
12 Dec 1901—12 Dec 1901:  First successful radio transmission across the Atlantic, by Marconi -  Morse
code from Cornwall to Newfoundland
 | 
| 164 | 1902 | 1902—1902:  Balfour's Education Act provides for secondary education
1902—1902:  Cremation Act -  cremation can only take place at officially recognised establishments,
and with two death certificates issued
1902—1902:  Marie Curie discovers radioactivity
31 Feb 1902—1902:  SA - Peace of Vereeniging signed, ending Anglo-Boer War.
24 May 1902—24 May 1902:  Empire Day (later Commonwealth Day) first celebrated
31 May 1902—31 May 1902:  Treaty of Vereeniging ends Second Boer War
9 Aug 1902—9 Aug 1902:  Coronation of Edward VII
 | 
| 165 | 1903 | 1903—1903:  Workers' Education Association (WEA) formed in Britain
1903—1903:  Women's Social and Political Union formed in Britain by Emmeline Pankhurst
1903—1903:  Henry Ford sets up his motor company
14 Dec 1903—14 Dec 1903:  First flight of Wilbur & Orville Wright
 | 
| 166 | 1904 | 1904—1904:  Leeds University established
1904—1904:  SA - Chinese labourers recruited for the Transvaal mines.
8 Apr 1904—8 Apr 1904:  France and UK sign the Entente Cordiale
4 May 1904—4 May 1904:  America takes over construction of the Panama Canal from the French
(completed 1914)
 | 
| 167 | 1905 | 1905—1905:  The title 'Prime Minister' noted in a royal warrant for the first time -  placed the Prime
Minister in order of precedence in Britain immediately after the Archbishop of York
1905—1905:  Aliens Act in Britain: Home Office controls immigration
1905—1905:  Germany lays down the first Dreadnought battleship
11 Apr 1905—11 Apr 1905:  Einstein publishes Special Theory of Relativity
 | 
| 168 | 1906 | 1906—1906:  Introduction of free school meals for poor children
10 Feb 1906—10 Feb 1906:  Launching of HMS Dreadnought, first turbine-driven battleship
15 Mar 1906—15 Mar 1906:  Rolls-Royce Ltd registered
26 May 1906—26 May 1906:  Vauxhall Bridge opened in London
20 Sep 1906—20 Sep 1906:  Launching of Cunard's RMS Mauretania on the Tyne
 | 
| 169 | 1907 | 1907—1907:  New Zealand becomes a Dominion
1907—1907:  Imperial College, London, is established
1907—1907:  First airship flies over London
1907—1907:  Lumiere develops a process for colour photography
1907—1907:  SA - Asiatic Registration Act passed in Transvaal, Indians oppose it.
Jul 1907—Jul 1907:  Leo Hendrik Baekeland patents Bakelite, the first plastic invented that held its
shape after being heated
1 Aug 1907—1 Aug 1907:  Baden-Powell leads the first Scout camp on Brownsea Island
9 Nov 1907—9 Nov 1907:  The Cullinan Diamond presented to Edward VII on his birthday
 | 
| 170 | 1908 | 1908—1908:  Coal Mines Regulation Act in Britain limits men to an eight hour day
1908—1908:  Separate courts for juveniles established in Britain
1908—1908:  Lord Baden-Powell starts the Boy Scout movement
1908—1908:  SA - Second Asiatic Registration Act passed in Transvaal, beginning of passive resistance campaigns.
1 Jul 1908—1 Jul 1908:  SOS became effective as an international signal of distress
12 Aug 1908—12 Aug 1908:  First 'Model T' Ford made
 | 
| 171 | 1909 | 1909—1909:  Beveridge Report prompts creation of labour Exchanges
1909—1909:  Peary reaches the north pole
1909—1909:  First commercial manufacture of Bakelite -  start of the plastic age
1909—1909:  SA - S.S. Waratah lost between Durban and Cape Town.
1 Jan 1909—1 Jan 1909:  Old Age Pensions Act came into force
16 Jan 1909—16 Jan 1909:  Ernest Shackleton's expedition finds the magnetic South Pole
15 Mar 1909—15 Mar 1909:  Selfridges department store opens in London
25 Jul 1909—25 Jul 1909:  Bleriot flies across the Channel (36 minutes, Calais to Dover)
 | 
| 172 | 1910 | 1910—1910:  Railway strike and coal strikes in Britain
1910—1910:  Constitutional crisis in Britain
1910—1910:  Dr Crippen caught by radio telegraphy; hanged 23 Nov at Pentonville
1910—1910:  Madame Curie isolates radium
1910—1910:  Halley's comet reappears
1910—1910:  Tango becomes popular in North America and Europe
1910—1910:  SA - Laying of foundation stone of Union Buildings in Pretoria.
1910—1910:  SA - Union of South Africa established
6 May 1910—6 May 1910:  Edward VII dies -  George V becomes King
31 May 1910—1910:  SA - Union of South Africa established by joining the British colonies and the Boer republics
 | 
| 173 | 1911 | 1911—1911:  Parliament Act in Britain reduces the power of the House of Lords
1911—1911:  British MPs receive a salary
1911—1911:  First British Official Secrets Act
1911—1911:  Rutherford: theory of atomic structures
1911—1911:  Strikes by seamen, dock and transport workers (1911-1912)
2 Apr 1911—2 Apr 1911:  Census: Population - England and Wales: 36 Million; Scotland: 4.6 Million; N Ireland: 1.25 Million
17 May 1911—1911:  SA - Census of population taken.
22 Jun 1911—22 Jun 1911:  Coronation of George V
14 Dec 1911—14 Dec 1911:  National Insurance introduced in Britain
 | 
| 174 | 1912 | 1912—1912:  Irish Home Rule crisis grows in Britain
1912—1912:  Britain nationalises the telephone system
1912—1912:  Discovery of the 'Piltdown Man' -  hoax, exposed in 1953
1912—1912:  The Titanic sinks
18 Jan 1912—18 Jan 1912:  Captain Scott's last expedition -  he and his team reach the south pole on Jan
18th; all die on the way back, their bodies found in November
14 Apr 1912—14 Apr 1912:  The 'unsinkable' Titanic sinks on maiden voyage -  loss of 1,513 lives
13 May 1912—13 May 1912:  Royal Flying Corps (later the RAF) founded in Britain
 | 
| 175 | 1913 | 1913—1913:  Third Irish Home Rule Bill rejected by House of Lords -  threat of civil war in Ireland - 
formation of Ulster Volunteers to oppose Home Rule
1913—1913:  Suffragette demonstrations in London -  Mrs Pankhurst imprisoned
1913—1913:  Trade Union Act in Britain establishes the right to use Union funds for political
purposes
1913—1913:  Invention of stainless steel by Harry Brearley of Sheffield
1913—1913:  Geiger invents his counter to measure radioactivity
1913—1913:  SA - Miners' strikes and riots on Witwatersrand. Indian riots in Natal. March of Natal Indians into Transvaal. Natives Land Act restricts black ownership of land.
4 Jun 1913—4 Jun 1913:  Emily Davison, a suffragette, runs out in front of the king's horse, Anmer, at the
Epsom Derby and dies
 | 
| 176 | 1914 | 1914—1914:  Irish Home Rule Act provides for a separate Parliament in Ireland; the position of Ulster
to be decided after the War
1914—1914:  Chaplin and De Mille make their first films
28 Jun 1914—28 Jun 1914:  Archduke Ferdinand assassinated in Sarajevo
4 Aug 1914—4 Aug 1914:  Britain declares war on Germany, citing Belgian neutrality as reason
5 Aug 1914—5 Aug 1914:  British cableship Telconia cut through all five of Germany's undersea telegraph
links to the outside world
15 Aug 1914—15 Aug 1914:  Panama Canal opened, the Canal cement boat 'Ancon' making the first official
transit (plans for a grand opening were cancelled due to the start of WW1)
Oct 1914—Oct 1914:  Battle of Ypres -  beginning of trench warfare on western front
27 Nov 1914—27 Nov 1914:  First policewoman goes on duty in Britain
16 Dec 1914—16 Dec 1914:  German battleships bombard Hartlepool and Scarborough
 | 
| 177 | 1915 | 1915—1915:  Junkers construct first fighter aeroplane
1915—1915:  First automatic telephone exchange in Britain
1915—1915:  SA - Afrikaans becomes the second official language, after English. South West Africa and South Africa linked by railway line.
19 Jan 1915—19 Jan 1915:  First Zeppelin air raid on England, over East Anglia -  four killed
Feb 1915—Feb 1915:  Submarine blockade of Britain starts
Apr 1915—Apr 1915:  Second Battle of Ypres -  poison gas used for first time
25 Apr 1915—25 Apr 1915:  Gallipoli campaign starts (declared ANZAC Day in 1916)
7 May 1915—7 May 1915:  RMS Lusitania sunk by German submarine off coast of Ireland -  1,198 died
16 May 1915—16 May 1915:  First meeting of a British WI (Women's Institute) took place in Llanfairpwll
(aka Llanfair PG), Anglesey
 | 
| 178 | 1916 | 1916—1916:  Compulsory military service introduced in Britain
Feb 1916—Feb 1916:  Battle of Verdun -  appalling losses on both sides, stalemate continues
24 Apr 1916—24 Apr 1916:  Easter Rising in Ireland -  after the leaders are executed, public opinion backs
independence
21 May 1916—21 May 1916:  First use of Daylight Saving Time in UK
31 May 1916—31 May 1916:  Battle of Jutland -  only major naval battle between the British and
German fleets
5 Jun 1916—5 Jun 1916:  Sinking of HMS Hampshire and death of Kitchener
3 Aug 1916—3 Aug 1916:  Sir Roger Casement hanged at Pentonville Prison for treason
15 Sep 1916—15 Sep 1916:  First use of tanks in battle, but of limited effect (Battle of the Somme 1 July to 18 Nov: over 1 million casualties)
7 Dec 1916—7 Dec 1916:  Lloyd-George becomes British Prime Minister of the coalition government
 | 
| 179 | 1917 | 1917—1917:  Battle of Cambrai -  first use of massed tanks, but effect more psychological than actual
1917—1917:  Ministry of Labour is established in Britain
Feb 1917—Feb 1917:  February revolution in Russia; Tsar Nicholas abdicates
16 Apr 1917—16 Apr 1917:  Lenin returns to Russia after exile
17 Apr 1917—17 Apr 1917:  USA declares war on Germany
26 May 1917—26 May 1917:  George V changes surname from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Windsor (Royal
proclamation on 17 July)
Jul 1917—Jul 1917:  Battle of Passchendaele -  little gained by either side (Jul-Nov)
7 Nov 1917—7 Nov 1917:  'October' Revolution in Russia -  Bolsheviks overthrow provisional government;
Lenin becomes Chief Commissar
6 Dec 1917—6 Dec 1917:  Halifax (Nova Scotia) Explosion, one of the world's largest artificial non-nuclear
explosions to date: a ship loaded with wartime explosives blew up after a collision,
obliterating buildings and structures within two square kilometres of the explosion
9 Dec 1917—9 Dec 1917:  British forces capture Jerusalem
 | 
| 180 | 1918 | 1918—1918:  Vote for women over 30, men over 21 (except peers, lunatics and felons)
1918—1918:  War of Independence in Ireland
1918—1918:  SA - Influenza epidemic with pneumonia.
18 Jan 1918—18 Jan 1918:  Bentley Motors founded
8 Mar 1918—8 Mar 1918:  Start of world-wide 'flu pandemic
Jul 1918—Jul 1918:  Second Battle of the Marne: last major German offensive in WW1 (Jul-Aug)
1 Oct 1918—1 Oct 1918:  Arab forces under Lawrence of Arabia capture Damascus
11 Nov 1918—11 Nov 1918:  Armistice signed
Dec 1918—Dec 1918:  First woman elected to House of Commons, Countess Markiewicz as a Sinn Fein
member refused to take her seat
 | 
| 181 | 1919 | 1919—1919:  Britain adopts a 48-hour working week
1919—1919:  Sir Ernest Rutherford publishes account of splitting the atom
15 Jun 1919—15 Jun 1919:  Alcock and Brown complete first nonstop flight across the Atlantic
28 Jun 1919—28 Jun 1919:  Treaty of Versailles signed
 | 
| 182 | 1920 | 1920—1920:  Regular cross-channel air service starts
1920—1920:  Marconi opens a radio broadcasting station in Britain
1920—1920:  Thompson patents his machine gun (Tommy gun)
Feb 1920—Feb 1920:  First roadside petrol filling station in UK -  opened by the Automobile Association
at Aldermaston on the Bath Road
 | 
| 183 | 1921 | 1921—1921:  Railway Act in Britain amalgamates companies -  only four remained
1921—1921:  Insulin discovery announced
1921—1921:  First birth control clinic
1921—1921:  SA - Diamond mines closed down in Kimberley, economic depression.
19 Jun 1921—19 Jun 1921:  Census: Population - England and Wales: 37.9 Million; Scotland: 4.9 Million; N Ireland: 1.25 Million
6 Dec 1921—6 Dec 1921:  Anglo-Irish Treaty signed in London, leading to the formation of the Irish Free
State and Northern Ireland
 | 
| 184 | 1922 | 1922—1922:  Law of Property Act -  the manorial system effectively ended
1 Jun 1922—1 Jun 1922:  Royal Ulster Constabulary founded
Oct 1922—Oct 1922:  BBC established as a monopoly, and begins transmissions in November (2LO in
London on 14 Nov; 5IT in Birmingham and 2ZY in Manchester on 15 Nov)
4 Oct 1922—1922:  SA - Inauguration of Witwatersrand University.
 | 
| 185 | 1923 | 1923—1923:  Roads in Great Britain classified with A and B numbers
1923—1923:  Hubble shows there are galaxies beyond the Milky Way
1923—1923:  First American broadcasts heard in Britain
1923—1923:  SA - Platinum discovered in Waterberg district of Transvaal.
1 Jan 1923—1 Jan 1923:  The majority of the railway companies in Great Britain grouped into four main
companies, the Big Four: LNER, GWR, SR, LMSR -  lasted until nationalisation in 1948
16 Feb 1923—16 Feb 1923:  Howard Carter unsealed the burial chamber of Tutankhamun
28 Apr 1923—28 Apr 1923:  First Wembley cup final (West Ham 0, Bolton 2) -  'I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles ' popular song of the time  became the West Ham anthem
28 Sep 1923—28 Sep 1923:  First publication of Radio Times
 | 
| 186 | 1924 | 4 Jan 1924—4 Jan 1924:  First Labour government in Britain, headed by Ramsay MacDonald
5 Feb 1924—5 Feb 1924:  Hourly Greenwich Time Signals from the Royal Greenwich Observatory were
first broadcast by the BBC
31 Mar 1924—31 Mar 1924:  British Imperial Airways begins operations (formed by merger of four British
airline companies -  became BOAC in 1940)
17 Jun 1924—1924:  SA - General elections in South Africa.
 | 
| 187 | 1925 | 1925—1925:  Britain returns to gold standard
1925—1925:  SA - South Africa reverts to gold standard. Afrikaans constituted an official language.
18 Jul 1925—18 Jul 1925:  Adolf Hitler publishes Mein Kampf
 | 
| 188 | 1926 | 1926—1926:  First public demonstration of television (TV) by John Logie Baird
1926—1926:  Adoption of children is legalised in Britain
1926—1926:  Kodak produces 16mm movie film
1926—1926:  Walt Disney arrives in Hollywood
21 Apr 1926—21 Apr 1926:  Princess Elizabeth born
3 May 1926—3 May 1926:  General Strike begins. Lasts until May 12 (mine workers for 6 months more)
31 Oct 1926—31 Oct 1926:  Death of Harry Houdini
 | 
| 189 | 1927 | 1927—1927:  Release of the first 'talkie' film (The Jazz Singer)
7 Jan 1927—7 Jan 1927:  First transatlantic telephone call -  New York City to London
22 Jan 1927—22 Jan 1927:  First football broadcast by BBC (Arsenal v Sheffield United at Highbury)
1 May 1927—1 May 1927:  First cooked meals on a scheduled flight introduced by Imperial Airways from
London to Paris
20 May 1927—20 May 1927:  Lindbergh makes solo flight across the Atlantic, in 33? hours
31 May 1927—31 May 1927:  Last Ford Model T rolls off assembly line
24 Jul 1927—24 Jul 1927:  The Menin Gate war memorial unveiled at Ypres
 | 
| 190 | 1928 | 1928—1928:  Women over 21 get vote in Britain -  same qualification for both sexes
26 Apr 1928—26 Apr 1928:  Madame Tussauds opens in London
15 Sep 1928—15 Sep 1928:  Sir Alexander Fleming accidentally discovers penicillin (results published 1929)
 | 
| 191 | 1929 | 1929—1929:  Abolition of Poor Law system in Britain
1929—1929:  Minimum age for a marriage in Britain (which had been 14 for a boy and 12 for a girl)
now 16 for both sexes, with parental consent (or a licence) needed for anyone under 21
1929—1929:  BBC begins experimental TV transmissions
 | 
| 192 | 1930 | 1930—1930:  First Nazis elected to the German Reichstag
1930—1930:  Youth Hostel Association (YHA) founded in Britain
1930—1930:  SA - White women receive the vote.
30 Jan 1930—30 Jan 1930:  Hitler becomes chancellor of Germany
31 Jan 1930—31 Jan 1930:  3M begins marketing Scotch Tape
6 Mar 1930—6 Mar 1930:  Clarence Birdseye first marketed frozen peas
5 Oct 1930—5 Oct 1930:  R101 airship disaster -  British abandons airship construction
 | 
| 193 | 1931 | 1931—1931:  Statute of Westminster: British Dominions become independent sovereign states
1931—1931:  Collapse of the German banking system; 3,000 banks there close
14 Apr 1931—14 Apr 1931:  Highway Code first issued
26 Apr 1931—26 Apr 1931:  Census: Population - England and Wales; 40 Million; Scotland: 4.8 Million; N Ireland: 1.24 Million (Unfortunately, the census was destroyed by fire in WW2)
21 Oct 1931—21 Oct 1931:  National Government formed to deal with economic crisis -  Britain comes off
gold standard
 | 
| 194 | 1932 | 1932—1932:  Great Hunger March of unemployed to London
1932—1932:  Moseley founds British Union of Fascists
1932—1932:  Cockroft and Walton accelerate particles to disintegrate an atomic nucleus
1932—1932:  Sir Thomas Beecham established the London Philharmonic Orchestra
1932—1932:  SA - Airmail service between South Africa and Britain started in January. Wireless telephone communication established with Britain in February.
21 May 1932—21 May 1932:  Amelia Earhart first solo nonstop flight across Atlantic by a female pilot
3 Oct 1932—3 Oct 1932:  Iraq gains independence from Britain
3 Oct 1932—3 Oct 1932:  'The Times' introduces 'Times New Roman' typeface
 | 
| 195 | 1933 | 1933—1933:  ICI scientists discover polythene
1933—1933:  Only 6 pennies minted in Britain this year
1933—1933:  SA - South Africa House opened in London. Afrikaans Bible issued.
12 Nov 1933—12 Nov 1933:  First known photos of the 'Loch Ness Monster' taken
 | 
| 196 | 1934 | 1934—1934:  Hitler becomes Fuehrer of Germany
1934—1934:  SA - Union Airways acquired by government on 01 August 1936. South African Broadcasting Corporation established.
18 Jul 1934—18 Jul 1934:  King George V opens Mersey Tunnel
26 Sep 1934—26 Sep 1934:  RMS Queen Mary launched
30 Nov 1934—30 Nov 1934:  First time a steam locomotive travels at 100 mph ('Flying Scotsman')
 | 
| 197 | 1935 | 1935—1935:  London adopts a 'Green Belt' scheme
1935—1935:  Land speed record of 301.13 mph by Malcolm Campbell
28 Feb 1935—28 Feb 1935:  Nylon first produced by Gerard J. Berchet of Wallace Carothers' research group
at DuPont (there is no evidence to the widely-supposed story that the name derives from
New York-London)
12 Mar 1935—12 Mar 1935:  Hore-Belisha introduces pedestrian crossings and speed limits for built-up areas
in Britain
1 Jun 1935—1 Jun 1935:  Voluntary driving tests introduced in UK
30 Jul 1935—30 Jul 1935:  Penguin paperbacks launched
 | 
| 198 | 1936 | 1936—1936:  Jet engine first tested
20 Jan 1936—20 Jan 1936:  George V dies
5 May 1936—5 May 1936:  First flight of a Spitfire
24 Jul 1936—24 Jul 1936:  'Speaking clock' service starts in UK
2 Nov 1936—2 Nov 1936:  British Broadcasting Corporation initiates the BBC Television Service, world's
first public TV transmission
30 Nov 1936—30 Nov 1936:  Crystal Palace destroyed by fire
5 Dec 1936—5 Dec 1936:  Edward VIII abdicates (announced Dec 10) -  popular carol that Christmas:
'Hark the Herald Angels sing  Mrs Simpson's got our King'
 | 
| 199 | 1937 | 1937—1937:  '999' emergency telephone call facility starts in London
1937—1937:  Billy Butlin opens his first holiday camp
12 Apr 1937—12 Apr 1937:  Frank Whittle ground-tests the first jet engine designed to power an aircraft
12 May 1937—12 May 1937:  Coronation of King George VI
28 May 1937—28 May 1937:  Neville Chamberlain becomes Prime Minister -  policy of appeasement towards
Hitler
3 Jun 1937—3 Jun 1937:  Duke of Windsor marries Wallis Simpson
4 Dec 1937—4 Dec 1937:  'The Dandy' first published
 | 
| 200 | 1938 | 1938—1938:  SA - Great Trek Centenary celebrations.
1938—1938:  Principle of paid holidays established in Britain
1938—1938:  HMS Rodney first ship to be equipped with radar
1938—1938:  First practical ball-point pen produced by Hungarian journalist, Lajos Biro
12 Mar 1938—12 Mar 1938:  Germany invades and annexes Austria
3 Jul 1938—3 Jul 1938:  'Mallard' reaches 126 mph (203 km/h); still world record for a steam locomotive
27 Sep 1938—27 Sep 1938:  Largest ocean liner ever built, Queen Elizabeth launched on Clydebank
29 Sep 1938—29 Sep 1938:  Chamberlain visits Hitler in Munich -  promises 'peace in our time'
30 Oct 1938—30 Oct 1938:  Orson Welles broadcasts his radio play of HG Wells 'The War of the Worlds', causing panic in the USA
 | 
| 201 | 1939 | 1939—1939:  Germany annexes Czechoslovakia
1939—1939:  Start of evacuation of women and children from London
1939—1939:  Coldest winter in Britain since 1894, though this could not be publicised at the time
1 Sep 1939—1 Sep 1939:  Germany invades Poland
3 Sep 1939—3 Sep 1939:  Britain and France declare war on Germany
6 Sep 1939—6 Sep 1939:  First air-raid on Britain
11 Sep 1939—11 Sep 1939:  British Expeditionary Force (BEF) sent to France
14 Oct 1939—14 Oct 1939:  HMS Royal Oak sunk in Scapa Flow with loss of 810 lives
7 Dec 1939—7 Dec 1939:  'First flight' of Canadian troops sail for Britain -  7,400 men on 5 ships
17 Dec 1939—17 Dec 1939:  'Admiral Graf Spee' scuttled outside Montevideo
 | 
| 202 | 1940 | 1 Apr 1940—1 Apr 1940:  BOAC starts operations, replacing Imperial and British Airways Ltd
11 May 1940—11 May 1940:  National Government formed under Churchill
13 May 1940—13 May 1940:  Germany invades France
27 May 1940—27 May 1940:  Start of the evacuation of the British Army at Dunkirk (27 May - 4 Jun)
25 Jun 1940—25 Jun 1940:  Fall of France to Germany
7 Sep 1940—7 Sep 1940:  Germany launches bombing blitz on Britain, the first of 57 consecutive nights of
bombing
15 Sep 1940—15 Sep 1940:  Battle of Britain: massive waves of German air attacks decisively repulsed by the
RAF -  Hitler postpones invasion of Britain
14 Nov 1940—14 Nov 1940:  Coventry heavily bombed and the Cathedral almost completely destroyed
 | 
| 203 | 1941 | 1941—1941:  Britain introduces severe rationing
1941—1941:  First British jet aircraft flies, based on work of Whittle
1941—1941:  Bailey invents his portable military bridge
1941—1941:  First use of antibiotics
1941—1941:  SA - South African Forces take Mega in Southern Abyssinia. South African Forces arrive in Egypt in April.
1941—1941:  SA - Heroic stand by South African Forces at Sidi Resegh in November 1944. The black-out in Cape Town is suspended. 6th South African Armoured Division leads 8th Army offensive in Italy, South Africans were the first to enter Florence.
10 May 1941—10 May 1941:  Rudolf Hess flies to Scotland
27 May 1941—27 May 1941:  'Bismark' sunk
22 Jun 1941—22 Jun 1941:  Germany invades Russia (Operation Barbarossa)
1 Jul 1941—1 Jul 1941:  First Canadian armoured regiments arrive in Britain
Dec 1941—Dec 1941:  Canadian forces given operation role in defending south coast of England
Dec 1941—Dec 1941:  'Manhattan Project' of nuclear research begins in America
7 Dec 1941—7 Dec 1941:  Japan attackes US fleet at Pearl Harbour
8 Dec 1941—8 Dec 1941:  USA enters WWII
24 Dec 1941—24 Dec 1941:  Hong Kong falls to the Japanese
 | 
| 204 | 1942 | 1942—1942:  Invention of world's first programmable computer by Alan Turing in co-operation with
Max Neumann -  used to crack German codes
1942—1942:  Gilbert Murray founds Oxfam
30 May 1942—30 May 1942:  Over 1,000 allied bombers raid Cologne
4 Jun 1942—4 Jun 1942:  Battle of Midway
19 Aug 1942—19 Aug 1942:  Abortive raid on Dieppe, largely by Canadian troops
6 Sep 1942—6 Sep 1942:  Germans defeated at Stalingrad
3 Oct 1942—3 Oct 1942:  First successful launch of V2 rocket in Germany -  first man-made object to reach
space
23 Oct 1942—23 Oct 1942:  Battle of El Alamein -  Montgomery defeats Rommel
2 Dec 1942—2 Dec 1942:  'Manhattan Project' -  a team led by Enrico Fermi initiates the first self-sustaining
nuclear chain reaction
 | 
| 205 | 1943 | 1943—1943:  Round-the-clock bombing of Germany begins
16 May 1943—16 May 1943:  'Dam Buster' raids on Ruhr dams by RAF
24 Jul 1943—24 Jul 1943:  Allies invade Italy -  Benito Mussolini resigns as Italian Dictator, 24 July
 | 
| 206 | 1944 | 6 Apr 1944—6 Apr 1944:  PAYE income tax begins
4 Jun 1944—4 Jun 1944:  Allies enter Rome
6 Jun 1944—6 Jun 1944:  D-Day invasion of Normandy
12 Jun 1944—12 Jun 1944:  First V1 flying bombs hit London
8 Sep 1944—8 Sep 1944:  First V2 rocket bombs hit London
11 Sep 1944—11 Sep 1944:  Allies enter Germany
16 Dec 1944—16 Dec 1944:  Battle of the Bulge: German counter-offensive
 | 
| 207 | 1945 | 1945—1945:  SA - 34 people killed and 90 injured in explosion of the Grand Magazine in Pretoria.
1945—1945:  SA - Announcement made that as from the beginning of the war until 05 March 1945, more than 1500 South African soldiers were decorated, 2386 were mentioned in despatches and 330 were commended.
1945—1945:  SA - Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuked
4 Feb 1945—4 Feb 1945:  Yalta Conference between Churchill, Roosevelt and Stalin
17 Mar 1945—1945:  SA - South African Forces capture Monte Sole and Monte Caprara, which were barring entering into Bologna.
29 Mar 1945—29 Mar 1945:  Last V1 flying bomb attack
25 Apr 1945—25 Apr 1945:  Berlin surrounded by Russian troops
30 Apr 1945—30 Apr 1945:  Hitler commits suicide
8 May 1945—8 May 1945:  VE Day (Victory in Europe)
9 May 1945—9 May 1945:  Channel Islands liberated
26 Jun 1945—26 Jun 1945:  UN Charter signed in San Francisco
16 Jul 1945—16 Jul 1945:  First ever atomic bomb exploded in a test in New Mexico (although there were
other forms of atomic device before that, such as the Pile at Stagg Field, first critical on
2nd Dec 1942)
26 Jul 1945—26 Jul 1945:  Labour win UK General Election -  Churchill out of office
29 Jul 1945—29 Jul 1945:  BBC Light Programme starts
6 Aug 1945—6 Aug 1945:  Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima
9 Aug 1945—9 Aug 1945:  Atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki
15 Aug 1945—15 Aug 1945:  VJ Day (Victory in Japan)
2 Sep 1945—2 Sep 1945:  Japanese surrender signed aboard USS Missouri
24 Oct 1945—24 Oct 1945:  United Nations Organisation comes into existence
4 Nov 1945—4 Nov 1945:  UNESCO founded
 | 
| 208 | 1946 | 1946—1946:  Transition to National Health Service starts in Britain (came into being 5th July 1948)
1946—1946:  Alistair Cooke starts his regular 'Letter from America' on BBC radio -  until 2004
1 Jan 1946—1 Jan 1946:  First civillian flight from Heathrow Airport
1 Mar 1946—1 Mar 1946:  Bank of England nationalised
 | 
| 209 | 1947 | 1947—1947:  Most severe winter in Britain for 53 years at start of the year -  heavy snow and much
flooding later
1947—1947:  First British nuclear reactor developed
1 Jan 1947—1 Jan 1947:  Coal Mines nationalised
23 Feb 1947—23 Feb 1947:  International Organization for Standardization (ISO) founded
1 Mar 1947—1 Mar 1947:  International Monetary Fund begins financial operations
1 Apr 1947—1 Apr 1947:  School leaving age raised to 15 in Britain
26 Oct 1947—26 Oct 1947:  British military occupation ends in Iraq
20 Nov 1947—20 Nov 1947:  Marriage of Princess Elizabeth (later Elizabeth II) and Philip Mountbatten in
Westminster Abbey
 | 
| 210 | 1948 | 1948—1948:  British Citizenship Act : all Commonwealth citizens qualify for British passports
1948—1948:  Transistor radio invented
1948—1948:  Long-playing record (LP) invented by Goldmark
1948—1948:  SA - Known as the beginning of apartheid era.
1948—1948:  SA - Nationalist Government come to power in SA
1 Jan 1948—1 Jan 1948:  British Railways nationalised
5 Jul 1948—5 Jul 1948:  National Health Service (NHS) begins in Britain
29 Jul 1948—29 Jul 1948:  London Olympics begin
 | 
| 211 | 1949 | 1949—1949:  Maiden flight of the Bristol Brabazon (broken up in 1953 for scrap)
1949—1949:  De Haviland produces the Comet -  first jet airliner
15 Mar 1949—15 Mar 1949:  Clothes rationing ends in Britain
4 Apr 1949—4 Apr 1949:  Twelve nations sign The North Atlantic Treaty creating NATO
 | 
| 212 | 1950 | 1950—1950:  SA - Korean War
19 May 1950—19 May 1950:  Points rationing ends in Britain
26 May 1950—26 May 1950:  Petrol rationing ends in Britain
11 Jul 1950—11 Jul 1950:  'Andy Pandy' first seen on BBC TV
9 Sep 1950—9 Sep 1950:  Soap rationing ends in Britain
28 Dec 1950—28 Dec 1950:  The Peak District becomes the Britain's first National Park
 | 
| 213 | 1951 | 3 May 1951—3 May 1951:  Festival of Britain and Royal Festival Hall open on South Bank, London
28 May 1951—28 May 1951:  First Goon Show broadcast
20 Dec 1951—20 Dec 1951:  Electricity first produced by nuclear power, from Experimental Breeder Reactor
 | 
| 214 | 1952 | 1952—1952:  Contraceptive pill invented
1952—1952:  Britain explodes her first atomic bomb, in Australia
1952—1952:  Radioactive carbon used for dating prehistoric objects
1952—1952:  Bonn Convention: Britain, France and USA end their occupation of West Germany
6 Feb 1952—6 Feb 1952:  King George VI dies
21 Feb 1952—21 Feb 1952:  Identity Cards abolished in Britain
2 May 1952—2 May 1952:  First commercial jet airliner service launched, by BOACComet between London
and Johannesburg
5 Jul 1952—5 Jul 1952:  Last tram runs in London (Woolwich to New Cross)
16 Aug 1952—16 Aug 1952:  Lynmouth (North Devon) flood disaster
6 Sep 1952—6 Sep 1952:  DH110 crashes at Farnborough Air Show, 26 killed
3 Oct 1952—3 Oct 1952:  End of tea rationing in Britain
1 Nov 1952—1 Nov 1952:  The first H-bomb ever ('Mike') was exploded by the USA -  the mushroom cloud
was 8 miles across and 27 miles high. The canopy was 100 miles wide. Radioactive mud fell
out of the sky followed by heavy rain. 80 million tons of earth was vaporised.
25 Nov 1952—25 Nov 1952:  Agatha Christie's 'The Mousetrap' opens in London
4 Dec 1952—4 Dec 1952:  Great smog hits London
 | 
| 215 | 1953 | 31 Jan 1953—31 Jan 1953:  Said to be the biggest civil catastrophe in Britain in the 20th century - 
severe storm and high tides caused the loss of hundreds of lives - - effects travelled from the
west coast of Scotland round to the south-east coast of England [The Netherlands were even
worse affected with over a thousand deaths]
5 Feb 1953—5 Feb 1953:  Sweet rationing ends in Britain
5 Mar 1953—5 Mar 1953:  Death of Stalin
26 Mar 1953—26 Mar 1953:  Jonas Salk announces his polio vaccine
24 Apr 1953—24 Apr 1953:  Winston Churchill knighted
25 Apr 1953—25 Apr 1953:  Francis Crick and James D Watson publish the double helix structure of DNA
2 Jun 1953—2 Jun 1953:  Coronation of Elizabeth II
26 Sep 1953—26 Sep 1953:  Sugar rationing ends in Britain (after nearly 14 years)
 | 
| 216 | 1954 | 1954—1954:  First comprehensive school opens in London
1954—1954:  Routemaster bus starts operating in London
1954—1954:  First transistor radios sold
6 May 1954—6 May 1954:  First sub 4 minute mile (Roger Bannister, 3 mins 59.4 secs)
3 Jul 1954—3 Jul 1954:  Food rationing officially ends in Britain
5 Jul 1954—5 Jul 1954:  BBC broadcasts its first television news bulletin
30 Sep 1954—30 Sep 1954:  First atomic powered sumbmarine USS Nautilus commissioned
 | 
| 217 | 1955 | 1955—1955:  'Mole' self-grip wrench patented by Thomas Coughtrie of Mole & Sons
27 Jul 1955—27 Jul 1955:  Jul 27: Allied occupation of Austria (after WW2) ends
22 Sep 1955—22 Sep 1955:  Commercial TV starts in Britain
 | 
| 218 | 1956 | 1956—1956:  Britain constructs world's first large-scale nuclear power station in Cumberland
1 Mar 1956—1 Mar 1956:  Radiotelephony spelling alphabet introduced (Alpha, Bravo, etc)
17 Apr 1956—17 Apr 1956:  Premium Bonds first launched -  first prizes drawn on 1 Jun 1957
3 Jun 1956—3 Jun 1956:  3rd class travel abolished on British Railways (renamed 'Third Class' as 'Second
Class', which had been abolished in 1875 leaving just First and Third Class)
31 Oct 1956—31 Oct 1956:  Britain and France invade Suez
 | 
| 219 | 1957 | 1957—1957:  Britain introduces parking meters
1957—1957:  Helvetica typeface developed (in Switzerland)
1957—1957:  SA - Sputnik
11 Jan 1957—11 Jan 1957:  Harold Macmillan becomes Prime Minister
14 May 1957—14 May 1957:  Post-Suez petrol rationing ends
15 May 1957—15 May 1957:  Britain explodes her first hydrogen bomb, at Christmas Island
25 May 1957—25 May 1957:  Treaty of Rome to create European Economic Community (EEC) of six
countries: France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland and Luxembourg -  became
operational Jan 1958
4 Dec 1957—4 Dec 1957:  Lewisham rail disaster -  90 killed as two trains collide in thick fog and a viaduct
collapses on top of them
25 Dec 1957—25 Dec 1957:  Queen's first Christmas TV broadcast
 | 
| 220 | 1958 | 1958—1958:  Easter: First anti-nuclear protest march to Aldermaston (emergence of CND)
1958—1958:  Computers begin to be used in research, industry and commerce
1958—1958:  USA begins to produce Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs)
13 May 1958—13 May 1958:  Velcro trade mark registered
26 Jul 1958—26 Jul 1958:  Prince Charles' Investiture as 'Prince of Wales'
5 Dec 1958—5 Dec 1958:  Inauguration of Subscriber Trunk Dialling (STD) in Britain (completed in 1979)
5 Dec 1958—5 Dec 1958:  Preston by-pass opens -  UK's first stretch of motorway
 | 
| 221 | 1959 | 3 Feb 1959—3 Feb 1959:  'The Day The Music Died' -  plane crash kills Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and
The Big Bopper
17 Feb 1959—17 Feb 1959:  Vanguard 2 satellite launched -  first to measure cloud-cover distribution
24 May 1959—24 May 1959:  Empire Day becomes Commonwealth Day
Aug 1959—Aug 1959:  BMC Mini car launched
3 Oct 1959—3 Oct 1959:  Postcodes introduced in Britain
1 Nov 1959—1 Nov 1959:  First section of M1 motorway opened
 | 
| 222 | 1960 | 17 Mar 1960—17 Mar 1960:  New ?1 notes issued by Bank of England
18 Mar 1960—18 Mar 1960:  Last steam locomotive of British Railways named
21 Jul 1960—21 Jul 1960:  Francis Chichester arrives in New York aboard Gypsy Moth II (took 40 days),
winning the first single-handed transatlantic yacht race which he co-founded
12 Aug 1960—12 Aug 1960:  Echo I, the first (passive) communications satellite, launched
12 Sep 1960—12 Sep 1960:  MoT tests on motor vehicles introduced
1 Oct 1960—1 Oct 1960:  HMS 'Dreadnought' nuclear submarine launched
2 Nov 1960—2 Nov 1960:  Penguin Books found not guilty of obscenity in the 'Lady Chatterley's Lover' case
 | 
| 223 | 1961 | 1961—1961:  SA - South Africa becomes a republic and leaves the Commonwealth.
1 Jan 1961—1 Jan 1961:  Farthing ceases to be legal tender in UK
13 Mar 1961—13 Mar 1961:  Black & White ?5 notes cease to be legal tender
14 Mar 1961—14 Mar 1961:  New English Bible (New Testament) published
1 May 1961—1 May 1961:  Betting shops legal in Britain
 | 
| 224 | 1962 | 1962—1962:  Britain passes Commonwealth Immigrants Act to control immigration
1962—1962:  Thalidomide withdrawn after it causes deformities in babies
1962—1962:  Britain and France agree to construct 'Concorde'
25 May 1962—25 May 1962:  Consecration of new Coventry Cathedral (old destroyed in WW2 blitz)
15 Jun 1962—15 Jun 1962:  First nuclear generated electricity to supplied National Grid (from Berkeley Glos)
Jul 1962—Jul 1962:  First passenger-carrying hovercraft enters service, along the North Wales Coast from Moreton to Rhyl
10 Jul 1962—10 Jul 1962:  First TV transmission between US and Europe (Telstar) -  first live broadcast on 23 Jul
24 Oct 1962—24 Oct 1962:  Cuba missile crisis -  brink of nuclear war
 | 
| 225 | 1963 | 1963—1963:  France vetoes Britain's entry into EEC
Jan 1963—Jan 1963:  Cold weather forces cancellation of most football matches (only 4 English First Division matches in the month) -  the first 'pools panel' created
27 Mar 1963—27 Mar 1963:  Beeching Report on British Railways (the 'Beeching Axe')
1 Aug 1963—1 Aug 1963:  Minimum prison age raised to 17
8 Aug 1963—8 Aug 1963:  'Great Train Robbery' on Glasgow to London mail train
17 Sep 1963—17 Sep 1963:  Fylingdales (Yorks) early warning system operational
18 Nov 1963—18 Nov 1963:  Dartford Tunnel opens
23 Nov 1963—23 Nov 1963:  First episode of 'Dr Who' on BBC TV
 | 
| 226 | 1964 | 1 Jan 1964—1 Jan 1964:  First 'Top of the Pops' on BBC TV
9 Apr 1964—9 Apr 1964:  First Greater London Council (GLC) election
21 Apr 1964—21 Apr 1964:  BBC2 TV launched
22 Aug 1964—22 Aug 1964:  'Match of the Day' starts on BBC2
4 Sep 1964—4 Sep 1964:  Forth road bridge opens
 | 
| 227 | 1965 | 1965—1965:  Britain enacts first Race Relations Act
1965—1965:  SA - Rhodesian UDI
7 Feb 1965—7 Feb 1965:  First US raids against North Vietnam
7 Apr 1965—7 Apr 1965:  Winston Churchill dies
1 Aug 1965—1 Aug 1965:  TV cigarette advertising banned in Britain
8 Oct 1965—8 Oct 1965:  Post Office Tower operational in London
28 Oct 1965—28 Oct 1965:  Death penalty for murder suspended in Britain for five-year trial period, then
abolished 18 Dec 1969
22 Dec 1965—22 Dec 1965:  70mph speed limit introduced on British roads
 | 
| 228 | 1966 | 14 Feb 1966—14 Feb 1966:  Australia converts from ? to $
3 May 1966—3 May 1966:  'The Times' begins to print news on its front page in place of classified
Advertisements
30 Jul 1966—30 Jul 1966:  World Cup won by England at Wembley (4-2 in extra time v West Germany)
8 Sep 1966—8 Sep 1966:  First Severn road bridge opens
21 Oct 1966—21 Oct 1966:  Aberfan disaster -  slag heap slip kills 144, incl. 116 children
1 Dec 1966—1 Dec 1966:  First Christmas stamps issued in Britain
 | 
| 229 | 1967 | 1967—1967:  SA - Six Day Arab - Isreali War
4 Jan 1967—4 Jan 1967:  Donald Campbell dies attempting to break his world water speed record on
Conniston Water -  his body and Bluebird recovered in 2002
18 Mar 1967—18 Mar 1967:  'Torrey Canyon' oil tanker runs aground off Lands End  first major oil spill
28 May 1967—28 May 1967:  Francis Chichester arrives in Plymouth after solo circumnavigation in Gipsy Moth IV (he was knighted 7th July at Greenwich by the queen using the sword with which Elizabeth I had knighted Sir Francis Drake four centuries earlier
27 Jun 1967—27 Jun 1967:  First withdrawal from a cash dispenser (ATM) in Britain -  at Enfield branch of Barclays
1 Jul 1967—1 Jul 1967:  First colour TV in Britain
14 Aug 1967—14 Aug 1967:  Offshore pirate radio stations declared illegal by the UK
20 Sep 1967—20 Sep 1967:  'QE2' launched on Clydebank
27 Sep 1967—27 Sep 1967:  'Queen Mary' arrives Southampton at end of her last transatlantic voyage
30 Sep 1967—30 Sep 1967:  BBC Radios 1 2 3 & 4 open first record played on Radio 1 was the controversial 'Flowers in the Rain' by 'The Move'
5 Oct 1967—5 Oct 1967:  Introduction of majority verdicts in English courts
 | 
| 230 | 1968 | 18 Feb 1968—18 Feb 1968:  British Standard Time introduced -  Summer Time became permanent but arguments prevailed and Britain reverted to GMT in October 1971
18 Apr 1968—18 Apr 1968:  London Bridge sold (and eventually moved to Arizona) -  modern London Bridge, built around it as it was demolished, was opened in Mar 1973
20 Apr 1968—20 Apr 1968:  Enoch Powell 'Rivers of Blood' speech on immigration
23 Apr 1968—23 Apr 1968:  Issue of 5p and 10p decimal coins in Britain
29 May 1968—29 May 1968:  Manchester United first English club to win the European Cup
11 Aug 1968—11 Aug 1968:  Last steam passenger train service ran in Britain (Carlisle- Liverpool)
16 Sep 1968—16 Sep 1968:  Two-tier postal rate starts in Britain
5 Oct 1968—5 Oct 1968:  Beginning of disturbances in N Ireland
 | 
| 231 | 1969 | 1969—1969:  SA - Man on the Moon
2 Mar 1969—2 Mar 1969:  Maiden flight of 'Concorde', at Toulouse
7 Mar 1969—7 Mar 1969:  Victoria Line tube opens in London
17 Apr 1969—17 Apr 1969:  Voting age lowered from 21 to 18
2 May 1969—2 May 1969:  Maiden voyage of liner Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2)
31 Jul 1969—31 Jul 1969:  Halfpenny ceases to be legal tender in Britain
14 Aug 1969—14 Aug 1969:  Civil disturbances in Ulster -  Britain sends troops to support civil authorities
7 Sep 1969—7 Sep 1969:  First episode of 'Monty Python's Flying Circus' recorded
14 Oct 1969—14 Oct 1969:  50p coin introduced in Britain (reduced in size 1998)
 | 
| 232 | 1970 | 1970—1970:  Boeing 747 (Jumbo jet) goes into service
17 Jun 1970—17 Jun 1970:  Decimal postage stamps first issued for sale in Britain
19 Jun 1970—19 Jun 1970:  Edward Heath becomes Prime Minister
30 Jul 1970—30 Jul 1970:  Damages awarded to Thalidomide victims
19 Sep 1970—19 Sep 1970:  First Glastonbury Festival held
20 Nov 1970—20 Nov 1970:  Ten shilling note (50p after decimalisation) goes out of circulation in Britain
 | 
| 233 | 1971 | 1971—1971:  Banking and Financial Dealings Act -  replaced the Bank Holidays Act of 1871
1971—1971:  Sunday becomes the seventh day in the week as UK adopts decision of the International
Standardisation Organisation (ISO) to call Monday the first day
1971—1971:  'Greenpeace' founded
1971—1971:  Rolls-Royce declared bankrupt
3 Jan 1971—3 Jan 1971:  Open University starts
15 Feb 1971—15 Feb 1971:  Decimalisation of coinage in UK and Republic of Ireland
9 Aug 1971—9 Aug 1971:  Internment without trial introduced in N Ireland
28 Oct 1971—28 Oct 1971:  Parliament votes to join Common Market (joined 1973)
28 Oct 1971—28 Oct 1971:  UK launches its first (and only) satellite, Prospero
 | 
| 234 | 1972 | 1972—1972:  Britain imposes direct rule in Northern Ireland
1972—1972:  Strict anti-hijack measures introduced internationally, especially at airports
1972—1972:  SA - Watergate
1972—1972:  Dutch Elm disease devastates trees across UK
1972—1972:  Domestic video cassette recorders introduced
30 Jan 1972—30 Jan 1972:  'Bloody Sunday' in Derry, Northern Ireland
28 May 1972—28 May 1972:  Duke of Windsor (ex-King Edward VIII) dies in Paris
 | 
| 235 | 1973 | 1 Jan 1973—1 Jan 1973:  Britain enters EEC Common Market (with Ireland and Denmark)
17 Mar 1973—17 Mar 1973:  Modern London Bridge opened by the Queen
1 Apr 1973—1 Apr 1973:  VAT introduced in Britain
26 Sep 1973—26 Sep 1973:  Concorde makes its first non-stop crossing of the Atlantic in record-breaking
time
14 Oct 1973—14 Oct 1973:  Marriage of Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips in Westminster Abbey
31 Dec 1973—31 Dec 1973:  Miners strike and oil crisis precipitate 'three-day week' (till 9 Mar 1974) to
conserve power
 | 
| 236 | 1974 | 1974—1974:  New counties formed in Britain after re-organisation of some county boundaries
1 Jun 1974—1 Jun 1974:  Flixborough disaster: explosion at chemical plant kills 28 people
7 Nov 1974—7 Nov 1974:  Lord Lucan disappears
21 Nov 1974—21 Nov 1974:  Birmingham pub bombings by the IRA
 | 
| 237 | 1975 | 1975—1975:  SA - South African Forces in Angola.
1975—1975:  SA - Angola and Mozambique independence
1975—1975:  Unemployment in Britain rises above 1M for first time since before WW2
11 Feb 1975—11 Feb 1975:  Margaret Thatcher becomes leader of Conservative party (in opposition)
28 Feb 1975—28 Feb 1975:  Moorgate tube crash in London -  over 43 deaths, greatest loss of life on the
Underground in peacetime. The cause of the incident was never conclusively determined
4 Mar 1975—4 Mar 1975:  Charlie Chaplin knighted
5 Jun 1975—5 Jun 1975:  UK votes in a referendum to stay in the European Community
29 Oct 1975—29 Oct 1975:  'Yorkshire Ripper' commits his first murder
3 Nov 1975—3 Nov 1975:  First North Sea oil comes ashore
29 Nov 1975—29 Nov 1975:  The name 'Micro-soft' coined by Bill Gates (Microsoft' became a Trademark the
following year)
27 Dec 1975—27 Dec 1975:  Equal Pay Act and Sex Discrimination Act come into force
 | 
| 238 | 1976 | 1976—1976:  National Theatre opens in London
1976—1981:  SA - The homelands of Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda and Ciskei are separated from South Africa and established as independent states.
1976—1976:  'Cod War' between Britain and Iceland
1976—1976:  Deaths exceeded live births in E&W for first time since records began in 1837
1976—1976:  James Callaghan becomes Prime Minister
21 Jan 1976—21 Jan 1976:  Concorde enters supersonic passenger service
1 Apr 1976—1 Apr 1976:  Apple Computer formed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
6 Aug 1976—6 Aug 1976:  Drought Act 1976 comes into force ? the long, hot summer
 | 
| 239 | 1977 | 2 Mar 1977—2 Mar 1977:  'Red Rum' wins a third Grand National
25 May 1977—25 May 1977:  George Lucas' film Star Wars' released
5 Jun 1977—5 Jun 1977:  Apple II, the first practical personal computer, goes on sale
7 Jun 1977—7 Jun 1977:  Queen's Silver Jubilee celebrations in London
22 Nov 1977—22 Nov 1977:  Regular supersonic Concorde service between London and NY inaugurated
 | 
| 240 | 1978 | 8 Apr 1978—8 Apr 1978:  Regular broadcast of proceedings in Parliament starts
1 May 1978—1 May 1978:  First May Day holiday in Britain
25 Jul 1978—25 Jul 1978:  World's first 'test tube' baby, Louise Browne born in Oldham
30 Nov 1978—30 Nov 1978:  Publication of The Times suspended -  industrial relations problems (until 13
Nov 1979)
 | 
| 241 | 1979 | 1 Mar 1979—1 Mar 1979:  32.5% of Scots vote in favor of devolution (40% needed) -  Welsh vote overwhelmingly against
30 Mar 1979—30 Mar 1979:  Airey Neave killed by a car bomb at Westminster
31 Mar 1979—31 Mar 1979:  Withdrawal of the Royal Navy from Malta
4 May 1979—4 May 1979:  Margaret Thatcher becomes first woman UK Prime Minister
1 Jul 1979—1 Jul 1979:  Sony introduces the Walkman
27 Aug 1979—27 Aug 1979:  Lord Mountbatten and 3 others killed in bomb blast off coast of Sligo, Ireland
18 Sep 1979—18 Sep 1979:  ILEA votes to abolish corporal punishment in its schools
 | 
| 242 | 1980 | 5 May 1980—5 May 1980:  SAS storm Iranian Embassy in London to free hostages
8 Dec 1980—8 Dec 1980:  John Lennon assassinated in New York
 | 
| 243 | 1981 | 25 Jan 1981—25 Jan 1981:  Launch of SDP by 'Gang of Four' in Britain
29 Mar 1981—29 Mar 1981:  First London marathon run
11 Apr 1981—11 Apr 1981:  Brixton riots in South London -  30 other British cities also experience riots
25 Apr 1981—25 Apr 1981:  Worst April blizzards this century in Britain
27 Apr 1981—27 Apr 1981:  First use of computer mouse (by Xerox PARC system)
29 Jul 1981—29 Jul 1981:  Wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer (divorced 28 Aug 1996)
12 Aug 1981—12 Aug 1981:  IBM launches the first PC
12 Aug 1981—12 Aug 1981:  IBM launches its PC ? starts the general use of personal computers
 | 
| 244 | 1982 | 1982—1982:  SA - Falklands War
26 Jan 1982—26 Jan 1982:  Unemployment reached 3 million in Britain (1 in 8 of working population)
5 Feb 1982—5 Feb 1982:  Laker Airways collapses
19 Feb 1982—19 Feb 1982:  DeLorean Car factory in Belfast goes into receivership
18 Mar 1982—18 Mar 1982:  Argentinians raised flag in South Georgia
2 Apr 1982—2 Apr 1982:  Argentina invades Falkland (Malvinas) Islands
5 Apr 1982—5 Apr 1982:  Royal Navy fleet sails from Portsmouth for Falklands
2 May 1982—2 May 1982:  British nuclear submarine HMS Conqueror sinks Argentine cruiser General
Belgrano
28 May 1982—28 May 1982:  First land battle in Falklands (Goose Green)
14 Jun 1982—14 Jun 1982:  Ceasefire in Falklands
21 Jun 1982—21 Jun 1982:  Prince William is born
20 Jul 1982—20 Jul 1982:  IRA bombings in London (Hyde Park and Regents Park)
19 Sep 1982—19 Sep 1982:  Smiley emoticon :-) said to have been used for the first time
11 Oct 1982—11 Oct 1982:  Mary Rose' raised in the Solent (sank in 1545)
31 Oct 1982—31 Oct 1982:  Thames Barrier raised for first time (some say first public demonstration Nov 7)
2 Nov 1982—2 Nov 1982:  Channel 4 TV station launched -  first programme 'Countdown'
4 Nov 1982—4 Nov 1982:  Lorries up to 38 tonnes allowed on Britain's roads
12 Dec 1982—12 Dec 1982:  Women's peace protest at Greenham Common (Cruise missiles arrived 14 Nov
1983)
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