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Lake and Reynolds Genealogy

Our Ancestors and Their Descendants

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Susan and Barry Reynolds

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Emanuel Custer

Male 1779 - 1829  (50 years)


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Timeline



 
 
 




   Date  Event(s)
1779 
  • 1779: The rise of Wyvill's Association Movement
1780 
  • 1780: The Gordon Riots develop from a procession to petition parliament against the Catholic Relief Act
1781 
  • 1781: Frederick William Herschel discovered the planet Uranus by its movement, although at the time he supposed it to be a comet
  • 1781: The Americans obtain a great victory of British troops at the surrender of Yorktown
1782 
  • 1782: End of Lord North's time as Prime Minister. He is succeeded by Rockingham in his second ministry. Ireland obtains short-lived parliament
1783 
  • 1783: William Bentinck, Duke of Portland Prime minister (Whig)
  • 1783: Joseph Michel Montgolfier and Jacques ?tienne Montgolfier invented the first practical hot air balloon.
  • 1783: Shelburne's ministry, followed by that of William Pitt the Younger. Britain recognises American independence at the Peace of Versailles. Fox-North coalition established
1784 
  • 1784: Parliament passes the East India Act
  • 1784: First edition of 'The Times' newspaper
1785 
  • 1785: Pitt's motion for Parliamentary Reform is defeated
1786 
  • 1786: The Eden commercial treaty with France is drawn up
1788 
  • 1788: George III suffers his first attack of 'madness' (caused by porphyria)
10 1789 
  • 1789: Outbreak of the French Revolution
11 1790 
  • 1790: Edmund Burke publishes his 'Reflections on the Revolution in France'
12 1791 
  • 1791: The 'Celerifere', an early version of the bicycle, was built around by Comte Mede de Sivrac. It was basically a scooter with a high seat
  • 1791: James Boswell publishes his 'Life of Johnson' an Thomas Paine, his 'Rights of Man'
13 1792 
  • 1792: Volta discovered he could arrange metals in a series in such a way that chemical energy is converted into electrical energy; that is, two dissimilar metals are submerged in an electrolyte and connected by an circuit and thereby exchange electrons. By 1800, he had invented the so-called voltaic cell, a pile of such metals "consisting of pairs of silver and zinc disks separated by pieces of moist cardboard"
  • 1792: Coal gas is used for lighting for the first time. Mary Wollstonecraft publishes her 'Vindication of the Rights of Women'
14 1793 
  • 1793: Outbreak of War between Britain and France. The voluntary Board of Agriculture is set up. Commercial depression throughout Britain
  • 1793: Speculative 'Canal Bubble' in UK bursts
15 1794 
  • 1794: Erasmus Darwin, Charles' grandfather, proposed that "warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living filament...possessing the faculty of continuing to improve by its own inherent activity, and of delivering those improvements by generation to its posterity."
  • 1794: Eli Whitney patented the cotton gin
  • 1794: Metric system introduced in France
16 1795 
  • 1795: The 'Speenhamland' system of outdoor relief is adopted, making wages up to equal the cost of subsistence
17 1796 
  • 1796: Edward Jenner investigated the folk tale that milk maids were immune to small pox, the virus variola major, and in a brief series of experiments confirmed that exposure to cow pox, the virus vaccinia, rendered immunity
18 1798 
  • 1798: Thomas Robert Malthus, in his Essay on the Principle of Population, contended that population increases by a geometric ratio whereas the means of subsistence increase by an arithmetic ratio.
  • 1798: Introduction of a tax of ten percent on incomes over ?200.
19 1799 
  • 1799: Trade Unions are suppressed. Napoleon is appointed First Consul in France
  • 1799: Three-year commercial boom in Britain begins
20 1800 
  • 1800: Act of Union with Ireland unites Parliaments of England and Ireland
21 1801 
  • 1801: Close of Pitt the Younger's Ministry. The first British Census is undertaken
22 1802 
  • 1802: Peace with France is established. Peel introduces the first factory legislation
23 1803 
  • 1803: Beginning of the Napoleonic Wars. Britain declares war on France. Parliament passes the General Enclosure Act, simplifying the process of enclosing common land
24 1805 
  • 1805: Ludolf Christian Treviranus said that spermatozoa were analogous to pollen
  • 1805: Nelson destroys the French and Spanish fleets at the Battle of Trafalgar, but is killed in the process
25 1806 
  • 1806: Louis Nicolas Vauquelin and Pierre Jean Robiquet isolated the first amino acid, 'asparagine,' from asparagus.
26 1807 
  • 1807: William Bentinck, Duke of Portland Prime Minister to 1809 (Whig)
  • 1807: Robert Fulton ushered in the era of self-propelled ships with his construction of a commercially viable paddle-wheel steamboat
27 1808 
  • 1808: Peninsular War to drive the French out of Spain (until 1814)
28 1809 
  • 1809: Two-year commercial boom in Britain
29 1810 
  • 1810: Final illness of George III begins
30 1811 
  • 1811: Depression caused by Orders of Council. There are Luddite disturbances in Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire. The King's illness leads to his son, the Prince of Wales, becoming Regent
31 1812 
  • 1812: Georges Cuvier, in 'Discours sur les r?volutions de la surface du globe', maintained the stratigraphic succession proved that fossils occur in the chronological order of creation: fish, amphibians, reptiles, and mammals.
  • 1812: Prime Minister Spencer Perceval is assassinated in the House of Commons by a disgruntled bankrupt
32 1813 
  • 1813: Canned food was invented for the British Navy by Peter Durand. The cans were made of solid iron and usually weighed more than the food inside them
  • 1813: Jane Austen's 'Pride and Prejudice' is published. The monopolies of the East India Company are abolished
  • 1813: Can opener invented
33 1815 
  • 1815: The defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo marks the end of the Napoleonic Wars. Peace is established in Europe at the Congress of Vienna. The Corn Laws are passed by Parliament to protect British agriculture from cheap imports
  • 1815: Start of two-year commercial boom in Britain
34 1817 
  • 1817: Economic slimp in Britain leads to the 'Blanketeers' March' and other disturbances
35 1818 
  • 1818: Death of the King's wife, Queen Caroline. Mary Shelley's publishes her 'Frankenstein'
36 1819 
  • 1819: Troops intervene at a mass political reform meeting in Manchester, killing and wounding four hundred people at the 'Peterloo Massacre'
37 1820 
  • 1820: Death of the blind and deranged King George III. He is succeeded by his son, the Prince Regent, who becomes King George IV. A radical plot to murder the Cabinet, known as the Cato Street Conspiracy, fails. Trial of Queen Caroline, in which George IV attempts to divorce her for adultery
38 1821 
  • 1821: Jean Fran?ois Champollion, employing the Rosetta Stone, established the principles for deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics.
  • 1821: Queen Caroline is excluded from the coronation
  • 1821: Start of two years of famine in Ireland
39 1822 
  • 1822: First prototype Espresso machine (France)
40 1823 
  • 1823: The Royal Academy of Music is established in London. The British Museum is extended and extensively rebuilt to house an expanding collection
41 1824 
  • 1824: The National Gallery is established. Commercial boom in Britain
42 1825 
  • 1825: Nash reconstructs Buckingham Palace. The World's first railway service, the Stockton and Darlington Railway opens. Trade Unions are legalized. Commercial depression in Britain
43 1826 
  • 1826: One of the first print references to fondue written by Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin in his 'Physiologie du Gout'
  • 1826: French physicist Joseph Niepce makes the first known photograph, "View from a Window at Gras," via a "heliograph" process on a metal plate.
44 1828 
  • 1828: The Duke of Wellington becomes British Prime Minister
45 1829 
  • 1829: The Metropolitan Police Force is set up by Robert Peel. Parliament passes the Catholic Relief Act, ending most restrictions on Catholic Civil Rights. They are allowed to own property and run for public office, including parliament



Last Updated
May 1, 2024