Timeline of London (19th century) explained
See main article: Timeline of London.
The following is a timeline of the history of London in the 19th century, the capital of England and the United Kingdom.
1800 to 1809
- 1800
- 1801
- 1802
- 1803
- 1804
- 1805
- 1806
- 1807
- 1808
- 1809
1810 to 1819
-
- 1815
- 1816
- 1817
- 4 February: The new St Marylebone Parish Church is consecrated.
- 18 June: The first Waterloo Bridge, designed by John Rennie, opens.
- 6 August: Gas lighting is introduced on stage in the West End theatre by The English Opera House, which then extends to the auditorium on 8 September. On 6 September, it is introduced at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, where it is already installed in the auditorium and foyer, and the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden as a demonstration.[34]
- The Dulwich Picture Gallery, designed by John Soane as the first purpose-built public art gallery, is completed and opens to the public.
- Apsley House is acquired by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington from his brother.
- Percival Norton Johnson sets up as a gold assayer, origin of the Johnson Matthey business.[35]
- The Wimbledon Windmill is built.
- 1818
- 11 May: The Old Vic is founded as the Royal Coburg Theatre in South London by James King, Daniel Dunn and John T. Serres.
- The alterations to the King's Theatre by the architect John Nash and George Repton are completed. This includes the construction at the rear of the Royal Opera Arcade, London's first shopping arcade.
- 1819
- 20 March: Burlington Arcade opens.
- 24 March: The first Southwark Bridge, designed by John Rennie as a toll bridge with iron arches, opens.
- April: John Keats begins his "Great Year" or "Living Year", during which he is at his most productive, having given up work at Guy's Hospital and taken up residence at a new house, Wentworth Place, on Hampstead Heath. On 3 April, Charles Wentworth Dilke lets his house, next door to Keats, to Mrs Brawne, whose daughter Fanny becomes the love of Keats' life. Between 21 April and the end of May Keats writes La Belle Dame sans Merci and most of his major odes: Ode to Psyche, Ode on a Grecian Urn, Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on Indolence, and Ode on Melancholy. In the summer he writes Lamia,[36] and on 19 October, he proposes marriage to Fanny.
- 21 April: The new building for the London Institution in Finsbury Circus opens.[37]
- The Travellers Club is founded.
- The bookseller William Pickering is in business as a publisher.
1820 to 1829
- 1820
- 1821
- 1822
- 1823
- 1824
- 1825
- 1826
- 1827
- 1828
- 1829
1830 to 1839
- 1830
- 1831
- 1832
- 1833
- 1 January: The London Fire Engine Establishment is formed under the leadership of James Braidwood, merging the existing insurance company brigades.
- The new Hungerford Market building and Leather Market (Bermondsey) open.
- 1834
- 1835
- 1836
- 1837
- 1838
- 1839
1840 to 1849
- 1840
- 14 January: A Chartist rising in the East End is largely suppressed by the police.
- 10 February: Queen Victoria marries Albert, Prince Consort in St James's Palace.
- 15 April
- 27 April: The foundation stone of the new Palace of Westminster is laid as its reconstruction following the Burning of Parliament in 1834 begins; it is completed in 1860.[68]
- June: The World Anti-Slavery Convention is held in Exeter Hall.
- 1 July: The Eastern Counties Railway is extended to a new London terminus at Bishopsgate railway station, known as Shoreditch until 1847.
- 6 July: The cable worked London and Blackwall Railway opens to a temporary City terminus in Minories.
- 15 September: The Northern and Eastern Railway opens its first section from Stratford together with the first Stratford Depot, which over the next 100 years will become the largest motive power depot in the UK.
- 30 September: The foundation of Nelson's Column is laid,[61] with Trafalgar Square being laid out and paved during the year.[1]
- Abney Park, Nunhead, and Brompton, three of the "Magnificent Seven cemeteries", are opened.
- Bridgewater House, Westminster, designed by Charles Barry in the Palazzo style as the town house of the Earl of Ellesmere to replace Cleveland House (and incorporating the Bridgewater Gallery for the family art collection) begins construction, and it is completed in 1854.
- Construction of Norwood New Town begins.
- W. Harrison Ainsworth's novels Guy Fawkes and The Tower of London and Charles Dickens' The Old Curiosity Shop are serialised.
- 1841
- February–November: Charles Dickens' novel is published serially.
- 8 March: The Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Chest, predecessor of the Royal Brompton Hospital, is established.
- March: Richard Beard opens England's first commercial photographic studio in London, producing daguerreotype portraits.[69]
- by April: The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew is first opened to the public.[70]
- 3 May: The London Library begins operation on Pall Mall.
- 6 June: The United Kingdom Census 1841 takes place. London's population is 123,563 in the City, 1,825,714 in the county, and 2,235,344 in Greater London.
- 14 June: The Surrey County Lunatic Asylum opens in Tooting.[71]
- 12 July: The London and Brighton Railway begins operating from Norwood Junction; it is extended through to Brighton on 21 September.
- 17 July: The magazine Punch begins publication.
- 2 August: Fenchurch Street railway station opens for the London and Blackwall Railway.
- 30 October: A fire at the Tower of London destroys its Grand Armoury and causes £250,000 worth of damage.
- 12 November: The Jewish Chronicle newspaper begins publication.
- The City of London and Tower Hamlets Cemetery, last of the "Magnificent Seven cemeteries" opens.
- The Fourth plinth, Trafalgar Square, is constructed for an equestrian statue of William IV, but this is never erected due to lack of funds, and it remains empty until 1999.
- The Metropolitan Association for Improving the Dwellings of the Industrious Classes is founded.
- The Chemical Society of London and the London Philanthropic Society are founded.
- 1842
- 1843
- 1844
- 1845
- 1846
- 1847
- 1848
- 10 April: "Monster" Chartist rally on Kennington Common.
- 21 April–23 November: Frédéric Chopin visits London and Scotland, with his last public appearance on a concert platform being on 16 November at the Guildhall.[81]
- 4 July: St George's Church, Southwark is opened, making it the largest post-Reformation Roman Catholic church in London at this date, becoming a cathedral in 1852. The first marriage held here is of its architect, Augustus Pugin, on 10 August.
- 11 July: Waterloo station opens for the London & South Western Railway.[61]
- October: The Palm house at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, designed by the architect Decimus Burton and the iron-founder Richard Turner, is completed and opened.
- The Duke of Wellington, Constable of the Tower since 1826, has a north bastion added to the Tower of London in response to the Chartist threat.[82]
- The Metropolitan Evening Classes for Young Men, predecessor of London Metropolitan University, are instituted at Crosby Hall, Bishopsgate by Rev. Charles Mackenzie.
- The Metropolitan Association for Improving the Dwellings of the Industrious Classes completes its first dwellings, the Metropolitan Buildings in Kings Cross.
- Queen's College, London is founded, making it the world's first school to award academic qualifications to young women.
- Samuel Reiss's Grand Cigar Divan becomes Simpson's Grand Divan Tavern.
- 1849
- May: The first exhibition of paintings by the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood: John Everett Millais' Isabella and Holman Hunt's Rienzi are shown at the Royal Academy summer exhibition, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti's Girlhood of Mary Virgin at the Institution for the Free Exhibition of Modern Art's "St. George's Gallery" in Knightsbridge next to Hyde Park Corner.
- Summer: Karl Marx moves from Paris to London, where he will spend the remainder of his life.
- July: The Horsleydown cholera outbreak (Second cholera pandemic of 1849–51) takes place.[83]
- 31 July: The Church of the Immaculate Conception, Farm Street, Mayfair opens, making it London's first post-Reformation Jesuit church.
- 9 August: "The Bermondsey Horror": Marie Manning and her husband, Frederick, murder Patrick O'Connor. On 13 November, they are hanged together publicly by William Calcraft at Horsemonger Lane Gaol for the crime before a large crowd.[84]
- 12 October: 5 workmen are killed by toxic gases in a Pimlico sewer.[85]
- 17 December: The customer, probably Edward Coke, collects the first bowler hat, devised by the hatmakers Thomas and William Bowler, from the hatters James Lock & Co. of St James's.[86]
- Bedford College is founded by Elizabeth Jesser Reid as the Ladies College in Bedford Square, a non-sectarian higher education institution to provide a liberal female education.
- Harrods moves to Knightsbridge,[87] and Gatti's cafe in Holborn is in business.
1850 to 1859
- 1850
- 1851
- 1852
- 1853
- 1854
- 1855
- 1856
- 1857
- 2 May: The British Museum Reading Room opens.
- 22 June: The South Kensington Museum is opened by the Queen. Although it is a predecessor of the Victoria and Albert Museum, it includes the collection of machinery that becomes the Science Museum. It is also the world's first museum to incorporate a refreshment room.[100]
- Peek Freans is established as biscuit manufacturers in Bermondsey.
- 1858
- 1859
1860 to 1869
- 1860
- 28 February: The Artists Rifles is established as the 38th Middlesex (Artists) Rifle Volunteer Corps with headquarters at Burlington House.[105]
- 9 July: The Nightingale Training School and Home for Nurses, the first nursing school based on the ideas of Florence Nightingale, opens at St Thomas' Hospital.
- 28 August: The Union of Benefices Act is passed to reduce the number of parish churches in the City and build new ones in the expanding suburbs. St Benet Gracechurch is the first to be demolished under this scheme in 1868.
- 1 October: The first section of Victoria station opens for the London, Brighton & South Coast Railway, with trains using the Grosvenor Bridge across the Thames. The second section, for the London, Chatham and Dover Railway, opens some time later.[90]
- November: The 'Temporary Home for Lost and Starving Dogs', the predecessor of the Battersea Dogs and Cats Home, is established by Mary Tealby.
- 29 December: The world's first ocean-going (all) iron-hulled and armoured battleship, HMS Warrior is launched on the Thames at Blackwall.[61]
- The first section of the London Underground begins construction on the site of Great Portland Street station.
- Approximate date: Joseph Malin's is one of the first recorded fish and chip shops in London and the United Kingdom.[106]
- 1861
- 1862
- 1863
- 10 January: The first section of the London Underground, the Metropolitan Railway between Paddington and Farringdon Street, opens to the public, operated by steam locomotives, making it the first in the world.
- 2 March: Clapham Junction railway station opens.
- March: The American-born painter James McNeill Whistler settles close to the Thames in Chelsea, where he will live for most of the rest of his life.
- 12 June: The Arts Club is founded by Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, Frederic Leighton and others in Mayfair as a social meeting place for those involved or interested in the creative arts.
- 26 October: The Football Association is founded at the Freemasons' Tavern in Long Acre.[110]
- 19 December: The first game is played under the new Football Association rules at Mortlake between Ebenezer Morley's Barnes Club and Richmond F.C.; it ends in a goalless draw.[111]
- Alexandra Park opens in Haringey.
- Siemens & Halske relocates from Millbank to the former Woolwich Dockyard area, where its submarine-cable factory becomes a major employer.[112]
- William Whiteley opens the drapery that becomes Whiteleys department store in Westbourne Grove and Curwen Press in business.
- Lyon's Inn, one of the Inns of Chancery, is dissolved and demolished.
- 1864
- 1865
- 1866
- 1867
- 1868
- 1869
1870 to 1879
- 1870
- 1871
- 1872
- 1873
- 1874
- 1875
- 1876
- 1877
- 1878
- 1879
1880 to 1889
- 1880
- 1881
- 16 March: Fenian dynamite campaign: A bomb is found and defused in the Mansion House.[138]
- 3 April: The United Kingdom Census 1881 takes place. London's population is 50,569 in the City, 3,779,728 in the county, and 4,766,661 in Greater London. 1/8 of the UK's population now live in London.
- 18 April: The Natural History Museum opens[139] in South Kensington.
- 14–20 July: The International Anarchist Congress is held in London.
- 26 July: The Evening News is first published.[7]
- 10 October: Richard D'Oyly Carte's Savoy Theatre opens, making it the world's first public building to be fully lit by electricity using Joseph Swan's incandescent light bulbs.[7] [140] [141] The run of Gilbert and Sullivan's new satirical opera Patience transfers from the Opera Comique. The stage is first lit electrically on 28 December.[142]
- 15 December: The rebuilt Leadenhall Market opens.[143]
- "Great Paul", Britain's heaviest swinging bell, is hung in the south-west tower of St Paul's Cathedral.
- The London Municipal Reform League is founded.
- Leyton Orient F.C. is formed as the football team of the Glyn Cricket Club.
- 1882
- 1883
- 1884
- 1885
- 1886
- 1887
- 18 January: A panic and crush at the Hebrew Dramatic Club in the East End leads to 17 deaths.[103]
- April–May: The First Colonial Conference is held at the Colonial Office.
- 9 May: The first exhibition at Earl's Court, an American Exhibition & Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, opens.
- 14 May: The People's Palace, a predecessor of Queen Mary University of London, is opened in the East End by Queen Victoria.
- 11 June: Replacement Hammersmith Bridge, a suspension bridge over the Thames, opens.
- 6/7 August: A 4th major fire devastates Whiteleys department store in Bayswater.[153]
- 13 November ("Bloody Sunday"): A large socialist demonstration addressed by respectable speakers is violently broken up by the police. Then, at a 20 November demonstration against police brutality, a bystander is killed.
- November: Arthur Conan Doyle's first detective novel, A Study in Scarlet, is published in Beeton's Christmas Annual by Ward Lock & Co. in London. This introduces the London consulting detective Sherlock Holmes and his friend and chronicler Dr. Watson.
- The Earl's Court site is first used as a showground.
- Clissold Park in Hackney is purchased by the Metropolitan Board of Works to be opened as a public park.[154]
- The London Social Camera Club is established.
- 1888
- 18 January: The first issue of The Star evening newspaper goes on sale; it will cover this year's Whitechapel murders intensively.[155]
- 13 February: The first issue of the Financial Times goes on sale;[1] it was launched on 9 January by Horatio Bottomley as the London Financial Guide.
- 23 March: A meeting called by William McGregor to discuss establishment of The Football League is held in London.[156]
- 3 April: The prostitute Emma Elizabeth Smith is brutally attacked by 2 or 3 men, dying of her injuries the following day. This is the first of the Whitechapel murders, but she is probably not a victim of Jack the Ripper.
- 26 May: Punch magazine begins serialisation of George and Weedon Grossmith's humorous The Diary of a Nobody, the first entry being for "April 3".
- 11 July: Snow (or at least a heavy frost) in parts of London early this morning.[157]
- 2 - 27 July: London matchgirls strike of 1888: Around 200 workers, mainly teenaged girls, strike following the dismissal of 3 colleagues from the Bryant and May match factory. This is precipitated by an article on their working conditions published on 23 June by the campaigning journalist Annie Besant, and the workers unionise on 27 July.[158]
- 7 August: Whitechapel murders: The body of prostitute Martha Tabram is found, making her a possible victim of Jack the Ripper.[61]
- 13 August: The Local Government Act, effective from 1889, establishes the County of London.
- 31 August: Whitechapel murders: The mutilated body of prostitute Mary Ann Nichols is found in Buck's Row. She is perhaps the first victim of Jack the Ripper.
- September: Woolwich Market is officially established on Beresford Square.[159]
- 8 September: Whitechapel murders: The mutilated body of prostitute Annie Chapman is found. She is considered to be the second victim of Jack the Ripper. On 27 September, the 'Dear Boss letter' signed "Jack the Ripper" (the first time the name is used) is received by the Central News Agency.[61] On 30 September, the bodies of the prostitutes Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes, the latter mutilated, are found, and they are generally considered Jack the Ripper's third and fourth victim respectively.
- 2 October: Whitehall Mystery: The dismembered remains of a woman's body are discovered at three central London locations, one being the construction site of New Scotland Yard.
- 3 October: Gilbert and Sullivan's Savoy opera The Yeomen of the Guard premières at the Savoy Theatre.
- 9 November: Whitechapel murders: The mutilated body of the prostitute Mary Jane Kelly is found; she is considered to be the fifth and last of Jack the Ripper's victims. A number of similar murders in England follows, but the police attribute them to copy-cat killers.
- 17 December: The Lyric Theatre opens in the West End.[61]
- Parliament Hill is purchased by the Metropolitan Board of Works to preserve it as a public viewpoint.
- The first police boxes are erected in London.
- St Dunstan's College is refounded in Catford.
- The Eagle Cricket Club is renamed Orient Football Club.
- 1889
- 23 March: The Woolwich Free Ferry is inaugurated.
- 1 April: The elected London County Council takes up its powers in succession to the Metropolitan Board of Works. The Progressive Party have a majority, with Lord Rosebery as the first chairman.[1] The boroughs of Lambeth, Southwark, Wandsworth and parts of Lewisham and the Penge area of Bromley, previously in the county of Surrey, become part of London[160] and Croydon becomes a county borough. Metropolitan Middlesex, about 20% of the area and containing 33% of its population, is also transferred to London and the remainder becomes an administrative county governed by the Middlesex County Council[161] meeting at Middlesex Guildhall in Westminster. East Barnet Valley Urban District, previously partly in Middlesex, is transferred to Hertfordshire. The Liberty of the Clink is also abolished.
- 24 April: The Garrick Theatre opens.
- 6 July: Several aristocrats are implicated in the Cleveland Street scandal after police raid a male brothel.[7]
- 6 August: The Savoy Hotel opens.
- 14 August–15 September: London Dock Strike of 1889: Dockers strike for a minimum wage of sixpence an hour ("The dockers' tanner"). They eventually receive this, making this a landmark in the development of New Unionism.
- 30 August: The Royal Mail Mount Pleasant Sorting Office is officially opened.
- 7 September: The Morley Memorial College for Working Men and Women opens in south London.[162]
- Charles Booth's Life and Labour of the People in London begins publication.
- Chenies Street Chambers Ladies Residential Dwellings open in Bloomsbury as a partly co-operative residential apartments for single women.[40]
1890 to 1899
- 1890
- 21 July: The replacement Battersea Bridge over the Thames opens.[61]
- 10 October: Brentford F.C. is established by members of Brentford Rowing Club.
- November: Scotland Yard, headquarters of the Metropolitan Police Service, moves to a building on the Victoria Embankment as New Scotland Yard.
- 4 November: The City & South London Railway, the first deep-level electric underground railway in the world, opens as the predecessor of the Northern line.[61] It runs a distance of 5.1abbr=onNaNabbr=on between the City of London and Stockwell.
- December: No hours of sunshine are recorded this month in Westminster.[163]
- The Blackwall Buildings, Whitechapel, noted philanthropic housing, is built in the East End.
- The construction of Britain's first council housing at Arnold Cross, Shoreditch begins in the East End.[164]
- Pearson move their building contractor's business to London.[165]
- The Rhymers' Club, a group of poets, begins to meet informally at the Cheshire Cheese on Fleet Street.
- 1890–1 – Construction of the first large-scale electrical power station in Deptford begins,[1] and from mid-1891, the first Bankside Power Station begins operation.
- 1891
- 1892
- 1893
- 1894
- 1895
- 1 January: The Bishopsgate Institute opens.
- 1 February: Gas explosion on Southwark Bridge.
- 14 February: Première of Oscar Wilde's last play, the comedy The Importance of Being Earnest, at St. James' Theatre.[61]
- 18 February: The Marquess of Queensberry, father of Oscar Wilde's lover Lord Alfred Douglas, leaves his calling card at the Albemarle Club, inscribed: "For Oscar Wilde, posing somdomite", i.e. a sodomite, inducing Wilde to charge him with criminal libel.[176]
- March: Birt Acres films Incident at Clovelly Cottage in Chipping Barnet, the "first successful motion picture film made in Britain".[177]
- 3–5 April: The libel case of Wilde v Queensberry takes place at the Old Bailey, where Queensberry, defended by Edward Carson, is acquitted. However, evidence of Wilde's homosexual relationships with young men in London renders him liable to criminal prosecution under the Labouchere Amendment and he is arrested at the Cadogan Hotel in Knightsbridge on 6 April for "unlawfully committing acts of gross indecency with certain male persons" and detained on remand in Holloway Prison. On 25 May, the criminal case of Regina v. Wilde takes place, in which, after a retrial at the Old Bailey, Oscar Wilde is convicted of gross indecency and is taken to Pentonville Prison to begin his 2 years' sentence of hard labour.[178]
- 29 June: The formation of Thames Ironworks F.C. by workers at the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company in Canning Town, the predecessor of West Ham United F.C., is announced.
- 17 July: The Great Wheel opens at the Earl's Court exhibition grounds; at 94 m (300 ft), it is the world's tallest Ferris wheel at this date. It is last used in October 1906 and demolished in 1907.
- 20 July: The rebuilt Lyric Theatre (Hammersmith) opens.[179]
- 10 August: The first ever indoor promenade concert, origin of The Proms, is held at the Queen's Hall, Langham Place, opening a series promoted by the impresario Robert Newman with 26-year-old Henry Wood as sole conductor.[61]
- 25 September: Snow falls in London.
- October: The London School of Economics holds its first classes.
- November: The Lee–Enfield rifle, produced at the Royal Small Arms Factory in Enfield, is adopted as standard issue by the British Army, remaining in service until the 1960s.[180]
- The Agapemonites complete the Ark of the Covenant church in Upper Clapton.
- 1896
- 10 January: Birt Acres demonstrates his film projector, the Kineopticon, the first in Britain, to the Lyonsdown Photographic Club in New Barnet, making it the first film show to an audience in the UK.[181] On 14 January, he demonstrates it to the Royal Photographic Society at the Queen's Hall.[182]
- 20 February:[183]
- 21 March: The Kineopticon is opened on Piccadilly Circus/Shaftesbury Avenue corner, but is destroyed by fire after a few weeks.
- May: "Watkin's Tower" at Wembley Park opens to the public. However, it is never completed beyond its first stage and is demolished by 1907. Wembley Stadium (1923) is eventually built on the site.[184]
- 4 May: The Daily Mail newspaper begins publication.
- 19 May: The Croydon Town Hall complex opens.[185]
- July: Robert W. Paul shoots the first actuality film of a London street scene at Blackfriars Bridge, which is first screened the following month.
- 26 July–1 August: The International Socialist Workers and Trade Union Congress is held in London.
- 17 August: Bridget Driscoll becomes the first person in the world to be killed in a car accident, in the grounds of The Crystal Palace.[61]
- 1 October: The Trocadero restaurant of J. Lyons and Co. opens.[186]
- November: Arthur Morrison's social realist novella A Child of the Jago is published.
- The first flats in the London County Council's Boundary Estate in the East End, the country's earliest public housing scheme, are completed, replacing part of the notorious Old Nichol slum.[187]
- The estate agents Knight, Frank & Rutley are established.
- 1897
- 1898
- 1899
- 25 February: In an accident at Grove Hill, Harrow, Edwin Sewell becomes the world's first driver of a petrol-driven vehicle to be killed, and his passenger, Maj. James Richer, dies of injuries 3 days later.[191]
- 15 March: Marylebone station, the last mainline London terminus, is opened by the Great Central Railway.
- 17 May: The foundation stone of the Victoria and Albert Museum is laid by Queen Victoria, making this her last public engagement.[61]
- 24 May: The Kensington Palace state rooms are opened to the public by the Office of Works.
- 13 July: London Government Act 1899 divides the County of London into 28 metropolitan boroughs with effect from 1 November 1900: Battersea, Bermondsey, Bethnal Green, Camberwell, Chelsea, Deptford, Finsbury, Fulham, Greenwich, Hammersmith, Hackney, Hampstead, Holborn, Islington, Kensington, Lambeth, Lewisham, Paddington, Poplar, St Marylebone, St Pancras, Shoreditch, Southwark, Stepney, Stoke Newington, Wandsworth, Westminster, and Woolwich (including North Woolwich).
- September–October: Monet makes the first of 3 visits to London in consecutive years, where he paints views over the Thames from the Savoy Hotel.
- 9 October: The Motor Traction Company introduces the first motor buses in regular London service between Kennington and Victoria station.
- 27 October: Louise Masset, an unmarried mother, murders her 3-year-old son in a cloakroom at Dalston Junction railway station. She will be found guilty on 18 December and hanged at Newgate Prison on 9 January 1900.[192]
- 31 October: The statue of Oliver Cromwell, Westminster, is unveiled outside the House of Commons.
- 16 November: Wyndham's Theatre opens on Charing Cross Road.
See also
Bibliography
See also lists of works about London by period: Tudor London, Stuart London, 18th century, 19th century, 1900–1939, 1960s
- published in the 19th century
- Book: Elmes
, James
. James Elmes . Topographical Dictionary of London and Its Environs . 1831. Whittaker, Treacher and Arnot . London.
- Book: Thomas Allen (topographer) . Thomas . Allen . Thomas Wright (antiquarian) . Thomas . Wright . History and Antiquities of London, Westminster, Southwark, and Parts Adjacent . London . 1839 . 2 . Account of the Companies of the City of London, Alphabetically Arranged . http://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.hwh1uq?urlappend=%3Bseq=386 . 376–429 . 2027/hvd.hwh1uq?urlappend=%3Bseq=386.
- Book: Penny Cyclopaedia . London . Charles Knight . http://hdl.handle.net/2027/ucm.5319406728?urlappend=%3Bseq=117. 1839. London . 14 . 109–129. . Penny Cyclopaedia . 2027/ucm.5319406728?urlappend=%3Bseq=117 .
- Book: Index of Dates ... Facts in the Chronology and History of the World . J. Willoughby Rosse . London . H.G. Bohn. 1859. Hathi Trust . http://hdl.handle.net/2027/hvd.32044098621048?urlappend=%3Bseq=52 . London. 2027/hvd.32044098621048?urlappend=%3Bseq=52 .
- Book: Maxwell, John and Robert . Concise Guide to London . London. Memorable Dates . 1885 . https://books.google.com/books?id=LJsHAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA125. circa 1882
- Book: Mrs. Basil Holmes. London Burial Grounds. 1896. Macmillan . Burial-Grounds within the Metropolitan Area . https://books.google.com/books?id=mQpIAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA279. .
- published in the 20th century
- Book: London . https://books.google.com/books?id=Br0ZAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA10 . 5–47 . Municipal Year Book of the United Kingdom for 1907 . . London . Edward Lloyd. 1907. .
- London . 16. 1910 . Howarth . Osbert John Radcliffe . Ingram . Thomas Allan . Wheatley . Henry Benjamin. Henry Benjamin Wheatley . 938 - 968; see pages (1) 945 & (2) 951 . (1) IV. Population, Public Health, &c. & (2) VII. Government . .
- Book: Miltoun
, Francis
. Dickens' London. 1908. . Boston . Brief Chronology . https://books.google.com/books?id=WCWgAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA287.
- Book: Rudé, George F.E. . Hanoverian London, 1714–1808 . 1971 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-01778-8 . History of London . George Rudé .
- Book: Nicholson
, Louise
. Louise Nicholson . London. 1998. Abbeville Press . 978-0-7112-1187-2 . London Chronology . https://books.google.com/books?id=aXzsP33a3EsC&pg=PA204.
- published in the 21st century
- Book: Richardson
, John
. The Annals of London: A Year-by-year Record of a Thousand Years of History. 2000. University of California Press. 978-0-520-22795-8.
- Book: Schwarz, Leonard . . Cambridge Urban History of Britain. 2000. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-43141-5 . 2 . London, 1700–1840 . 641+ . https://books.google.com/books?id=8sTabkXK6XEC&pg=PA641.
- Book: Rappaport, Erika Diane . Shopping for Pleasure: Women in the Making of London's West End. 2001. Princeton University Press. 0-691-04476-7.
- Book: Wilson, A.N. . London: A History. 2004. Modern Library . 978-0-307-42665-9 . Chronology of London History . 193+ . https://books.google.com/books?id=h5Se8d8YfW0C&pg=PA193. A.N. Wilson.
- Book: Weinreb
, Ben
. The London Encyclopaedia . 3rd. 2008. Macmillan. 978-0-230-73878-2. etal. Ben Weinreb . The London Encyclopaedia .
- Book: London . Michelin Green Guide. 2012. 978-2-06-718238-7 . https://books.google.com/books?id=WCh1M90AVQUC&pg=PT83 . 20C to Today (timeline). . Michelin. Lifestyle. Michelin Travel.
- Book: Conlin, Jonathan. Tales of Two Cities: Paris, London and the Birth of the Modern City. 2013. Counterpoint LLC. 978-1-61902-225-6.
- Book: Matera, Marc . Black London: The Imperial Metropolis and Decolonization in the Twentieth Century. 2015. University of California Press. 978-0-520-95990-3.
External links
Notes and References
- Book: Palmer, Alan. Palmer . Veronica. 1992. The Chronology of British History. Century Ltd. London. 0-7126-5616-2.
- Web site: Chronology of Scottish History. A Timeline of Scottish History. Rampant Scotland. 2014-08-22.
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- Web site: Motoring Firsts. National Motor Museum Trust. 2010-08-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20100821110033/http://nationalmotormuseum.org.uk/?location_id=151. 2010-08-21. live.
- http://www.capitalpunishmentuk.org/louise.html "Louise Masset".