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1865 (MDCCCLXV) was
a common year starting
on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar and
a common
year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar, the 1865th year of
the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the
865th year of the 2nd millennium,
the 65th year of the 19th century,
and the 6th year of the 1860s decade. As of
the start of 1865, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian
calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923. Contents · 1Events · 2Births · 3Deaths Events[edit] January–March[edit] January 15: Union captures Fort Fisher. ·
January 4 – The New York Stock
Exchange opens its first permanent headquarters at 10-12 Broad near Wall Street, in New York City. ·
January 13 – American Civil War – Second
Battle of Fort Fisher: United States forces launch a major
amphibious assault against the last seaport held by the Confederates, Fort Fisher, North Carolina. ·
January 15 – American Civil War:
United States forces capture Fort Fisher. ·
The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (conditional
prohibition of slavery and involuntary servitude) passes narrowly, in the
House of Representatives. ·
American Civil War:
Confederate General Robert E. Lee becomes
general-in-chief. ·
February ·
American Civil War: Columbia, South
Carolina burns, as Confederate forces flee from
advancing Union forces. ·
Only
known calendar month with no full moon.[1] ·
February 3 – American Civil War – Hampton Roads
Conference: Union and Confederate leaders discuss peace terms. ·
February 8 & March 8 – Gregor Mendel reads his paper on Experiments
on Plant Hybridization at two meetings of the Natural
History Society of Brünn in Moravia, subsequently taken to be the origin
of the theory of Mendelian
inheritance.[2] ·
February 21 – John Deere receives a patent for ploughs. ·
February 22 – Tennessee adopts a new constitution, that abolishes slavery. ·
March 3 – The U.S. Congress authorizes
formation of the Bureau of Refugees,
Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. ·
March – Hamm's Brewery opens in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin. ·
March 4 – Abraham Lincoln is sworn
in for a second term as President of the United States. ·
March 4 – Washington College and
Jefferson College are merged, to form Washington
& Jefferson College.[3] ·
March 13 – American Civil War:
The Confederate
States of America agrees to the use of African American troops. ·
March 18 – American Civil War:
The Congress of the Confederate States of America adjourns for the last time. ·
March 19–21 – American Civil War – Battle of
Bentonville: Union troops compel Confederate forces to retreat
from Four Oaks,
North Carolina. ·
March 25 ·
The Claywater
Meteorite explodes just before reaching ground level in Vernon County,
Wisconsin; fragments having a combined mass of 1.5 kg
(3.3 lb) are recovered. ·
American Civil War:
In Virginia, Confederate forces capture Fort Stedman from
the Union. Lee's army suffers heavy casualties: about 2,900, including 1,000
captured in the Union counterattack. Confederate positions are weakened.
After the battle, Lee's defeat is only a matter of time. April–June[edit] April 9: Appomattox Court House. ·
April 1 – American Civil War – Battle of Five Forks:
In Petersburg, Virginia,
Confederate General Robert E. Lee begins his final offensive. ·
April 2 – American Civil War:
Confederate President Jefferson Davis and most of his Cabinet
flee the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia,
which is taken by Union troops the next day. ·
April 6 – German chemicals producer Badische
Anilin- und Sodafabrik (BASF) is founded
in Mannheim. ·
April 9 – American Civil War: Confederate
States Army General Robert E. Lee surrenders to Union Army General Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House, effectively ending
the American Civil War. ·
April 14 ·
Assassination
of Abraham Lincoln: President
of the United States Abraham Lincoln is shot while attending
an evening performance of the farce Our American Cousin at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C., by
actor and Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth.
Doctors move the unconscious President to a bed in a house across the street. ·
United
States Secretary of State William H. Seward and
his family are attacked in his home, by Lewis Powell. ·
April 15 – President Lincoln dies early
this morning from his gunshot wound. Vice President Andrew Johnsonbecomes the 17th President of
the United States, upon Lincoln's death. Johnson is sworn in later
that morning. ·
April 18 – Confederate President Jefferson Davis and his entire cabinet
arrive in Charlotte,
North Carolina, with a contingent of 1,000 soldiers. ·
April 21 – German Chemicals producer BASF moves
its headquarters and factories from Mannheim, to the Hemshof District of Ludwigshafen. ·
April 26 ·
American Civil War: Confederate
States Army General Joseph E. Johnston surrenders
to Union Army Major General William Tecumseh
Sherman, at Durham Station, North Carolina. ·
Union
cavalry corner John Wilkes Booth in
a Virginia barn, and cavalryman Boston Corbett shoots the assassin
dead. ·
April 27 ·
The steamboat Sultana,
carrying 2,300 passengers, explodes and sinks in the Mississippi River,
killing 1,800, mostly Unionsurvivors
of the Andersonville
Prison. April 27: Steamboat Sultanasinks. ·
Governor of New York Reuben Fenton signs a bill formally
creating Cornell University. ·
May 1 – The Triple Alliance of Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay against Paraguay is formally signed; the Paraguayan War has already begun. ·
May 4 – American Civil War:
Lieutenant General Richard Taylor,
commanding all Confederate forces in Alabama, Mississippi, and eastern Louisiana, surrenders his forces to Union
General Edward Canby at Citronelle, Alabama,
effectively ending all Confederate resistance east of the Mississippi River. ·
May 5 ·
In North Bend, Ohio (a suburb of Cincinnati), the first train robbery in the United States
takes place. ·
Jefferson Davis meets with his
Confederate Cabinet (14 officials) for the last time, in Washington, Georgia,
and the Confederate Government is officially dissolved. ·
May 10 – American Civil War: Jefferson Davis is captured by the Union Army near Irwinville, Georgia. ·
May 12–13 – American Civil War – Battle of Palmito
Ranch: In far south Texas, more than a month after Confederate General Lee's surrender, the last land battle of
the civil war with casualties, ends with a
Confederate victory. ·
May 17 ·
The International
Telegraph Union is founded. ·
French missionary Father Armand David first observes Père David's deer in Peking, China.[4] ·
May 23 – Grand Review
of the Armies: Union Army troops parade down Pennsylvania Avenue (Washington,
D.C.) to celebrate the end of the American Civil War. ·
May 25 – Mobile magazine
explosion: 300 are killed in Mobile, Alabama, when an ordnance depot
explodes. ·
May 28 – The Mimosa sets sail with emigrants
from Wales for Patagonia.[5] ·
May 29 – American Civil War:
President of the United States Andrew Johnson issues a proclamation of
general amnesty for most citizens of the former Confederacy. ·
June–August
– English polymath Francis Galton formulates eugenics.[6] ·
June 2 – American Civil War:
Confederate forces west of the Mississippi River under
General Edmund Kirby Smith surrender
at Galveston, Texas,
under terms negotiated on May 26, becoming the
last to do so. ·
June 10 – Richard Wagner's opera Tristan und Isolde debuts
at the Munich Court
Theatre. ·
June 11 – Battle of the
Riachuelo: The Brazilian Navy squadron defeats the Paraguayan
Navy. ·
June 19 – American Civil War:
Union Major General Gordon Granger lands at Galveston, Texas, and informs the people
of Texas of the Emancipation
Proclamation (an event celebrated in modern times each year
as Juneteenth). ·
June 23 – American Civil War:
At Fort Towson in Oklahoma Territory,
Confederate General Stand Watie, a
Cherokee Indian, surrenders the last significant Rebel army. ·
June 25 – James Hudson Taylor founds
the China Inland Mission at Brighton, England. ·
June 26 – Jumbo, a young male African elephant, arrives at London Zoo and becomes a popular
attraction. July–September[edit] ·
July –
The Christian Mission, later renamed The Salvation Army,
is founded in Whitechapel, London,
by William and Catherine Booth. ·
July 4 – Lewis Carroll publishes his children's
novel Alice's
Adventures in Wonderland in England[7][8] (first trade editions in December). ·
July 5 ·
The U.S. Secret Service is
founded. ·
The
first speed limit is
introduced in Britain:
2 mph (3.2 km/h) in town and 4 mph (6.4 km/h) in the
country. ·
July 7 – Following Abraham Lincoln's assassination on April 14, the four conspirators condemned to
death during the trial are hanged, including David Herold, George Atzerodt, Lewis Payne and Mary Surratt. Her son, John Surratt, escapes execution by fleeing
to Canada, and ultimately to Egypt. ·
July 14 – First
ascent of the Matterhorn: The summit of the Matterhorn in the Alps is
reached for the first time, by a party of 7 led by the Englishman Edward Whymper; 4 die in a fall during the
descent. July 14: Matterhorn climbed. July 30: Steamer Brother
Jonathan sinks. ·
July 21 – Wild
Bill Hickok – Davis Tutt shootout: In the market square of Springfield,
Missouri, Wild Bill Hickok shoots Little Dave Tutt dead over a poker debt, in what is regarded as the
first true western fast draw showdown. ·
July 23 – The SS Great Eastern departs on
a voyage to lay a transatlantic
telegraph cable.[7] ·
July 27 – Welsh settlers arrive
in Argentina at Chubut Valley. ·
July 30 – The steamer Brother
Jonathan sinks off the California coast, killing 225. ·
July 31 – The first narrow gauge
mainline railway in the world opens at Grandchester,
Australia. ·
August 16 – The Dominican Republic regains
independence from Spain. ·
August 25 – The Shergotty meteorite Mars
meteorite falls in Sherghati, Gaya, Bihar, India. ·
September 19 – Union Business College
(now Peirce College)
is founded in Philadelphia. ·
September 26 – Champ Ferguson becomes the first person
(and one of only two) to be convicted of war crimes for actions taken during
the American Civil War,
found guilty by a U.S. Army tribunal on 23 charges, arising from the murder
of 53 people. He is hanged on October 20, two days after the conviction
of Henry Wirz for war crimes.[9] October–December[edit] ·
October 11 – Morant Bay rebellion: Paul Bogle leads hundreds of black men
and women in a march in Jamaica; the rebellion
is brutally suppressed by the British governor Edward John Eyre with 400 executed.[8] ·
October 25 – Florida drafts its constitution
in Tallahassee. ·
The
Standard Oil Company opens. ·
The
paddlewheel steamer SS Republic sinks
off the Georgia coast,
with a cargo of $400,000 in coins. ·
November 6 – American Civil War:
Confederate captain James Waddell surrenders the commerce raider CSS Shenandoah to the
British at Liverpool. ·
November 10 – Major Henry Wirz, the superintendent of the Confederate
prison camp in Andersonville, Georgia, is hanged, becoming the first of two American
Civil War soldiers to be executed for war crimes. ·
November 11 – Duar War between Britain and Bhutan ends with the Treaty of
Sinchula, in which Bhutan cedes control of its southern passes to Britain in
return for an annual subsidy.[7] ·
November 26 – Battle of Papudo: The Spanish ship Covadonga is
captured by the Chileans and
the Peruvians, north of Valparaíso, Chile. ·
December 11 – The United States
Congress creates the United States House Committee on Appropriations and
the Committee on Banking and Commerce, reducing the tasks of the House Committee on Ways and Means. ·
December 17 – Leopold II becomes
King of the Belgians, following the death (on December 10) of his father,
King Leopold I. ·
December 18 – Secretary Seward declares
the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution ratified
by three-quarters of the states (including those in secession) as of December 6; slavery is legally outlawed in
the last two slave states of Kentucky and Delaware, and the remaining 45,000
slaves are freed. ·
December 21 – The Kappa Alpha Order is
founded at Washington
College, Lexington, Virginia. ·
December 24 – Jonathan Shank and Barry
Ownby form the Ku Klux Klan in
the American South,
to resist Reconstruction and
intimidate carpetbaggers and scalawags, as well as to repress the
freedpeople. Date unknown[edit] ·
A forest fire near Silverton, Oregon destroys
about one million acres (4,000 km²) of timber. ·
The National Temperance Society and Publishing House is
founded by James Black in
the U.S. Births[edit] January–March[edit] ·
January 5 – Julio Garavito
Armero, Colombian astronomer (d. 1920) ·
January 9 – Leo Ditrichstein, Austrian-born stage actor,
playwright (d. 1928) ·
January 10 – Mary Ingalls, blind older sister of American
author Laura Ingalls Wilder (d. 1928) ·
January 19 – Valentin Serov, Russian painter, mainly of
portraits (d. 1911) ·
January 20 – Yvette Guilbert, French cabaret singer,
actress (d. 1944) ·
January 27 – Nikolai Pokrovsky,
Russian politician, last foreign minister of the Russian Empire (d. 1930) ·
Verina Morton Jones,
African-American physician, suffragist and clubwoman (d. 1943) ·
Lala Lajpat Rai ("The Lion of
Punjab"), a leader of the Indian independence
movement (d. 1928) ·
Kaarlo Juho
Ståhlberg, President of Finland (d. 1952) ·
January 31 – Henri Desgrange, French cycling enthusiast,
founder of the Tour de France (d. 1940) ·
February 4 – Ernest Hanbury
Hankin, English bacteriologist, naturalist (d. 1939) ·
February 9 – Beatrice Stella Tanner,
later Mrs. Patrick
Campbell, English theatre actress, producer (d. 1940) ·
February 12 – Kazimierz Tetmajer,
Polish writer (d. 1940) ·
February 17 – Ernst Troeltsch, German theologian (d. 1923). ·
February 19 – Sven Hedin, Swedish scientist, explorer
(d. 1952) ·
February 21 – John Haden Badley,
English author, educator (d. 1967) ·
Wilfred Grenfell, English medical missionary
to Newfoundland and Labrador (d. 1940) ·
Alexander
Henderson, American businessman (d. 1925) ·
March 1 – Elma Danielsson, Swedish socialist,
journalist (d. 1936) ·
March 10 – Tan Sitong, Chinese reformist leader
(d. 1898) ·
March 15 – Edith Maude Eaton,
English-born writer (d. 1914) ·
March 19 – William Morton
Wheeler, American entomologist (d. 1937) ·
March 20 – Alan MacMasters, Scottish inventor (d. 1927) ·
March 30 – Heinrich Rubens, German physicist (d. 1922) April–June[edit] ·
April – Richard Rushall, British Businessman
(d. 1953) ·
April 1 – Richard Adolf
Zsigmondy, Austrian-born chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1929) ·
April 2 – Gyorche Petrov, Macedonian and Bulgarian
revolutionary (d. 1921) ·
April 9 ·
Laurence Hope,
English poet (d. 1904) ·
Erich Ludendorff, German general (d. 1937) ·
Charles Proteus
Steinmetz, German-American engineer, electrician
(d. 1923) ·
April 14 – Alfred Hoare Powell,
English Arts and Crafts architect, and designer and painter of pottery
(d. 1960) ·
April 18 – Leónidas Plaza,
16th President of Ecuador (d. 1932) ·
April 28 ·
Vital Brazil, Brazilian physician,
immunologist (d. 1950) ·
Charles W. Woodworth,
American entomologist (d. 1940) ·
May 2 – Clyde Fitch, American dramatist (d. 1909) ·
May 3 – Henry Francis Bryan,
governor of American Samoa (d. 1944) ·
May 5 – Helen Maud Merrill,
American litterateur and poet (d. 1943) ·
May 23 – Epitácio Pessoa,
11th President of Brazil (d. 1942) ·
May 25 ·
John Mott, American YMCA leader, recipient
of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1955) ·
Pieter Zeeman, Dutch physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1943) ·
May 26 – Robert W. Chambers,
American artist (d. 1933) ·
June 2 – George Lohmann, English cricketer (d. 1901) ·
June 3 – King George V of the United Kingdom
(d. 1936) ·
June 5 – Charles Stanton Ogle,
American actor (d. 1940) ·
June 9 ·
Albéric Magnard,
French composer (d. 1914) ·
Carl Nielsen, Danish composer (d. 1931) ·
June 13 – W. B. Yeats, Irish writer, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1939) ·
June 19 ·
Alfred Hugenberg, German businessman,
politician (d. 1951) ·
May Whitty, British stage and screen actress
(d. 1948) ·
June 21 – Otto Frank
(physiologist), German doctor (d. 1944) ·
June 26 – Bernard Berenson, American art historian
(d. 1959) ·
June 28 – Alice May Douglas,
American author (d. 1943) ·
June 29 – Shigechiyo Izumi, Japanese supercentenarian
(d. 1986) July–September[edit] ·
July 13 – Gérard Encausse,
French occultist (d. 1916) ·
July 15 – Alfred
Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe, Irish-born British
publisher; founder of the Daily Mail and Daily Mirror (d.1922) ·
July 23 ·
Max Heindel, Danish-born Christian
occultist, astrologer, and mystic (d. 1919) ·
Edward Terry Sanford, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States (d. 1930) ·
July 26 – Philipp Scheidemann, Chancellor
of Germany (d. 1939) ·
August 2 ·
Irving Babbitt, American literary critic
(d. 1933) ·
John Radecki, Australian stained glass
artist (d. 1955) ·
August 10 – Alexander Glazunov,
Russian composer (d. 1936) ·
August 15 – Usui Mikao, Japanese founder of reiki (d. 1926) ·
August 17 – Julia Marlowe, English-born American stage
actress (d. 1950) ·
August 20 – Bernard Tancred, South African cricketer
(d. 1911) ·
August 24 – King Ferdinand I of
Romania (d. 1927) ·
August 26 – Arthur James Arnot,
Scottish-Australian electrical engineer, inventor (d. 1946) ·
James Henry Breasted,
American Egyptologist (d. 1935) ·
Charles G. Dawes, 30th Vice
President of the United States, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1951) ·
September 4 – Maria Karłowska,
Polish Roman Catholic religious
professed and blessed (d. 1935) ·
September 11 – Rainis, Latvian poet, playwright (d. 1929) ·
September 13 – William
Birdwood, 1st Baron Birdwood, British field marshal (d. 1951) ·
September 24 – Mollie McConnell, American actress (d. 1920) ·
September 26 – Mary
Russell, Duchess of Bedford, English aviator, ornithologist
(d. 1937) ·
September 27 – Ezra Fitch, American businessman, co-founder
of Abercrombie &
Fitch (d. 1930) October–December[edit] ·
October 1 – Paul Dukas, French composer (d. 1935) ·
October 9 – Arthur Hayes-Sadler,
British admiral (d. 1952) ·
October 12 – Arthur Harden, English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1940) ·
October 15 – Charles W. Clark, American baritone
(d. 1925) ·
October 17 – James Rudolph
Garfield, U.S. politician (d. 1950) ·
Charles James Briggs,
British general (d. 1941) ·
Raymond
Hitchcock, American actor (d. 1929) ·
October 23 – Hovhannes Abelian,
Armenian actor (d. 1936) ·
October 26 – Benjamin Guggenheim,
American businessman (d. 1912) ·
October 27 – Tinsley Lindley, English footballer
(d. 1940) ·
Warren G. Harding,
29th President
of the United States (d. 1923) ·
Paul Olaf Bodding,
Norwegian missionary to India, creator of Santali Latin
alphabet (d. 1938) ·
November 11 – Edwin Thanhouser, American actor,
businessman, and film producer, founder of the Thanhouser Company (d. 1956) ·
December 8 – Jean Sibelius, Finnish composer (d. 1957) ·
December 16 – Olavo Bilac, Brazilian poet (d. 1918) ·
December 19 – Minnie Maddern Fiske,
American stage actress (d. 1932) ·
December 20 – Elsie de Wolfe, American socialite, interior
decorator (d. 1950) ·
Anna Farquhar
Bergengren, American author and editor (unknown year of death) ·
Albrecht,
Duke of Württemberg, German field marshal (d. 1939) ·
Evangeline Booth, 4th General of The Salvation Army (d. 1950) ·
Fay Templeton, Broadway musical comedy star
(d. 1939) ·
December 28 – Félix Vallotton,
Swiss painter, printmaker (d. 1925) ·
December 30 – Rudyard Kipling, Indian-born English
writer, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1936) Date Unknown[edit] ·
Pauline Schmidt, Danish magician (d. 1944) Deaths[edit] January–June[edit] ·
January 14 – Marie-Anne Libert,
Belgian botanist (b. 1782) ·
January 19 – Pierre-Joseph
Proudhon, French philosopher, anarchist (b. 1809) ·
January 28 – Felice Romani, Italian poet, librettist
(b. 1788) ·
February 6 – Isabella Beeton, British cook, household
management expert (b. 1836) ·
March 1 – Anna Pavlovna of
Russia, queen consort of the Netherlands (b. 1795) ·
March 20 – Yamanami Keisuke, Japanese samurai (b. 1833) ·
March 30 – Alexander Dukhnovich,
Russian priest, writer and social activist (b. 1803 ·
April 1 ·
John
Milton, Governor of Florida (b. 1807) ·
Giuditta Pasta, Italian soprano (b. 1798) ·
April 2 – A. P. Hill, American Confederate general
(b. 1825) ·
April 13 – Achille Valenciennes,
French zoologist (b. 1794) ·
April 15 – Abraham Lincoln, 16th President
of the United States (b. 1809) ·
April 18 – Léon Jean Marie
Dufour, French medical doctor, naturalist (b. 1780) ·
April 24 – Nicholas
Alexandrovich, Tsarevich of Russia (b. 1843) ·
April 26 – John Wilkes Booth,
American actor, assassin of Abraham Lincoln (b. 1838) ·
April 28 – Sir Samuel Cunard, Canadian businessman,
founder of the Cunard Line (b. 1787) July–December[edit] ·
July – Dimitris Plapoutas,
Greek military leader (b. 1786) ·
July 6 – Princess Sophie
of Sweden, Grand Duchess of Baden (b. 1801) ·
July 7 – The Lincoln assassination
conspirators (executed) ·
Lewis Powell (b. 1844) ·
David Herold (b. 1842) ·
George Atzerodt (b. 1835) ·
Mary Surratt (b. 1823) ·
July 25 – James Barry,
British military surgeon (b. 1795) ·
August 4 – Percival Drayton, United States Navy officer
(b. 1812) ·
August 12 – William Jackson
Hooker, English botanist (b. 1785) ·
August 13 – Ignaz Semmelweis, Hungarian physician
(b. 1818) ·
August 16 – Sir Frederick Stovin, British army general
(b. 1783) ·
August 27 – Thomas
Chandler Haliburton, Canadian author (b. 1796) ·
August 29 – Robert Remak, German embryologist,
physiologist and neurologist (b. 1815) ·
September 2 – William Rowan
Hamilton, Irish mathematician (b. 1805) ·
September 10 – Maria Silfvan, Finnish actor (b. 1802) ·
October 16 – Andrés Bello, Venezuelan poet, lawmaker,
teacher, philosopher and sociologist (b. 1781) ·
October 18 – Henry
John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1784) ·
November 10 – Henry Wirz, Confederate military officer,
prisoner-of-war camp commander (executed) (b. 1823) ·
November 12 – Elizabeth Gaskell,
British novelist, biographer (b. 1810) ·
November 28 – William Machin
Stairs, Canadian businessman, statesman (b. 1789) ·
November 29 – Isaac A. Van Amburgh,
American animal trainer (b. 1811) ·
December 6 – Sebastián Iradier,
Spanish composer (b. 1809) ·
December 10 – King Leopold I of Belgium (b. 1790) ·
December 14 – Johan Georg Forchhammer,
Danish geologist (b. 1794) ·
December 17 – Luigi Ciacchi, Italian cardinal (b. 1788) References[edit] 1.
^ Symons, Mitchell (2013). Numberland.
London: Michael O'Mara Books. p. 141. ISBN 978-1-78243-060-5. 2.
^ Moore, Randy (May 2001). "The "Rediscovery" of Mendel's
Work" (PDF). Bioscene. 27.
Archived from the original (PDF) on February 2, 2017. Retrieved December 6,2016. 3.
^ Coleman, Helen Turnbull Waite (1956). Banners in the Wilderness: The Early Years of
Washington and Jefferson College. University of Pittsburgh Press.
p. 214. OCLC 2191890.
Retrieved 2011-04-28. 4.
^ "Elaphurus davidianus". Ultimate
Ungulate. 2004. Archived from the original on June 5,
2011. Retrieved 2011-05-05. 5.
^ Wilkinson, Susan (September 1998). "Welsh immigrants in Patagonia: Mimosa, the old
ship that sailed into history". Buenos Aires Herald.
Retrieved 2010-11-26. 6.
^ Galton, Francis (1865). "Hereditary talent and character" (PDF). Macmillan's Magazine. 12: 157–166, 318–327.
Retrieved 2016-12-06. 7.
^ Jump up to:a b c Everett,
Jason M., ed. (2006). "1865". The People's Chronology. Thomson
Gale. 8.
^ Jump up to:a b Palmer,
Alan; Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London:
Century Ltd. p. 286. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2. 9.
^ Cartmell, Donald (2001). The Civil War Book of
Lists. Career Press. p. 104. |
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