Millennium:

2nd millennium

Centuries:

·       18th century

·       19th century 

·       20th century

Decades:

·       1830s

·       1840s

·       1850s

·       1860s

·       1870s

Years:

·       1855

·       1856

·       1857

·       1858

·       1859

·       1860

·       1861

 

1858 in topic

Humanities

Archaeology – Architecture – Art 
Literature – Music

By country

Australia – Belgium – Brazil – Canada – Denmark – France – Germany – Mexico – New Zealand – Norway – Philippines – Portugal – Russia – South Africa – Spain – Sweden – United Kingdom – United States – Venezuela

Other topics

Rail transport – Science – Sports

Lists of leaders

Sovereign states – State leaders – Territorial governors – Religious leaders

Birth and death categories

Births – Deaths

Establishments and disestablishments categories

Establishments – Disestablishments

Works category

Works

·       v

·       t

·       e

 

1858 in various calendars

Gregorian calendar

1858
MDCCCLVIII

Ab urbe condita

2611

Armenian calendar

1307
ԹՎ ՌՅԷ

Assyrian calendar

6608

Bahá'í calendar

14–15

Balinese saka calendar

1779–1780

Bengali calendar

1265

Berber calendar

2808

British Regnal year

21 Vict. 1 – 22 Vict. 1

Buddhist calendar

2402

Burmese calendar

1220

Byzantine calendar

7366–7367

Chinese calendar

丁巳 (Fire Snake)
4554 or 4494
    — to —
戊午年 (Earth Horse)
4555 or 4495

Coptic calendar

1574–1575

Discordian calendar

3024

Ethiopian calendar

1850–1851

Hebrew calendar

5618–5619

Hindu calendars

 - Vikram Samvat

1914–1915

 - Shaka Samvat

1779–1780

 - Kali Yuga

4958–4959

Holocene calendar

11858

Igbo calendar

858–859

Iranian calendar

1236–1237

Islamic calendar

1274–1275

Japanese calendar

Ansei 5
(安政5年)

Javanese calendar

1786–1787

Julian calendar

Gregorian minus 12 days

Korean calendar

4191

Minguo calendar

54 before ROC
民前54

Nanakshahi calendar

390

Thai solar calendar

2400–2401

Tibetan calendar

阴火蛇年
(female Fire-Snake)
1984 or 1603 or 831
    — to —
阳土马年
(male Earth-Horse)
1985 or 1604 or 832

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/4a/Commons-logo.svg/30px-Commons-logo.svg.png

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1858.

1858 (MDCCCLVIII) was a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar, the 1858th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini(AD) designations, the 858th year of the 2nd millennium, the 58th year of the 19th century, and the 9th year of the 1850s decade. As of the start of 1858, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Contents

·       1Events

·       2Births

·       3Deaths

·       4References

Events[edit]

January–March[edit]

·       January – William I of Prussia becomes regent for his brother, Frederick William IV, who has suffered a stroke.

·       January 9 – Anson Jones, the last President of the Republic of Texas, commits suicide.

·       January 14 – Orsini affairFelice Orsini and his accomplices fail to assassinate Napoleon III in Paris, but their bombskill eight and wound 142 people. Because of the involvement of French émigrés living in Britain, there is a brief anti-British feeling in France, but the emperor refuses to support it.

·       January 25 – The Wedding March by Felix Mendelssohn becomes a popular wedding recessional, after it is played on this day at the marriage of Queen Victoria's daughter Victoria, Princess Royal, to Prince Friedrich of Prussia in St James's Palace, London.[1]

·       February 11 – Lourdes apparitions: Peasant girl Bernadette Soubirous of Lourdes, fourteen, has a vision at the grotto of Massabielle, the first in a series of eighteen events which will come to be regarded as Marian apparitions.

·       February 13 – Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning Speke become the first Europeans to discover Lake Tanganyika.[1]

·       March 13 – Felice Orsini is executed by guillotine, for the attempted assassination of Napoleon III of France.

·       March 21 – Indian Rebellion: British troops retake Lucknow.

·       March 30 – Hymen Lipman patents a pencil with an attached eraser in the United States.

April–June[edit]

·       April 16 – The Wernerian Natural History Society, a former Scottish learned society, is wound up.

·       April 19 – The United States signs a treaty with the Yankton Sioux Tribe.

·       April 28May 1 – Battle of Grahovac: The Ottomans are decisively defeated by Montenegrin forces.

·       May–July – Mahtra War: Peasants in the Governorate of EstoniaRussian Empire revolt against ongoing serfdom, which was officially abolished in 1816.

·       May 11 – Minnesota is admitted as the 32nd U.S. state.

·       May 13 – John Ruskin begins a tour of Europe; he considers it a significant turning point in his life.[2]

·       May 14 – Dr David Livingstone's 6-year Second Zambesi Expedition arrives at the African coast.[3]

·       May 19 – The Marais des Cygnes massacre is perpetrated by pro-slavery forces, in Bleeding Kansas.

·       June 2 – Comet Donati, the first comet to be photographed, is discovered by Giovanni Battista Donati, and remains visible for several months afterwards.

·       June 1317 – The Treaty of Tientsin is signed, ending the first part of the Second Opium War.

·       June 16 – Abraham Lincoln accepts the Republican Party nomination for a seat in the United States Senate, delivering his House Divided speech in Springfield, Illinois.

·       June 17 – The Atlantic and North Carolina Railroad opens, operating 95 miles from GoldsboroNorth Carolina to New Bern, North Carolina.[4]

·       June 19 – A six-minute earthquake destroys much of Mexico City and devastate Texcoco.

·       June 20 – Indian Rebellion of 1857: The last rebels surrender in Gwalior.

·       June 23 – Police of the Papal States seize Jewish boy Edgardo Mortara, and take him away to be raised as a Catholic.

July–September[edit]

·       July

·       Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour goads Austria into attacking Sardinia.

·       Pike's Peak Gold RushFifty-Niners stream into the Rocky Mountains of the western United States.

·       July 1 – A joint presentation of papers by Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace, announcing a theory of evolution by natural selection, are read at London's Linnean Society.

·       July 8 – A peace treaty ends the Indian Rebellion.

·       July 12 – The Advertiser, a daily newspaper still in circulation, begins publication in Adelaide, Australia.

·       July 17 – The Lutine bell is salvaged, and subsequently hung in Lloyd's of London.

·       July 28 – In Bengal/India, British officer William James Herschel uses the hand impression of Rajyadhar Konai, as a contract fingerprint signature.

·       July 29 – The United States and Japan sign the Treaty of Amity and Commerce, negotiated by Townsend Harris.

·       August – The first aerial photography is carried out by Nadar, from a moored balloon in France.[5]

·       August 2 – The Government of India Act, passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom, transfers the territories of the British East India Company and their administration to the direct rule of the British Crown, through a Secretary of State for India.[6]

·       August 2 – A bill is passed to create a modern sewage system in London as a result of the Great Stink, when the heat of the summer made the smell from sewage in the Thames unbearable.

·       August 5 – Cyrus West Field and others complete the first transatlantic telegraph cable, after several unsuccessful attempts. The service ends on September 1, due to weak current.

·       August 7 – A football match, played under an unknown set of rules, is held between Melbourne Grammar School and Scotch College.

·       August 11 – The Eiger is first ascended.

·       August 16 – U.S. President James Buchanan inaugurates the new trans-Atlantic telegraph cable, by exchanging greetings with Queen Victoria. However, a weak signal forces a shutdown of the service in a few weeks.

·       August 21 – The first of the Lincoln–Douglas debates is held in Illinois.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b1/Atlanticcablestamp.jpg/230px-Atlanticcablestamp.jpg

August 5: First transatlantic telegraph cable.

·       September – Cochinchina Campaign: French warships, under Charles Rigault de Genouilly, attack and occupy Da NangVietnam.

·       September 11 – Dom, the third highest summit in the Alps, is first ascended.

October–December[edit]

·       October 21 – Jacques Offenbach's operetta Orpheus in the Underworld, featuring music associated with the can-can, is first performed in Paris.

·       October 28 – Macy's department store, founded by R.H. Macy, opens for business in New York City.

·       November 12 – Johann II, Prince of Liechtenstein, succeeds to the throne aged 18; he will rule until his death in 1929, the second-longest in European royal history and the longest precisely documented tenure of any monarch without a regent since antiquity.

·       November 16 – The 2,400,000th day of the Epoch of the Julian day is reached.

·       November 17 – The city of Denver, Colorado is founded.

·       November 17 - Modified Julian Day zero.

·       December 29 – The Northern Railway Company is established in Madrid, Spain, with a purpose to construct the Northern Railway.

·       December 30 – Paraguay expedition: Seventeen U.S. Navy warships, under the command of William Shubrick, depart from Uruguay on a mission to demand concessions from Paraguay, and to go to war if necessary.

Date unknown[edit]

·       William M. Tweed begins his 13-year term as "Boss" of Tammany Hall.

·       Homosexuality is legalised in the Ottoman Empire.

·       The haute couture firm of Worth and Bobergh is established in Paris.

·       The Miners Association is established in Cornwall, England, UK.

·       Feudalism and serfdom in Bulgaria are abolished in the Ottoman Empire (practically in 1880).

Births[edit]

January–June[edit]

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Rudolf Diesel

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Max Planck

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Gustaf V of Sweden

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Lillie Eginton Warren

·       January 7 – Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, Russian-born advocate of the Hebrew language (d. 1922)

·       January 10 – Heinrich Zille, German illustrator, photographer (d. 1929)

·       January 11 – Harry Gordon Selfridge, American department store magnate (d. 1947)

·       January 13 – Oskar Minkowski, Lithuanian physician (d. 1931)

·       January 21 – Anna Bowman Dodd, American author (d. 1929)

·       January 22 – Frederick Lugard, 1st Baron Lugard, English soldier, explorer and colonial administrator (d. 1945)

·       January 25 – Lillie Eginton Warren, American speech therapy pioneer (d. 1926)

·       January 27 – Cornelia Hubertina Doff (Neel Doff), Dutch-born French author (d. 1942)

·       January 28 – Eugčne Dubois, Dutch paleoanthropologist, geologist who discovered Pithecanthropus erectus (later redesignated Homo erectus or Java Man) (d. 1940)

·       February 5 – Mahlon Pitney, American politician, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (d. 1924)

·       February 15 – John Joseph Montgomery, American glider pioneer (d. 1911)

·       February 18 – Wilhelm Schmidt, German pioneer of superheated steam for use in locomotives (d. 1924)

·       February 19 – Charles Alexander Eastman, Native American author, physician, reformer, helped found the Boy Scouts of America (d. 1939)

·       February 24 – Friedrich Schrempf, German editor, politician (d. 1912)

·       March 6 – Samuel Untermyer, American lawyer (d. 1940)

·       March 9 – Gustav Stickley, American furniture designer, architect (d. 1942)

·       March 10 – Kokichi Mikimoto, Japanese pearl farm pioneer (d. 1954)

·       March 15 – Liberty Hyde Bailey, American botanist (d. 1954)

·       March 18 – Rudolf Diesel, German inventor, automotive pioneer (d. 1913)

·       March 23 – Ludwig Quidde, German pacifist, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1941)

·       March 24 – Elia Goode Byington, American newspaper proprietor, editor, and manager (d. 1936)

·       March 27 – Richard Friedrich Johannes Pfeiffer, German physician, bacteriologist (d. 1945)

·       March 28 – Joséphin Péladan, French novelist (d. 1918)

·       March 30 – DeWolf Hopper, American actor, singer, comedian, and theatrical producer (d. 1935)

·       April 3 – Mary Harrison McKeede facto First Lady of the United States (d. 1930)

·       April 19 – May Robson, Australian-born American actress (d. 1942)

·       April 23 – Max Planck, German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1947)

·       April 30 – Mary Dimmick Harrison, 2nd wife of President Benjamin Harrison (d. 1948)

·       May 8 – Heinrich Berté, Austrian operetta composer (d. 1924)

·       May 26 – Horace Smith-Dorrien, British general (d. 1930)

·       June 3 – Alina Jägerstedt, Swedish trade unionist, Social Democrat (d. 1919)

·       June 5 – Carl Swartz, 14th Prime Minister of Sweden (d. 1926)

·       June 8 – Florence Hull Winterburn, American children's author (unknown year of death)

·       June 16

·       King Gustaf V of Sweden (d. 1950)

·       William D. Boyce, founder of the Boy Scouts of America (d. 1929)

·       Isabel Grimes Richey, American poet (d. 1910)

·       June 20

·       Charles Waddell Chesnutt, African-American author, essayist, political activist (d. 1932)

·       Paul Maistre, French general (d. 1922)

·       June 28 – Otis Skinner, American stage & film actor (d. 1943)

July–December[edit]

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Theodore Roosevelt

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Selma Lagerlöf

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/9b/GiacomoPuccini.jpg/110px-GiacomoPuccini.jpg

Giacomo Puccini

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/25/Emmeline_Pankhurst%2C_seated_%281913%29.jpg/110px-Emmeline_Pankhurst%2C_seated_%281913%29.jpg

Emmeline Pankhurst

·       July 1 – Velma Caldwell Melville, American editor and writer (d. 1924)

·       July 9 – Franz Boas, German anthropologist (d. 1942)

·       July 14 – Emmeline Pankhurst, English suffragette, mother of ChristabelSylvia and Adela Pankhurst (d. 1928)

·       July 16 – Petar Bojović, Serbian field marshal (d. 1945)

·       July 21 – Maria Christina of Austria, queen consort of Spain, second wife of Alfonso XII of Spain (d. 1929)

·       July 28 – José Luis Tamayo, 20th President of Ecuador (d. 1947)

·       August 1 – Hans Rott, Austrian composer (d. 1884)

·       August 2 – Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont, queen consort, regent of the Netherlands (d. 1934)

·       August 10 – Georgi Todorov, Bulgarian general (d. 1934)

·       August 11 – Christiaan Eijkman, Dutch physician, pathologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1930)

·       August 13 – G. E. M. Skues, Newfoundland-born British inventor of nymph fly fishing (d. 1949)

·       August 15 – E. Nesbit, English children's novelist (d. 1924)

·       August 18 – Thomas S. Rodgers, American admiral (d. 1931)

·       August 19 – Alfred Dyke Acland, British military officer (d. 1937)

·       August 21 – Ethlyn T. Clough, American newspaper owner, editor, and manager (d. 1936)

·       August 27 – Giuseppe Peano, Italian mathematician (d. 1932)

·       September 1

·       Andrew Jackson Zilker, American philanthropist (d. 1934)

·       Carl Auer von Welsbach, Austrian chemist, inventor (d. 1929)

·       September 12 – J. H. Smith, American politician, pioneer (d. 1956)

·       September 15 – Emma Augusta Sharkey, American dime novelist (d. 1902)

·       September 16 – Bonar Law, New Brunswick-born Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (d. 1923)

·       September 21 – Shimamura Hayao, Japanese admiral (d. 1923)

·       September 30 – Estelle M. H. Merrill, American journalist (d. 1908)

·       October 2 – Emma Amelia Cranmer, American prohibition reformer and suffragist (d. 1937)

·       October 3 – Eleonora Duse, Italian actress (d. 1924)

·       October 11 – Frederick Kerr, English actor (d. 1933)

·       October 12 – John L. Sullivan, American heavyweight boxing champion (d. 1918)

·       October 15 – William Sims, American admiral (d. 1936)

·       October 19 – George Albert Boulenger, Belgian naturalist (d. 1937)

·       October 25 – Take Ionescu, 29th Prime Minister of Romania (d. 1922)

·       October 27

·       Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1919)

·       Saitō Makoto, Japanese admiral, 19th Prime Minister of Japan (d. 1936)

·       November 10 – Heinrich XXVII, Prince Reuss Younger Line (d. 1928)

·       November 20 – Selma Lagerlöf, Swedish writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1940)

·       November 23 – Albert Ranft, Swedish theatre director, actor (d. 1938)

·       November 26 – Katharine Drexel, American Roman Catholic saint (d. 1955)

·       November 30 – Jagadish Chandra Bose, Indian physicist (d. 1937)

·       December 11 – Kata Dalström, Swedish politician (d. 1923)

·       December 15 – Elizabeth Eggleston Seelye, American biographer (d. 1923)

·       December 19 – Adolf Schiel, German-born officer in Boer armed forces (d. 1903)

·       December 22 – Giacomo Puccini, Italian composer (d. 1924)

·       December 24 – Harriet Pritchard Arnold, American author (d. 1901)

·       December 25 – Herman P. Faris, American temperance movement leader (d. 1936)

·       December 27 – Juan Luis Sanfuentes, 16th President of Chile (d. 1930)

Date unknown[edit]

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/23/Matilde_P%C3%A9rez_Moll%C3%A1.jpg/110px-Matilde_P%C3%A9rez_Moll%C3%A1.jpg

Matilde Pérez Mollá

·       Bill Doolin, American outlaw and member of the Dalton Gang (d. 1896)

·       Matilde Pérez Mollá, Spanish mayor (d. 1936)

·       Belle Hunt Shortridge, American author (d. 1893)

Deaths[edit]

January–June[edit]

·       January 5 – Joseph Radetzky von Radetz, Austrian field marshal (b. 1766)

·       January 8 – Caroline Cornwallis, English writer (b. 1786)

·       January 9 – Anson Jones, 4th and last President of the Republic of Texas (suicide) (b. 1798)

·       February 21 – John K. Kane, American politician and jurist (b. 1795)

·       February 23 – Vicente Ramón Roca, 3rd President of Ecuador (b. 1792)

·       March 4 – Commodore Matthew Calbraith Perry, American naval officer (b. 1794)

·       April 7 – Anton Diabelli, Austrian composer (b. 1781)

·       May 11 – Joseph Gensoul, French surgeon (b. 1797)

·       June 3 – Julius Reubke, German composer (b. 1834)

·       June 28

·       Jane Marcet, British science writer (b. 1769)

·       Auguste de Montferrand, French architect (b. 1786)

July–December[edit]

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Harriet Taylor Mill

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Aloys II, Prince of Liechtenstein

·       August 14 – Tokugawa Iesada, 13th shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan (b. 1824)

·       September 9 – Thomas Assheton Smith II, English politician, cricketer (b. 1776)

·       September 17 – Dred Scott, African-American slave (b. c. 1795)

·       November 3 – Harriet Taylor Mill, British philosopher, women's rights advocate (b. 1807)

·       November 12 – Aloys II, Prince of Liechtenstein (b. 1796)

·       November 15 – Li Hsu-pin, Chinese military leader (b. 1817)

·       November 17 – Robert Owen, British social reformer (b. 1771)

·       November 24 – Wincenty Krasiński, Polish military leader (b. 1782)

·       December 3 – Joseph Marie Élisabeth Durocher, French geologist (b. 1817)

·       December 13 – Karl Ludwig Philipp Zeyher, German botanist (b. 1799)

·       December 17 – Mustafa Reşid Pasha, Ottoman statesman (b. 1800)

Date unknown[edit]

·       Amelia Griffiths, British phycologist (b. 1768)

·       Georgios Kountouriotis, Prime Minister of Greece (b. 1782)

References[edit]

1.     Jump up to:a b Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.

2.     ^ Ruskin, John (1982). Hayman, John, ed. Letters From The Continent, 1858. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-5583-4.

3.     ^ "The Zambesi Expedition". Livingstone Online. Archived from the original on March 2, 2012. Retrieved 2011-08-26.

4.     ^ CommunicationSolutions/ISI, "Railroads — prior to the Civil War"North Carolina Business History, 2006, accessed 1 Feb 2010.

5.     ^ "Brief history of aerial photography". www.findaerialphotography.com. 2007. Retrieved 2015-01-02.

6.     ^ Wolpert, Stanley (1989). A New History of India (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 239–40. ISBN 0-19-505637-X.