MOSS, Nancy Boyd

MOSS, Nancy Boyd

Female 1818 -

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Timeline



 
 



 




   Date  Event(s)
1818 
  • 1818: Death of the King's wife, Queen Caroline. Mary Shelley's publishes her 'Frankenstein'
1819 
  • 1819: Troops intervene at a mass political reform meeting in Manchester, killing and wounding four hundred people at the 'Peterloo Massacre'
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
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
1822 
  • 1822: First prototype Espresso machine (France)
1823 
  • 1823: The Royal Academy of Music is established in London. The British Museum is extended and extensively rebuilt to house an expanding collection
1824 
  • 1824: The National Gallery is established. Commercial boom in Britain
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
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.
10 1828 
  • 1828: The Duke of Wellington becomes British Prime Minister
11 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
12 1830 
  • 1830: Death of King George IV at Windsor. He is succeeded by his brother, William IV. Opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway. Rise of the Whigs, under Grey
  • 1830: First major cholera epidemic in Britain starts and lasts two years.
13 1831 
  • 1831: Faraday , in the first in a series of Experimental Researches in Electricity, discovered the means of producing electricity from magnetism, i.e., electromagnetic induction, the generation of an electric field by a changing magnetic field. This is the principle of the dynamo
  • 1831: Swing' Riots in rural areas against the mechanization of agricultural activities. The new London Bridge is opened over the River Thames
14 1832 
  • 1832: The first or great Reform Act is passed. This climax of a period of political reform extends the vote to a further 500,000 people and redistributes Parliamentary seats on a more equitable basis
15 1833 
  • 1833: Abolition of Slavery throughout the British Empire. Parliament passes the Factory Act, prohibiting children aged less than nine from working in factories, and reducing the working hours of women and older children. Start of the Oxford Movement in the Anglican Church
16 1834 
  • 1834: Charles Babbage designed a programmable mechanical calculating machine, or 'analytical engine,' that could carry out arithmetic operations specified on punch cards and choose the sequence of operations. Although the design was never built, Augusta Ada Byron wrote programs to demonstrate its potential power.
  • 1834: Parliament passes the Poor Law Act, establishing workhouses for the poor. Robert Owen founds the Grand National Consolidated Trade Union. The government acts against 'illegal oaths' in such unionism, rsulting in the Tolpuddle Martyrs being transported to Australia. Fire destroys the Palace of Westminster
17 1835 
  • 1835: Parliament passes the Municipal Reform Act, requiring members of town councils to be elected by ratepayers and councils to publish their financial accounts
  • 1835: Commercial boom with 'little' railway mania across Britain starts and continues into 1836
18 1837 
  • 1837: Death of King William IV at Windsor. He is succeeded by his niece, Victoria. Births, deaths and marriages must be registered by law. Charles Dickens publishes 'Oliver Twist,' drawing attention to Britain's poor.
19 1838 
  • 1838: The Anti-Corn Law League is established. Publication of the People's Charter. The start of Chartism
20 1839 
  • 1839: Chartist Riots take place
  • 1839: First use of 'OK' in print? (in Boston Morning Post)
  • 1839: Fox Talbot produces photographs from negatives
21 1840 
  • 1840: Queen Victoria marries Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. The penny post is instituted
  • 1840: There are reckoned to be 107 accountants in London
22 1841 
  • 1841: The first British Census recording the names of the populace is undertaken. The Tories come to power. Sir Robert Peel becomes Prime Minister
23 1842 
  • 1842: First Christmas card
  • 1842: First UK public telegraph lines, from Paddington to Slough and Gosport to London
24 1843 
  • 1843: Alexander Bain (1818-1903) invented an early fax machine
25 1844 
  • 1844: Charles Darwin wrote, but didn't publish, an essay presaging the theory of the origin of species.
  • 1844: Samuel Finley Breese Morse demonstrates a telegraph, using a code of his own invention
  • 1844: Parliament passes the Bank Charter Act. Foundation of the Rochdale Co-Operative Society and the Royal Commission on the Health of Towns
  • 1844: Two years of railway mania begins across Britain. Massive investment and speculation leads to the laying of 5,000 miles of track
26 1845 
  • 1845: Irish Potato Famine kills more than a million people in two years
  • 1845: Engels publishes 'The Condition of the Working Class in England'
  • 1845: There are reckoned to be 210 accountants in London
27 1846 
  • 1846: End of Sir Robert Peel's Ministry. Whigs come to Power. Repeal of the Corn Laws
28 1847 
  • 1847: Flourens discovered the anesthetic properties of chloroform
  • 1847: Levi Strauss invents denim jeans
29 1848 
  • 1848: Major Chartist demonstration in London. Revolutions in Europe. Parliament passes the Public Health Act
  • 1848: Karl Marx publishes 'The Communist Manifesto' and 'Das Kapital'
30 1849 
  • 1849: Howe patents the safety-pin
31 1850 
  • 1850: American Joel Houghton invented the first dishwasher. He made it out of wood, and gave it a hand-turned wheel that splashed water on the dishes inside. It didn't really work, but it did get the first "dishwasher" patent
  • 1850: First machine-made paper bag
32 1851 
  • 1851: The Great Exhibition is staged in Hyde Park. Thanks to Prince Albert, it is a great success
  • 1851: Patent for Singer sewing machine issued
33 1852 
  • 1852: Death of the Duke of Wellington. Derby's first minority Conservative government. Aberdeen's coalition government is established
34 1853 
  • 1853: Potato crisps invented by a cook named George Crum.
  • 1853: Florence Nightingale first recommended the regimen of cleanliness which dramatically reduced the death rate in hospitals
  • 1853: Vaccination against smallpox is made compulsory. Queen Victoria uses chloroform during birth of Prince Leopold. Gladstone presents his first budget
35 1854 
  • 1854: The Northcote-Trevelyan civil service report is published; and The Crimean War begins, as Britain and France attempt to defend European interests in the Middle East against Russia
36 1855 
  • 1855: John Snow, investigating London's piped water supply, showed graphically that cholera could be transmitted by water from a particular pump.
  • 1855: End of Aberdeen's coalition government. Palmerston's first government comes to power
  • 1855: Yale lock invented
37 1856 
  • 1856: Crimean War comes to an end. The Victoria Cross is instituted for military bravery
38 1857 
  • 1857: Cyrus Field made his first attempt at laying a trans-Atlantic telegraph cable. In 1866, his fourth attempt was successful.
  • 1857: The Second Opium War opens China to European trade. The Indian Mutiny erupts against British Rule on the sub-continent
39 1858 
  • 1858: Derby establishes his second minority government. Parliament passes the India Act
  • 1858: Eraser fitted to end of pencil
40 1859 
  • 1859: Darwin in 'On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life', asserted all life had a common ancestor and that the origin of species was natural selection
  • 1859: End of Derby's second minority government. Palmerston brings his second Liberal government to power.
  • 1859: Smiles' 'Self-Help' published
41 1860 
  • 1860: Joseph Wilson Swan invented the light bulb, an incandescent lamp using a carbon filament.
  • 1860: Gladstone's budget and the Anglo-French Cobden Treaty codifies and extends the principles of free trade
42 1861 
  • 1861: Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis published his deduction that childbirth fever was transmitted on the hands of doctors during their examinations
  • 1861: Death of Prince Albert, Prince Consort
43 1862 
  • 1862: Pasteur published the 'germ theory:': Infection is caused by self-replicating microorganisms, and that attenuated viral cultures granted immunity. These beneficent antigens he named 'vaccines' in honor of Jenner and his vaccinia virus
  • 1862: Parliament passes the Limited Liability Act in order to provide vital stimulus to accumulation of capital in shares
44 1863 
  • 1863: Edward, Prince of Wales, marries Princess Alexandra of Denmark. The Salvation Army is founded
45 1865 
  • 1865: Lister, using carbolic acid as antiseptic and sterilizing his instrument, proved the efficacy of antiseptic surgery
  • 1865: Death of Palmerston. Russell establishes his second Liberal government
  • 1865: Lewis Carroll publishes 'Alice's Adventure in Wonderland'
46 1866 
  • 1866: Gregor Mendel, in "Versuche ?ber Pflantenhybriden," interpreted heredity in terms of a pairing of dominant and/or recessive unit characters; that is, ones that could in practice be treated as indivisible and independent particles
  • 1866: Alfred Nobel patented dynamite
  • 1866: Russell and Gladstone fail to have their moderate Reform Bill passed in parliament. Derby takes power in his third minority Conservative government
47 1867 
  • 1867: Karl Marx, in Das Kapital, maintained the value, or exchange relation, of commodities is characterized by its alienation from its use-value, and thus its value as the product of human labor, which the capitalist treats as a variable and against which he accounts his surplus.
  • 1867: Derby and Disraeli's Second Reform Bill doubles the franchise to two million. Canada becomes the first independent dominion in the British Empire under the Dominion of Canada Act
48 1868 
  • 1868: Disraeli succeeds Derby as Prime Minister. Gladstone becomes Prime Minister for the first time
49 1869 
  • 1869: George M. Beard distinguished 'neurasthenia,' a nervous disease of men, from hysteria, a women's disease, as, in an earlier time, men's 'hypochondriasis' had been distinguished from women's ' vapeurs.' Subforms of neurasthenia came to be called phobias.
  • 1869: The Irish Church is disestablished. The Suez Canal is opened
50 1870 
  • 1870: Primary education becomes compulsory in Britain through the Forster-Ripon English Elementary Education Act. Parliament also passes the Women's Property Act, extending the rights of married women, and the Irish Land Act
  • 1870: First British postcard devised by Anthony Trollope
  • 1870: Wheeler introduces toilet paper roll in US
  • 1870: Inauguration of London to Calcutta telegraph line, first electronic link between Europe and India
51 1871 
  • 1871: Trade Unions are legalized
52 1872 
  • 1872: Secret voting is introduced for elections. Parliament passes the Scottish Education Act
53 1873 
  • 1873: Gladstone's government resigns after the defeat of their Irish Universities Bill. Disraeli declines to take up office instead
  • 1873: Parmalee invents automatic fire sprinklers
54 1874 
  • 1874: Disraeli becomes Conservative Prime Minister for the second time
55 1875 
  • 1875: Disraeli purchases a controlling interest for Britain in the Suez Canal. Agricultural depression increases
  • 1875: Parliament passes R.A. Cross's Conservative social reforms
56 1876 
  • 1876: Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone.
  • 1876: Nikolas August Otto designed the first four-stroke piston engine
  • 1876: Queen Victoria becomes Empress of India. The massacre of Christians in Turkish Bulgaria leads to anti-Turkish campaigns in Britain, led by Gladstone
57 1877 
  • 1877: Confederation of British and Boer states established in South Africa
58 1878 
  • 1878: The Congress of Berlin is held. Disraeli announces 'peace with honour'
  • 1878: Edweard Muybridge photographs horse in motion
59 1879 
  • 1879: A trade depression emerges in Britain. The Zulu War is fought in South Africa. The British are defeated at Isandhlwana, but are victorious at Ulundi
  • 1879: Gladstone's Midlothian campaign denounces imperialism in South Africa and Afghanistan
60 1880 
  • 1880: Gladstone establishes his second Liberal government
  • 1880: The first Anglo-Boer War begins
61 1881 
  • 1881: Savoy Theatre introduces electric lighting
  • 1881: Parliament passes the Irish Land and Coercion Acts
  • 1881: Death of Billy the Kid
62 1882 
  • 1882: Britain occupies Egypt. A triple alliance is established between Germany, Austria and Italy
  • 1882: Standard Oil controls 95% of the U.S. oil refining capacity
  • 1882: Stillwell invents brown paper bag
63 1884 
  • 1884: Freud published a paper in which he found cocaine, an alkaloid in coca, effective against fatigue and neurasthenia.
  • 1884: Hilaire de Chardonnet invented the first artificial textile, which was made from cellulose. It was later named rayon
  • 1884: Parliament passes the third Reform Act which further extends the franchise
64 1885 
  • 1885: Death of General Gordon at Khartoum. Burma is annexed. Salisbury succeeds Gladstone with his first minority Conservative government. Parliament passes the Redistribution Act
65 1886 
  • 1886: Gladstone's third Liberal government fails to pass its first Irish Home Rule Bill through the House of Commons. Gladstone resigns as Prime Minister. Split in the Liberal Party. Salisbury establishes his second Conservative-Liberal-Unionist government. The Royal Niger Company is chartered. Gold is discovered in the Transvaal
  • 1886: Statue of Liberty erected in New York Harbour
  • 1886: Coca-Cola syrup invented
66 1887 
  • 1887: Emile Berliner patents the gramophone
  • 1887: Queen Victoria celebrates her Golden Jubilee. The Independent Labour Party is founded. The British East Africa Company is chartered
  • 1887: UK telegraph companies control 107,000 miles of submarine cable
  • 1887: There are estimated to be 5,400 cash registers in US (increases to 16,900 in 1890)
67 1888 
  • 1888: Celluloid photographic film introduced
  • 1888: The County Councils' Act establishes representative county based authorities
  • 1888: Kodak box camera
  • 1888: Coin-operated public telephone
68 1889 
  • 1889: London Dockers' Strike. The British South Africa Company is chartered
  • 1889: The Eiffel Tower, designed by French engineer Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, is completed for the Paris Exposition.
  • 1889: First Official Secrets Act in UK
69 1892 
  • 1892: Leon Bouly invents cinematographic film camera
  • 1892: Gladstone forms his fourth Liberal government
70 1893 
  • 1893: Whitcomb L. Judson invented the zip to help a friend with a stiff back who could not bend over to do up his shoes
  • 1893: Second Irish Home Rule Bill fails to pass the House of Lords
  • 1893: New Zealand becomes the first nation to grant women the right to vote
  • 1893: Car number plates introduced in France
71 1894 
  • 1894: Rosebery takes power with his minority Liberal government
72 1895 
  • 1895: Oscar Wilde jailed
  • 1895: Wilhelm Conrad R?ntgen, using a Crookes' tube, observed a new form of penetrating radiation, which he named X-rays
  • 1895: Guglielmo Marconi sent longwave wireless telegraphic, or radio, signals over a distance of more than a mile
  • 1895: Salisbury forms his third Unionist ministry
  • 1895: Kellogg's Corn Flakes go on sale
73 1896 
  • 1896: Freud suggested analyzing childhood conflicts in the study of neuroses. He also devised a psychoanalytic technique called 'free association' which allows emotionally-charged, repressed material to be consciously recognized
  • 1896: The British conquest of the Sudan begins
  • 1896: Lightner Witmer establishes at the University of Pennsylvania a clinic of psychology, the first psychological clinic in America and perhaps in the world
74 1897 
  • 1897: Queen Victoria celebrates her Diamond Jubilee
  • 1897: Telephone penetration in US is 7 per 1,000 people
75 1898 
  • 1898: Christopher Latham Sholes patented the typewriter. His QWERTY keyboard is still with us today.
  • 1898: British rule over Sudan fully established. German Naval expansion begins
  • 1898: Campbell's soups first appear with red and white labels, colors suggested by Cornell University's football uniforms.
76 1899 
  • 1899: British disasters in South Africa
  • 1899: Boer War begins in South Africa and lasts three years
77 1900 
  • 1900: Salisbury wins the 'Khaki' election. The Labour Representation Committee is formed. Parliament passes the Commonwealth of Australia Act
  • 1900: Max Planck proposes quantum theory
  • 1900: There are reckoned to be 6,000 accountants in England
  • 1900: Australia Becomes a Commonwealth
  • 1900: Boxer Rebellion in China
  • 1900: Italy's King Assassinated
  • 1900: Kodak Introduces $1 Brownie Cameras
  • 1900: Max Planck Formulates Quantum Theory
  • 1900: Sigmund Freud Publishes The Interpretation of Dreams
78 1901 
  • 1901: Willis H. Carrier invented the industrial air conditioner
  • 1901: Vacuum Cleaner invented by Hubert Cecil Booth
  • 1901: Death of Queen Victoria. She is succeeded by her son, Prince Albert, as King Edward VII
  • 1901: Marconi sends wireless message from Cornwall to Newfoundland
  • 1901: First Nobel Prizes Awarded
  • 1901: First Trans-Atlantic Radio Signal
  • 1901: U.S. President McKinley Assassinated
79 1902 
  • 1902: Invention of the Teddy Bear
  • 1902: Boer War Ends
  • 1902: Mount Pel?e Erupts
  • 1902: The Teddy Bear is Introduced
80 1903 
  • 1903: Orville Wright and Wilbur Wright achieved flight in a manned, gasoline power-driven, heavier-than-air flying machine.
  • 1903: First Flight at Kitty Hawk
  • 1903: First Message to Travel Around the World
  • 1903: First Silent Movie, The Great Train Robbery
  • 1903: Plague in India
81 1904 
  • 1904: First telephone answering machine
  • 1904: Beatrix Potter's 'The Tale of Benjamin Bunny' is published
  • 1904: First Popular American Film
  • 1904: Ground Broken on Panama Canal
  • 1904: New York City Subway Opens
  • 1904: Russo-Japanese War Begins
  • 1904: Trans-Siberian Railway Completed
82 1905 
  • 1905: Einstein evolved the Special Theory of relativity.
  • 1905: Aliens Act in Britain tries to control immigration
  • 1905: Bloody Sunday - Russian Revolution of 1905
  • 1905: Einstein Proposes His Theory of Relativity
  • 1905: Freud Publishes His Theory of Sexuality
83 1906 
  • 1906: Finland First European Country to Give Women the Right to Vote
  • 1906: Kellogg's Starts Selling Corn Flakes
  • 1906: San Francisco Earthquake
  • 1906: Upton Sinclair Writes The Jungle
84 1907 
  • 1907: Electric washing machine - The Thor - on sale
  • 1907: Ten Rules of War Established at the Second Hague Peace Conference
  • 1907: First Electric Washing Machine
  • 1907: Picasso Introduces Cubism
  • 1907: Typhoid Mary Captured for the First Time
85 1908 
  • 1908: Henry Ford created the Model T automobile
  • 1908: Electric iron and toaster patented
  • 1908: Earthquake in Italy Kills 150,000
  • 1908: Ford Introduces the Model-T
  • 1908: Three Year-Old Pu Yi Becomes Emperor of China
  • 1908: Turks Revolt in the Ottoman Empire
86 1909 
  • 1909: French Engineer Louis Bleriot is first to cross the English Channel in an airplane
  • 1909: Pianos reach maximum market penetration in UK households at one per ten people
  • 1909: 800 million postcards sold in England
  • 1909: Japan's Prince Ito is Assassinated
  • 1909: Plastic Is Invented
  • 1909: Robert Peary Becomes the First to Reach the North Pole
87 1910 
  • 1910: Georges Claude discovered that electricity conducted through a tube of the rare inert gas, neon, gives a bright red glow and that other gases gave off other colors, e.g., argon gives blue, helium gives yellow and white, etc.
  • 1910: First live opera broadcast
  • 1910: Halley's Comet Makes an Appearance
  • 1910: The Tango Catches On
88 1911 
  • 1911: British National Insurance Act lays foundation for health and unemployment insurance
  • 1911: The Chinese Revolution
  • 1911: Ernest Rutherford Discovers the Structure of an Atom
  • 1911: Greenwich Mean Time Adopted
  • 1911: The Incan City of Machu Picchu Discovered
  • 1911: Mona Lisa Is Stolen
  • 1911: Roald Amundsen Reaches the South Pole
  • 1911: Standard Oil Company Broken Up
  • 1911: Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Catches on Fire
89 1912 
  • 1912: The Sinking of the Titanic 1,515 people lose their lives.
  • 1912: Parachutes Invented
  • 1912: Piltdown Man, the 'Missing Link,' Discovered (Fraud)
  • 1912: SOS Accepted as Universal Distress Signal
  • 1912: The Titanic Sinks
90 1913 
  • 1913: Leo Baekeland invented a plastic laminate, known as Bakelite, and later as 'formica'.
  • 1913: First assembly line introduced in Ford automobile factory
  • 1913: The "Armory Show," an international display of some 1600 works of modern art, and one of the more important U.S. art exhibitions ever held, opens at the 69th-regiment armory in New York City; it arouses public curiosity, generates sensational news coverage, and helps change the direction of American art
  • 1913: First Crossword Puzzle
  • 1913: Henry Ford Creates Assembly Line
  • 1913: Personal Income Tax Introduced in U.S.
91 1914 
  • 1914: First World War starts
  • 1914: Archduke Ferdinand Assassinated
  • 1914: Battle of the Marne
  • 1914: Charlie Chaplin First Appeared as the Little Tramp
  • 1914: First Traffic Light
  • 1914: Panama Canal Officially Opened
  • 1914: World War I Begins
92 1915 
  • 1915: Armenian Genocide
  • 1915: D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation Released
  • 1915: Germans Use Poison Gas as a Weapon
  • 1915: Lusitania Sunk by German U-Boat
  • 1915: Second Battle of Ypres
93 1916 
  • 1916: Navy employs animal trainer 'Captain' Joseph Woodward's music hall sea lions for U-boat sabotage.
  • 1916: Coca-Cola adopts a distinctive bottle which identifies the company internationally
  • 1916: Battle of the Somme
  • 1916: Battle of Verdun
  • 1916: Easter Rising in Ireland
  • 1916: First Self-Service Grocery Store Opens in U.S.
94 1917 
  • 1917: Bolshevik revolution in Russia installs a new government headed by V.I. Lennin
  • 1917: French artist Marcel Duchamp submits a porcelain urinal, signed "R. Mutt" and titled "Fountain," to the New York Independents Exhibition; it is rejected.
  • 1917: First Pulitzer Prizes Awarded
  • 1917: Mata Hari Executed for Being a Spy
  • 1917: Russian Revolution
  • 1917: U.S. Enters World War I
95 1918 
  • 1918: Influenza Epidemic
  • 1918: Russian Czar Nicholas II and His Family are Killed
96 1919 
  • 1919: Eddington and Frank W. Dyson measured the bending of starlight by the gravitational pull of the sun, thus confirming Einstein's general theory of relativity
  • 1919: Prohibition Begins in the U.S.
  • 1919: Treaty of Versailles Ends World War I
97 1920 
  • 1920: Bubonic Plague in India
  • 1920: League of Nations Established
98 1921 
  • 1921: Stage debut of John Gielgud
  • 1921: Extreme Inflation in Germany
  • 1921: Irish Free State Proclaimed
  • 1921: Lie Detector Invented
99 1922 
  • 1922: BBC launched as limited company
  • 1922: Kemal Atat?rk Founds Modern Turkey
  • 1922: Tomb of King Tut Discovered
  • 1922: Michael Collins Killed in Ambush
  • 1922: Mussolini Marches on Rome
  • 1922: The Reader's Digest Published
100 1923 
  • 1923: Electrolux produced the first electric refrigerator
  • 1923: Kodak introduces home movie equipment
  • 1923: Charleston Dance Becomes Popular
  • 1923: Hitler Jailed After Failed Coup
  • 1923: Ruhr Occupied by French and Belgian Forces
  • 1923: Talking Movies Invented
  • 1923: Teapot Dome Scandal
101 1924 
  • 1924: First Olympic Winter Games
  • 1924: Leopold and Loeb Murder a Neighbor Out of Boredom
  • 1924: V.I. Lenin Dies
102 1925 
  • 1925: Flapper Dresses in Style
  • 1925: Hitler Publishes 'Mein Kampf'
103 1926 
  • 1926: General Strike in UK
  • 1926: The first automatic traffic light was installed in Wolverhampton, England. It remained in service until 1968
  • 1926: A.A. Milne Publishes Winnie-the-Pooh
  • 1926: Houdini Dies After Being Punched
  • 1926: Robert Goddard Fires His First Liquid-Fuel Rocket
  • 1926: A Woman Swims the English Channel
104 1927 
  • 1927: The Jazz Singer - first film talking movie released
  • 1927: Philo Farnsworth and John Logie Baird demonstrate television
  • 1927: Babe Ruth Makes Home-Run Record
  • 1927: BBC Founded
  • 1927: The First Talking Movie, The Jazz Singer
  • 1927: Lindbergh Flies Solo Across the Atlantic
105 1928 
  • 1928: George Eastman devises a process for color photography; it leads to the first successful three-color roll film available to amateur photographers when it appears in 1935 as Kodachrome (for slides) and as Kodacolor (for prints) in 1942.
  • 1928: First Mickey Mouse cartoon
  • 1928: Bubble Gum Invented
  • 1928: First 'Mickey Mouse' Cartoon
  • 1928: First Oxford English Dictionary Published
  • 1928: Kellogg-Briand Treaty Outlaws War
  • 1928: Penicillin Discovered


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