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James Bolstridge

Male 1669 -


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Timeline



 
 



 




   Date  Event(s)
1670 
  • 1670: Hudson's Bay Company established - early settlers in Canada
1673 
  • 1673: Test Act was passed to try to help differentiate between Anglicans and Catholics. Public officeholders were required to swear an oath of allegiance (which recognised the monarch as the head of the Church of England) and accept communion by Protestant form
1675 
  • 1675: Whig party formed under Shaftsbury
1679 
  • 1679: Tories first named
  • 1679: Habeas Corpus Act becomes law in England
1682 
  • 1682: Pennsylvania founded by William Penn
1684 
  • 1684: Presbyterian settlement in Stuart's Town in South Carolina
1685 
  • 1685: James II King of England 1685 - 1688
  • 1685: Judge Jeffreys and the Bloody Assizes - 320 executed, 800 transported
1688 
  • 1688: The Glorious Revolution James effectively abdicates
  • 1688: Abolition of Hearth Tax
1689 
  • 1689: William and Mary Joint Reign (William prince of Orange and Mary Daughter of James II 1689 - 1694
10 1694 
  • 1694: William II King of England Sole ruler after death of Mary 1694 - 1702
11 1695 
  • 1695: Freedom of Press in England
  • 1695: Act of Parliament imposes a fine on all who fail to inform the parish minister of the birth of a child (repealed 1706)
12 1696 
  • 1696: Act of Parliament establishes Workhouses
13 1697 
  • 1697: Official opening of St Paul's Cathedral
14 1701 
  • 1701: Act of Settlement bars Catholics from the British throne
15 1702 
  • 1702: Anne Queen of England 1702 - 1714
  • 1702: 1702 - 1713 War of the Spanish Succession
16 1705 
  • 1705: First working Newcomen Steam Engine
17 1707 
  • 1707: Kingdom of Great Britain Established English and Scottish Parliaments united by an Act of the English Parliament.
18 1708 
  • 1708: First Jacobite rising in Scotland
19 1712 
  • 1712: Imposition of Soap Tax (abolished 1853)
  • 1712: Treaty of Utrecht concludes the War of the Spanish Succession
  • 1712: Second Jacobite rebellion in Scotland, under the Old Pretender
  • 1712: First Prime Minister Robert Walpole - 1742 (Whig)
20 1714 
  • 1714: George I King of England 1714 - 1727
21 1719 
  • 1719: Third abortive Jacobite rising
22 1723 
  • 1723: The Waltham Black Acts add 50 capital offences to the penal code - people could be sentenced to death for theft and poaching
  • 1723: The Workhouse Act or Test - to get relief, a poor person has to enter Workhouse
23 1725 
  • 1725: Treaty of Hanover
24 1727 
  • 1727: George II King of England 1727 - 1760
25 1729 
  • 1729: Methodists formed at Oxford
26 1730 
  • 1730: Irish Famine
27 1733 
  • 1733: Law forbidding the use of Latin in parish registers generally obeyed - some continued in Latin for a few years
28 1738 
  • 1738: John Wesley has his conversion experience
29 1741 
  • 1741: Benjamin Ingham founded the Moravian Methodists or Inghamites - The Morovians later were instrumental in converting and educating black slaves in the West Indies
30 1742 
  • 1742: England goes to war with Spain - incited by William Pitt the Elder (Earl of Chatham) for the sake of trade
31 1743 
  • 1743: Battle of Dettingen - last time a British sovereign (George II) led troops in battle - the Kettle Drums were captured by the Third King's Own Dragoon Guards
32 1745 
  • 1745: Charles Edward Stuart the young pretender to the English throne lands in Scotalnd Defeated at Culloden 1746
  • 1745: Jacobite rebellion in Scotland - Bonnie Prince Charlie (The Young Pretender) lands in the western Highlands - raises support among Episcopalian and Catholic clans - The Pretender's army invades Perth, Edinburgh, and England as far as Derby
33 1746 
  • 1746: April 17 1746 Battle of Culloden. The Jacobite rebellion crushed for all time.
  • 1746: Battle of Culloden - last battle fought in Britain - 5,000 Highlanders routed by the Duke of Cumberland and 9,000 loyalists Scots - Young Pretender Charles flees to Continent, ending Jacobite hopes forever - the wearing of the kilt prohibited. Many Scots exiled to Jamaica
34 1752 
  • 1752: Year standardised to end Dec 31 (previously Mar 24) Julian Calendar dropped and Gregorian Calendar adopted in England
35 1754 
  • 1754: Hardwicke Act (1753): Banns to be called, and Printed Marriage Register forms to be used - Quakers & Jews exempt
36 1756 
  • 1756: The Seven Years War with France (Pitt's trade war) begins
37 1757 
  • 1757: India: The Nawab of Bengal tries to expel the British, but is defeated at the battle of Plassy - the East India Company forces are led by Robert Clive - The foundation laid for the Empire of India
38 1758 
  • 1758: India stops being merely a commercial venture - England begins dominating it politically - The East India Company retains its monopoly although it ceased to trade
39 1759 
  • 1759: Wesley builds 356 Methodist chapels
40 1760 
  • 1760: George III King of England 1760 - 1820
41 1762 
  • 1762: France surrenders Canada and Florida
42 1763 
  • 1763: Treaty of Paris of 1763 - In a nutshell, Britain emerged as the world?s leading colonial empire. Her possessions stretched from India to Africa to the West Indies to North America. The British shocked knowledgeable people of the day by choosing to take the barren wasteland of Canada from France, rather than the prosperous West Indian sugar islands of Guadeloupe and Martinique.North America. Received Canada from France - Received Florida from Spain - Ceded recently taken Guadeloupe and Martinique back to France - Ceded recently taken Cuba and the Philippines to Spain - Received Grenada and the Grenadines from France - Received extensive Indian rights from France - Received Senegal from France - Received Minorca from France and Spain
43 1767 
  • 1767: First iron railroads built for mines by John Wilkinson Newcomen's steam pumping engine perfected by James Watt - First one installed at Tipton
44 1769 
  • 1769: Arkwright invents water frame (textile production)
45 1770 
  • 1770: Boston Massacre - On March 5th crowds protesting against the presence of British soldiers are fired upon.
  • 1770: Hargreaves's jenny invented (textile production)
46 1772 
  • 1772: Judge Lord Mansfield rules in the case of James Somerset a negro that there is no legal basis for slavery in England.
47 1773 
  • 1773: The Boston Tea Party - American Colonists protest at excise duties.
48 1775 
  • 1775: American rebel forces enter Canada and capture Montreal
  • 1775: Battle of Lexington: first action in American War of Independence (1775-1783)
49 1776 
  • 1776: Canada : As a result of the American Revolution, 1,124 people from New England arrived in Halifax in the first wave of United Empire Loyalists. In total, about 40,000 Americans remain loyal to Britain and flee north, to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, the St. Lawrence Valley, and the lands bordering the Great Lakes. These include a large number of Black Loyalists ie Slaves who escaped and served in the British Forces
  • 1776: British forces capture New York
  • 1776: American Declaration of Independence
50 1777 
  • 1777: British Forces capture Philadelphia but surrender at Saratoga
51 1778 
  • 1778: France hoping for to take advantage of British problems in North America declare war.
52 1779 
  • 1779: Spain declares war on Britain hoping to regain territories lost in 1763
  • 1779: First iron bridge built, over the River Severn by John Wilkinson
  • 1779: Abraham Darby completes the first iron bridge across the Severn at Coalbrookdale