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Samuel Bolstridge

Male Abt 1785 - 1821  (33 years)


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Timeline



 
 
 




   Date  Event(s)
1785 
  • 1785: Sunday School Society founded to educate poor children (by 1851, enrols more than 2 million)
1788 
  • 1788: First slave carrying act, the Dolben Act of 1788, regulates the slave trade - stipulates more humane conditions on slave ships
  • 1788: First convicts (and free settlers) arrive in New South Wales
1789 
  • 1789: The French Revolution begins - storming of the Bastille
1792 
  • 1792: Repression in Britain (restrictions on freedom of the press) - Fox gets Libel Act through Parliament, requiring a jury and not a judge to determine libel
1793 
  • 1793: Execution of Louis XVI of France - England declares war on France (1793-1802)
1794 
  • 1794: Abolition of the slave trade in North America, not slavery - Widely ignored and not enforced
  • 1794: The prosecutor for Britain, Lord Justice Eyre, charges reformers with High Treason - he argued that, since reform of parliament would lead to revolution and revolution to executing the King, the desire for reform endangered the King's life and was therefore Treason
1795 
  • 1795: Great English Famine after crop failure. Speenhamland Act proclaims that the Parish is responsible for bringing up the labourer's wage to subsistence level.
1798 
  • 1798: 1798- 1802 First war with Napoleon - Feb-Oct: The Irish Rebellion; 100,000 peasants revolt; approximately 25,000 die - Irish Parliament abolished
1800 
  • 1800: Union of Great Britain and Ireland - Union Jack official British flag
10 1801 
  • 1801: First census puts the population of England and Wales at 9,168,000 - population of Britain nearly 11 million (75 per cent rural)
11 1805 
  • 1805: Battle of Trafalgar - Nelson Killed in Action
12 1806 
  • 1806: First colonists leave Britain for South Africa
13 1807 
  • 1807: Abolition of the slave trade in the British Empire
14 1813 
  • 1813: Printed Parish Registers introduced for Baptisms and Burials
15 1815 
  • 1815: The Corn Laws - Cereals could not be imported into Britain until the domestic price reached eighty shillings a quarter. This price meant that cereals and bread were more expensive than they needed to be and this caused considerable agitation
  • 1815: Battle of Waterloo